Balance Sheet-Part1-Classification of Assets
Balance Sheet-Part1-Classification of Assets
MANAC I
Session 2
Balance Sheet Items’ Classification
Processing
is done CASH Sold on
credit
Raw
Material
Inventory Accounts
Receivable
Current Assets
Cash
Includes cheques or any other instrument that
circulates as cash
Marketable Securities
Result of excess short-term cash; Valued at ‘lower
of cost or market price’
Accounts Receivable
Amounts owed to the company by ‘debtors’;
collection losses are called bad debts
Accounts Receivable 750,000
Less: Estimated collection loss (Reserve) 75,000
Net realizable value of accounts receivable 675,000
Current Assets…
Prepaid Expenses
Paid in advance such as rent, taxes, subscriptions and
insurance
Merchandise Inventory
Merchandise goods held for sale to customers in the
ordinary course of business
Manufacturing Inventory
Transformed into another product or assembled together
into another product before being sold
Classified as raw material (steel for a car-making unit)
and components (tyres)
Fixed Assets
Are tangible, relatively long-lived items
owned by the business
To be used in the course of business
Not possible to trace them in the value of the
goods or services sold by the firm
Benefit over several accounting periods to
the extent of life of asset
Value of the asset is reduced proportionate to
the expired life of the asset – depreciation
Example…
A trader buys a delivery van for Rs. 100,000. Assume
that the van will have to be discarded as junk as the
end of five years. At the end of the first year it will be
represented as:
100,000
80,000
60,000
40,000 Cost
Acc. Depreceiation
20,000
0
Year Year Year Year Year Year
0 1 2 3 4 5
Current Long-term
Investments Investments
future date
Accrued Liabilities
Expenses or obligations incurred in the previous
precisely determined
The principle of conservatism
Bank Overdraft
Short-term borrowing – ‘current account’ with
Contingent Liabilities
These are no liabilities as of now as neither ‘the
of a certain event
Example: A claim against the company
contested in a law court
Shown as part of ‘notes’ to the balance sheet
Long-Term Liabilities
Secured Unsecured
(Asset Backing) (No asset backing)
Long-Term Liabilities
Capital
Assets = Liabilities + Owners Equity
In the Ramsons Illustration:
Total assets 10,000,000
Liabilities 6,000,000
Owners equity 4,000,000
TOTAL TOTAL
Prepare a Balance Sheet as of 30 March 2010, for
the SK Company, using the following information
Cash 89000 Capital 1000000