Fair value. Price negotiated at arm's length between willing buyers and willing sellers, each acting rationally in their own self-interest. Sometimes measured as the present value of expected cash flows.
When fixed assets are received as a gift, the journal entry would typically be: Debit - Fixed Asset (at fair value) Credit - Donation Revenue (at fair value) This recognizes the receipt of the fixed asset at its fair value and records the donation revenue for the fair value of the gift.
Poor would probably be a better adjective to describe 580. Fair Isaac describes anything as below 550 to be "awful".
100-200
No, it's impossible. If you did it with hundredths blocks then it would be fair.
The value will go up!
The fair market value of donated items is the estimated price they would sell for in a transaction between a willing buyer and seller, considering their condition and market demand.
Book value is the value of asset shown in financial statements while fair value is the value at which asset can be sold in market
In fair condition it would be worth somewhere between $35-$50. It was made between 1971-1978
The Fair Market Value (FMV) and the appraised value would largely be the same. The FMV is what the market would pay (arm's length transaction). The appraised value is the value an appraiser will put on the property by finding three other properties that have recently sold and are considered so similar they are comparable for determining the value. The appraised value is not the tax value or the tax assessed value.
No.
400-700 dollars for a rifle in the condition that you describe.
200-350 dollars for a Winchester model 1894 rifle in the condition that you describe.