Understanding the Balance Sheet
What is a Balance Sheet?
A balance sheet provides a snapshot of what a company owns (assets) and what it owes (liabilities and equity) at a specific point in time.
It is one of three essential financial statements:
- Balance Sheet — Financial position at a specific point in time. (A snapshot.)
- Income Statement — Overview of profits or losses over a period.
- Cash Flow Statement — Report on how cash is generated and spent.
The Fundamental Equation
Assets = Liabilities + Equity
This equation ensures the balance sheet always balances.
Structure of a Balance Sheet
Assets (What the Company Owns)
- Current Assets — Cash and assets expected to be converted within one year (cash, accounts receivable, inventory).
- Non-Current Assets — Long-term assets (property, plant, equipment, intangible assets).
Liabilities (What the Company Owes)
- Current Liabilities — Obligations due within one year (accounts payable, short-term loans).
- Non-Current Liabilities — Obligations due after one year (long-term loans, bonds payable).
Equity (Shareholder Capital)
Equity represents the company's net worth — what remains for shareholders after all liabilities are deducted from assets. Examples: common stock, retained earnings.
Analyzing the Balance Sheet
| Analysis | What to Look For |
|---|---|
| Liquidity | Current assets vs. current liabilities |
| Financial Stability | Ratio of liabilities to equity |
| Investment Insight | Proportion of non-current assets |
In the American format, assets are listed in order of liquidity (most to least liquid), and liabilities are arranged based on payment priority (earliest to latest).