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Intangible assets

Law IntakeIntangible property

Intangible assets - Nonphysical items such as stock certificates, bonds, bank accounts, and pension benefits that have value and must be taken into account in estate planning.

 


Intangible Assets: Items of personal property; examples; franchises, trademarks, patents, copyrights, goodwill.
Intangible Value: A value that cannot be imputed to any part of the physical property.

Intangible Assets:
Nonphysical items such as stocks, bonds, pension receipts, bank accounts whose value should be taken into account.
Intentional Tort: ...

The intangible assets of a business include not only its trade name and other identifying devices but also its inventions, creative works, and artistic efforts.

COST OF MONEY - An imputed cost determined by applying a cost-of-money rate to facilities capital employed in contract performance, or to an investment in tangible and intangible assets while they are being constructed, ...

found its way into most legal systems, including the common law, and these courts, in an analogous but much later development, classifying intangible assets and interests in the same category as tangible movables, have, traditionally, ...

The principle of valuing IP is to determine the future income associated with its ownership (Smith&Parr: Valuation of Intellectual Property and Intangible Assets, 3rd Edition, Wiley 2000). Note that the value of IP is independent of its cost.

See also: Assets, Law, Question, Person, Information

Law IntakeIntangible property

 
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