The Balance Sheet
In financial accounting, a balance sheet or statement of financial position is a summary of the financial balances of a sole proprietorship, a business partnership, a corporation, or other business organization, such as an LLC or an LLP. Assets, liabilities, and the equity of stockholders are listed as of a specific date, such as the end of a fiscal year or accounting period. 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 ([).
The Balance Sheet
If an error is found on a previous year's financial statement, a correction must be made and the financials reissued.
Current Liabilities on the Balance Sheet
All liabilities are typically placed on the same side of the report page as the owner's equity because both those accounts have credit balances (asset accounts, on the other hand, have debit balances). Current liabilities and their account balances as of the date on the balance sheet are presented first, in order by due date. The balances in these accounts are typically due in the current accounting period or within one year. Current liabilities can represent costs incurred for employee salaries and wages, production and build up of inventory, and acquisition of equipment which are needed and used up during normal business operations.
Information in the Notes
Current liability information found in the notes to the financial statements provide additional explanation on the liability balances and any circumstances affecting them. Accounting principles can sometimes require the disclosure of specific information for the benefit of the financial statement user. For example, companies that pay pension plan benefits require additional footnote disclosure that provide the user with additional details on pension costs and the assets used to fund it.