Balance Sheet - Assets
Balance
Sheet - Assets
Marilyn moves on to explain the
balance sheet, a financial statement that reports the amount of a
company's (A)assets, (B) liabilities, and (C) stockholders'
(or owner's) equity at a specific point in time. Because the balance sheet
reflects a specific point in time rather than a period of time,
Marilyn likes to refer to the balance sheet as a "snapshot" of a
company's financial position at a given moment. For example, if a balance sheet
is dated December 31, the amounts shown on the balance sheet are the balances
in the accounts after all transactions pertaining to December 31 have been
recorded.
(A)
Assets
Assets are things that a company owns
and are sometimes referred to as the resources of the company. Joe readily
understands this—off the top of his head he names things such as the company's
vehicle, its cash in the bank, all of the supplies he has on hand, and the
dolly he uses to help move the heavier parcels. Marilyn nods and shows Joe how
these are reported in accounts called Vehicles, Cash, Supplies, and Equipment. She
mentions one asset Joe hadn't considered—Accounts
Receivable. If Joe delivers parcels, but isn't paid immediately for
the delivery, the amount owed to Direct Delivery is an asset known as Accounts
Receivable.
Prepaids
Marilyn brings up another less
obvious asset—the unexpired portion of prepaid expenses. Suppose
Direct Delivery pays $1,200 on December 1 for a six-month insurance premium on
its delivery vehicle. That divides out to be $200 per month ($1,200 ÷ 6
months). Between December 1 and December 31, $200 worth of insurance premium is
"used up" or "expires". The expired amount will
be reported as Insurance
Expense on December's income statement. Joe asks Marilyn where
the remaining $1,000 of unexpired insurance premium would be reported. On the
December 31 balance sheet, Marilyn tells him, in an asset account called Prepaid
Insurance.
Other examples of things that might be paid for before they are used
include supplies and annual dues to a trade association. The portion that
expires in the current accounting period is listed as an expense on the income
statement; the part that has not yet expired is listed as an asset on the
balance sheet.
Marilyn assures Joe that he will soon see a significant link between the
income statement and balance sheet, but for now she continues with her
explanation of assets.
Cost
Principle and Conservatism
Joe learns that each of his company's
assets was recorded at its original cost, and even if the fair market
value of an item increases, an accountant will not increase the recorded amount
of that asset on the balance sheet. This is the result of another basic
accounting principle known as the cost principle.
Although accountants generally do
not increase the value of an asset, they might decrease its
value as a result of a concept known as conservatism. For
example, after a few months in business, Joe may decide that he can help out
some customers—as well as earn additional revenues—by carrying an inventory of
packing boxes to sell. Let's say that Direct Delivery purchased 100 boxes
wholesale for $1.00 each. Since the time when Joe bought them, however, the
wholesale price of boxes has been cut by 40% and at today's price he could
purchase them for $0.60 each. If the net realizable
value of his inventory is less than the original recorded cost,
the principle of conservatism directs the accountant to report the lower amount
as the asset's value on the balance sheet.
In short, the cost principle generally prevents assets from being
reported at more than cost, while conservatism might require assets to be
reported at less than their cost.
Depreciation
Joe also needs to know that the
reported amounts on his balance sheet for assets such as equipment, vehicles,
and buildings are routinely reduced by depreciation. Depreciation is required
by the basic accounting principle known as the matching principle. Depreciation
is used for assets whose life is not indefinite—equipment wears out, vehicles
become too old and costly to maintain, buildings age, and some assets (like
computers) become obsolete. Depreciation is the allocation of the cost of the
asset to Depreciation
Expense on the income statement over its useful life.
As an example, assume that Direct
Delivery's van has a useful life of five years and was purchased at a cost of
$20,000. The accountant might match $4,000 ($20,000 ÷ 5 years) of Depreciation
Expense with each year's revenues for five years. Each year the carrying amount of
the van will be reduced by $4,000. (The carrying amount—or "book
value"—is reported on the balance sheet and it is the cost of the van
minus the total depreciation since the van was acquired.) This means that after
one year the balance sheet will report the carrying amount of the delivery van
as $16,000, after two years the carrying amount will be $12,000, etc. After
five years—the end of the van's expected useful life—its carrying amount is
zero.
Joe wants to be certain that he
understands what Marilyn is telling him regarding the assets on the balance
sheet, so he asks Marilyn if the balance sheet is, in effect, showing what the
company's assets are worth. He is surprised to hear Marilyn say that the assets
are not reported on the balance sheet at their worth (fair market value).
Long-term assets (such as buildings, equipment, and furnishings) are reported
at their cost minus the amounts already sent to the income statement
as Depreciation Expense. The result is that a building's market value may
actually have increased since it was acquired, but the amount on the balance
sheet has been consistently reduced as the accountant moved some of
its cost to Depreciation Expense on the income statement in order to achieve
the matching principle.
Another asset, Office Equipment, may
have a fair market value that is much smaller than the carrying amount reported
on the balance sheet. (Accountants view depreciation as an allocation process—allocating
the cost to expense in order to match the costs with the revenues generated by
the asset. Accountants do not consider depreciation to be a valuation process.)
The asset Land is
not depreciated, so it will appear at its original cost even if the land is now
worth one hundred times more than its cost.
Short-term (current) asset amounts are likely to be close to their
market values, since they tend to "turn over" in relatively short
periods of time.
Marilyn cautions Joe that the balance sheet reports only the assets
acquired and only at the cost reported in the transaction. This means that a
company's reputation—as excellent as it might be—will not be listed as an
asset. It also means that Jeff Bezos will not appear as an asset on
Amazon.com's balance sheet; Nike's logo will not appear as an asset on its
balance sheet; etc. Joe is surprised to hear this, since in his opinion these
items are perhaps the most valuable things those companies have. Marilyn tells
Joe that he has just learned an important lesson that he should remember when
reading a balance sheet.
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