balance sheet
(noun)
A summary of a person's or organization's assets, liabilities. and equity as of a specific date.
Examples of balance sheet in the following topics:
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Introduction to the Balance Sheet
- The balance sheet is a summary of the financial balances of a company and reflects the company's solvency and financial position.
- Both internal and external users use the balance sheet.
- The balance sheet also demonstrates how liquid the business is.
- Finally, the balance sheet shows the book value of the owners' stake in the business.
- Name the two types of balance sheets and identify which accounts are listed on the balance sheet
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Being Aware of Off-Balance-Sheet Financing
- Off-Balance-Sheet-Financing represents rights to use assets or obligations that are not reported on balance sheets to pay liabilities.
- Off-Balance-Sheet-Financing is associated with debt that is not reported on a company's balance sheet.
- The formal accounting distinctions between on and off-balance sheet items can be complicated and are subject to some level of management judgment.
- An example of off-balance-sheet financing is an unconsolidated subsidiary.
- Jeffrey Skilling is the former CEO of Enron, which was notorious for it's use of off-balance-sheet-financing.
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Reporting Cash
- Cash and cash equivalents are reported in the current asset section of a business's balance sheet.
- Cash is an asset, which means it is included in a business's balance sheet .
- When the company's cash balance is reported on its balance sheet, all of those accounts are combined into one "cash" line item.
- A sample balance sheet in Chinese.
- Cash and cash equivalents are reported on the balance sheet.
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What Goes on the Balances Sheet and What Goes in the Notes
- The balance sheet lists current liability accounts and their balances; the notes provide explanations for the balances, which are sometimes required.
- Of the four basic financial statements, the balance sheet is the only statement which applies to a single point in time of a company's calendar year.
- Balance sheets are presented with assets in one section, and liabilities and equity in the other section, so that the two sections "balance. " The fundamental accounting equation is: assets = liabilities + equity ([).
- Current liabilities and their account balances as of the date on the balance sheet are presented first, in order by due date.
- Explain why a company would use a note to the balance sheet
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Relationships Between Statements
- The income statement, specifically, net income reconciles the beginning (prior ending period) balance sheet to the current balance sheet.
- The statement of shareholder's equity connects the income statement and the balance sheet.
- The statement of shareholder's equity explains the changes in retained earnings between two balance sheet dates.
- A clean surplus occurs when all changes in the balance sheet are reconciled by the income statement.
- That is, the net change in the balance sheet accounts will not equal net income.
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Reporting Current Liabilities
- Current liabilities are reported first in the liability section of the balance sheet because they have first claim on company assets.
- The presentation of the balance sheet should support the accounting equation of assets = liabilities + owner's equity.
- For many companies, accounts payable is the first balance sheet account listed in the current liabilities section.
- Therefore, late payments are not disclosed on the balance sheet for accounts payable.
- Current liabilities is the first section reported under liabilities on the balance sheet.
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Reporting Receivables
- Accounts receivable are reported as a line item on the balance sheet and in a more detailed again report.
- Accounts receivable are reported as a line item on the balance sheet.
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Resource Cost Write-Off
- The term write-off describes removing an asset whose value is zero and is no longer in use from the balance sheet.
- An asset is written off the balance sheet by recording a journal entry.
- The decrease in the asset and accumulated depletion accounts reduces the balance to zero and removes the account from the balance sheet.
- The asset's balance is reduced by the impairment amount to reflect the asset's new economic value and the account remains on the balance sheet.
- An asset write-off removes an asset's cost off the balance sheet and expenses it on the income statement.
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Reporting Inventories
- Inventory is an asset and its ending balance should be reported as a current asset on the balance sheet.
- Inventory is an asset and its ending balance should be reported as a current asset on the balance sheet.
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The Post-Closing Trial Balance
- A post-closing trial balance is a trial balance taken after the closing entries have been posted.
- The permanent balance sheet accounts will appear on the post-closing trial balance with their balances.
- When the post-closing trial balance is run, the zero balance temporary accounts will not appear.
- As with the trial balance, the purpose of the post-closing trial balance is to ensure that debits equal credits.
- The post-closing trial balance differs from the adjusted trial balance in only two important respects: It excludes all temporary accounts since they have been closed, and it updates the retained earnings account to its proper ending balance.