As there are tax implications in this entire process, one presumes your
employer has tax advisors or even business valuation specialists involved in
the process.  They should be the ones doing this work on ALL assets going
into the new entity.

If that isn't a sufficient answer, then I would go with, the undepreciated
amount.  Depreciation was invented for precisely this purpose, to simulate
how much value a piece of equipment has after it's been used for a period of
time.


On Wed, Jul 6, 2011 at 11:59 AM, John Aldrich
<[email protected]>wrote:

> We are spinning off one of our divisions into a separate company and one of
> the company laptops is going into the new company. We need to charge the
> new
> company for the value of the laptop. How would one go about figuring the
> current retail value of a used laptop?
>
>
>
>
>
>
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