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Sept 10, 2025

Basics

What Is a Balance Sheet?

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What Is a Balance Sheet?

Every company has a balance sheet — a financial document that provides a snapshot of the company's equity, assets, and liabilities at a given moment. Along with the income statement and cash flow statement, it serves as a key sign of the company's financial health and stability.

The basic formula for a balance sheet is:

Total assets = total liabilities + total equity.

What do these metrics mean?

The assets are what a business owns, the liabilities are what it owes, and equity is the shareholders’ stake in the company.

Why analyze accounting assets and liabilities?

Analyzing accounting assets and liabilities gives you an insight into a company’s liquidity, financial health, solvency, and capital structure. Can it meet its long-term obligation? What is the business’s potential to grow and expand? You can find the answers to all these questions and more by analyzing a balance sheet.

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What is the difference between active and passive assets?

Active assets are those that directly generate income. Companies often use passive assets for investment or as a means of protecting wealth rather than actively contributing to the overall profit of the company.

Active assets:

  • inventory and equipment;

  • accounts receivable;

  • patents.

Passive assets:

  • investments in securities (stocks, bonds, etc.);

  • long-term deposits and savings;

  • real estate investment.

What are the types of assets?

Current assets

Current assets are ones that are liquid enough that they can be readily converted into cash.

  1. Cash itself and cash equivalents. This can include not only actual bank accounts, but short-term investments like treasury bills and money market funds.

  2. Accounts receivable. This is money owed to an organization for goods and/or services already provided. If worse comes to worst, this outstanding debt can be leveraged to borrow the cash the company needs.

  3. Inventory. Everything in the process of being manufactured and sold - from raw materials, to goods on store shelves.

  4. Marketable securities. Mutual funds, stocks, and bonds a company can trade.

  5. Prepaid expenses. Things a company has paid for, but has yet to receive, including estimated taxes.

The more current assets a company has, the better. However, the number of current assets can vary from one industry to another. In service-based companies it is lower, while retail businesses have more current assets.

Non-current assets

Non-current assets are vital for the business’s growth and can’t be converted into cash within a fiscal year.

  1. Tangible assets. Land, buildings, vehicles, and equipment used for production or service delivery are examples. Anything that exists physically.

  2. Intangible assets. Intellectual property is a good example. These assets can contribute to a company’s position on the market. Intangible assets are usually not listed in a balance sheet.

  3. Long-term investments. These are held for long periods (more than a year): real estate, stakes in other companies, bonds and the like. Unlike marketable securities, they serve strategic or long-term growth purposes.

  4. Long-term receivables. Money that other businesses of clients owe to the company, for example installment sales or loans.

 Current assetsNon-current assets
PurposeEnsure liquidity in the short-termSupport long-term business operations and growth
LiquidityHighly liquidHighly illiquid
Financial impactImportant for meeting short-term obligationsCrucial for long-term planning and management

What are the types of liabilities?

Just as with assets, current and non-current are the two types of liabilities. The main difference is the time when a company meets the obligations.

Current liabilities

These must be fulfilled within one operating cycle or accounting year. They too show the business’s liquidity and the ability to meet its immediate financial obligations. Current liabilities are often settled with current assets.

  1. Accounts payable. How much the company owes for goods or services. They are usually due within several months depending on the contract.

  2. Short-term loans. Bank overdrafts, or short-term financial obligations.

  3. Accrued expenses. Outstanding expenses that have yet to be paid out.

  4. Dividends payable. Generally paid a few months after being declared.

These are all examples of ways you can measure how much money a company is good for without a need for an influx of cash to meet its obligations.

Non-current liabilities

  1. Long-term debt. Bank loans, corporate bonds, mortgages, and other obligations a company has more than a year to settle.

  2. Long-term lease payments.

  3. Deferred tax liabilities.

  4. Pension obligations.

 Current liabilitiesNon-current liabilities
PurposeFinance short-term needsFinance long-term needs
DurationAre due within one yearAre due within several years
Financial impactDirectly affect liquidity ratiosAffect solvency ratios

The passive/active indicator: what is it and what is its function?

The passive/active indicator is a valuable tool for measuring financial health and solvency, evaluating possible risks, supporting well-weighed decision making, and analyzing capital structure. It shows the correlation between a company's liabilities (passive) and its assets (active).

The formula for this indicator is:

Passive/active indicator = Total liabilities / Total assets.

What does this mean?

If the indicator is greater than 1, the company has more liabilities than assets. This is generally not seen as a sign of a good company to invest in, as it is likely to either go under, or need to be rescued with an influx of cash.

Conversely, if the indicator is less than 1, the company is in good shape.

Another important indicator: current liquidity

Analyze the working capital ratio: divide the assets by the liabilities.If the result is greater than 1, you’re good to go.If the working capital ratio is less than 1, this signals that the company may have liquidity problems and struggles to meet its short-term obligations.

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FAQ

FAQ

What are other financial ratios for analyzing balance sheets?

  1. Debt-to-equity ratio. The company’s liabilities divided by its equity will tell you how much leverage a company has. In other words, it answers the question of how heavily that company relies on borrowing. If it relies on it a lot, and its profits drop, shareholders could be in big trouble.

  2. Quick ratio. Subtract inventory from current assets, and divide the difference by its current liabilities to figure out how much a company can vouch for without having to sell off its inventory.

What does a balance sheet not show?

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