Balance
Sheet
Balance Sheet
Introduction to Balance Sheet
The accounting balance sheet is
one of the major financial statements used by accountants and business owners.
(The other major financial statements are the income statement, statement of
cash flows, and statement of stockholders' equity) The balance sheet is also
referred to as the statement of financial position.
The balance sheet presents a
company's financial position at the end of a specified date. Some describe the
balance sheet as a "snapshot" of the company's financial position at
a point (a moment or an instant) in time. For example, the amounts reported on
a balance sheet dated December 31, 2015 reflect that instant when all the
transactions through December 31 have been recorded.
Because the balance sheet informs
the reader of a company's financial position as of one moment in time, it
allows someone—like a creditor—to see what a company owns as well as what it
owes to other parties as of the date indicated in the heading. This is valuable
information to the banker who wants to determine whether or not a company
qualifies for additional credit or loans. Others who would be interested in the
balance sheet include current investors, potential investors, company
management, suppliers, some customers, competitors, government agencies, and
labor unions.
In Part 1 we will explain the
components of the balance sheet and in Part 2 we will present a sample balance
sheet. If you are interested in balance sheet analysis, that is included in the
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We will begin our explanation of
the accounting balance sheet with its major components, elements, or major
categories:
Assets
Liabilities
Owner's (Stockholders') Equity
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Assets
Assets are things that the company
owns. They are the resources of the company that have been acquired through
transactions, and have future economic value that can be measured and expressed
in dollars. Assets also include costs paid in advance that have not yet
expired, such as prepaid advertising, prepaid insurance, prepaid legal fees,
and prepaid rent. (For a discussion of prepaid expenses go to
Examples of asset accounts that
are reported on a company's balance sheet include:
Cash
Petty Cash
Temporary Investments
Accounts Receivable
Inventory
Supplies
Prepaid Insurance
Land
Land Improvements
Buildings
Equipment
Goodwill
Bond Issue Costs
Etc.
Usually asset accounts will have
debit balances.
Contra assets are asset accounts
with credit balances. (A credit balance in an asset account is contrary—or
contra—to an asset account's usual debit balance.) Examples of contra asset accounts
include:
Allowance for Doubtful Accounts
Accumulated Depreciation-Land
Improvements
Accumulated Depreciation-Buildings
Accumulated Depreciation-Equipment
Accumulated Depletion
Etc.
Classifications Of Assets On The
Balance Sheet
Accountants usually prepare
classified balance sheets. "Classified" means that the balance sheet
accounts are presented in distinct groupings, categories, or classifications.
The asset classifications and their order of appearance on the balance sheet
are:
Current Assets
Investments
Property, Plant, and Equipment
Intangible Assets
Other Assets
An outline of a balance sheet
using the balance sheet classifications is shown here:
05X-table-01
To see how various asset accounts
are placed within these classifications, view the sample balance sheet in Part
4.
Effect of Cost Principle and
Monetary Unit Assumption
The amounts reported in the asset
accounts and on the balance sheet reflect actual costs recorded at the time of
a transaction. For example, let's say a company acquires 40 acres of land in
the year 1950 at a cost of $20,000. Then, in 1990, it pays $400,000 for an
adjacent 40-acre parcel. The company's Land account will show a balance of $420,000
($20,000 for the first parcel plus $400,000 for the second parcel.). This
account balance of $420,000 will appear on today's balance sheet even though
these parcels of land have appreciated to a current market value of $3,000,000.
There are two guidelines that
oblige the accountant to report $420,000 on the balance sheet rather than the
current market value of $3,000,000: (1) the cost principle directs the
accountant to report the company's assets at their original historical cost,
and (2) the monetary unit assumption directs the accountant to presume the U.S.
dollar is stable over time—it is not affected by inflation or deflation. In
effect, the accountant is assuming that a 1950 dollar, a 1990 dollar, and a
2015 dollar all have the same purchasing power.
The cost principle and monetary
unit assumption may also mean that some very valuable resources will not be
reported on the balance sheet. A company's team of brilliant scientists will
not be listed as an asset on the company's balance sheet, because (a) the
company did not purchase the team in a transaction (cost principle) and (b)
it's impossible for accountants to know how to put a dollar value on the team
(monetary unit assumption).
Coca-Cola's logo, Nike's logo, and
the trade names for most consumer products companies are likely to be their
most valuable assets. If those names and logos were developed internally, it is
reasonable that they will not appear on the company balance sheet. If, however,
a company should purchase a product name and logo from another company, that
cost will appear as an asset on the balance sheet of the acquiring company.
Remember, accounting principles
and guidelines place some limitations on what is reported as an asset on the
company's balance sheet.
Effect of Conservatism
While the cost principle and
monetary unit assumption generally prevent assets from being reported on the
balance sheet at an amount greater than cost, conservatism will result in some
assets being reported at less than cost. For example, assume the cost of a
company's inventory was $30,000, but now the current cost of the same items in
inventory has dropped to $27,000. The conservatism guideline instructs the
company to report Inventory on its balance sheet at $27,000. The $3,000
difference is reported immediately as a loss on the company's income statement.
Effect of Matching Principle
The matching principle will also
cause certain assets to be reported on the accounting balance sheet at less
than cost. For example, if a company has Accounts Receivable of $50,000 but
anticipates that it will collect only $48,500 due to some customers' financial
problems, the company will report a credit balance of $1,500 in the contra
asset account Allowance for Doubtful Accounts. The combination of the asset Accounts
Receivable with a debit balance of $50,000 and the contra asset Allowance for
Doubtful Accounts with a credit balance will mean that the balance sheet will
report the net amount of $48,500. The income statement will report the $1,500
adjustment as Bad Debts Expense.
The matching principle also
requires that the cost of buildings and equipment be depreciated over their
useful lives. This means that over time the cost of these assets will be moved
from the balance sheet to Depreciation Expense on the income statement. As time
goes on, the amounts reported on the balance sheet for these long-term assets
will be reduced. (For a further discussion on depreciation, go to
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