From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
In formal bookeeping and accounting, a balance sheet is
a statement of the financial value (or "worth") of a business
or other organisation (or person) at a particular date, usually
at the end of its "fiscal year ," as distinct from a profit and
loss statement (or "P&L"),
which records income and expenditures over some period. Therefore
a balance sheet is often described as a "snapshot" of the company's
financial condition at that time.
The balance sheet has two parts: assets on the left-hand ("debit") side
or at the top and liabilies on the right-hand ("credit")
side or at the bottom. The assets of the company -- money ("in
hand" or owed to it), investments (including securities and real
estate), and other property -- are equal to the claims for payments
of the persons or organisations owed -- the creditors, lenders,
and shareholders. This standard format for balance
sheets is derived from the principle of double entry bookkeeping .
According to the basic accounting equation:
- assets = liabilities + equity
therefore,
- assets - liabilities = equity.
Equity, which is the shareholders' interest (= "net worth "),
may not reflect the company's true value, since assets are normally
shown (= "carried")
on the balance sheet at what the company paid for them without
any adjustment for increases or decreases in their value since
then.