Generally, you can use straight-line method or income forecast method to depreciate certain intangible property.
Straight Line Method
This method lets you deduct the same amount of depreciation each year over the useful life of the property. To figure your deduction, first determine the adjusted basis, salvage value, and estimated useful life of your property. Subtract the salvage value, if any, from the adjusted basis. The balance is the total depreciation you can take over the useful life of the property.
Divide the balance by the number of years in the useful life. This gives you your yearly depreciation deduction. Unless there is a big change in adjusted basis or useful life, this amount will stay the same throughout the time you depreciate the property. If, in the first year, you use the property for less than a full year, you must prorate your depreciation deduction for the number of months in use.
For example, you can use the straight-line method over the useful life if you can depreciate the cost of a patent or copyright. The useful life of a patent or copyright is the lesser of the life granted to it by the government or the remaining life when you acquire it.
Income Forecast Method
You can choose to use the income forecast method instead of the straight-line method to depreciate the following depreciable intangibles.
Motion picture films or videotapes.
Sound recordings.
Copyrights.
Books.
Patents.
Under the income forecast method, each year's depreciation deduction is equal to the cost of the property, multiplied by a fraction. The numerator of the fraction is the current year's net income from the property, and the denominator is the total income anticipated from the property through the end of the 10th tax year following the tax year the property is placed in service.
Disclaimer
All information in this article is only for the purpose of information sharing, instead of professional suggestion. Kaizen will not assume any responsibility for loss or damage.
TCJA was limits excess business losses for noncorporate taxpayers. Excess business loss is disallowed as a deduction. The loss amount that is disallowed is the aggregate of all trade or business deductions/losses over gross income/gains from such trades or businesses, less a threshold of $250,000 (or $500,000 if married filing jointly; it will be annually adjusted for inflation).
Physical presence was previously the only consideration where income tax nexus is concerned. But this standard was largely replaced by an economic presence/factor presence nexus concept by many states. Just like the sales tax nexus, the income tax nexus better fits the expanding use of e-commerce. States using the economic presence/factor presence nexus standard can impose tax on qualified out-of-state companies, even if they do not have a physical presence in the state.
A corporation's disposing of all (or “substantially all") of its assets, “not in the ordinary course of business," is a fundamental change. Differently, it is not a fundamental change for the company buying the assets. Thus, the shareholders of the buying corporation do not get to vote on the transaction, and do not have rights of appraisal.
Usually, Company combinations are undertaken as a way for one company to acquire another. There are different ways to accomplish this goal. The choice will depend not only on corporate law, but on business and tax considerations. This article will discuss some different ways in which separate business entities may be combined.