@jhm that does depend upon a variety of factors. Is the OP prepared to go out and sell it, wait for a buyer to find it on landing pages and how much of hurry are they in to sell it? For starters.
With some sales effort behind it, or a patient wait for the right buyer to find it, it's certainly five figures. The dotcom would be in the very high five to low six figure range. I'm sitting on two similar level, logistics, dotcom domains right now and I know exactly how much I want for each of them. It is not unrealistic either.
Within their respective countries, the .co.uk, .de and possibly two or three other ccTLDs, good names are a lot more valuable than you appear to think. Each of those economies has a sufficient number of large companies to support such a market. That is the key factor, not whether it would sell for a high price in the USA or what the wider domaining industry, utterly observant of USA trends and generally ignorant of what is going on elsewhere, thinks.
Just a few months ago a .co.uk domain, It was vans or whitevans .co.uk, something like that, sold for something like 7 or 8 hundred thousand pounds, It was discussed on Domain Sherpa, to prompt anybody who may remember the detail. That's close to a million US$. The better names are not 5 to 10% of dotcoms, they are 25-30% and sometimes more. It does tail off rapidly but this one is not in the tail.
If the OP wishes to let it go for low hundreds I do hope they'll offer it to me first!
Interesting discussion, though. It's making me think harder about not just the UK but the wider European domaining market. It's a lot closer than the USA and I probably understand the trading psyche better. Plus I have a network of contacts here developed over decades.