Accounting Equation & Financial Statements
The accounting equation is the foundation of all bookkeeping. Every transaction must keep it balanced:
Assets = Liabilities + Owners’ Equity
Assets are resources the firm owns. Liabilities are creditors’ claims on those resources. Owners’ equity is what remains for shareholders. If assets exceed liabilities, equity is positive. If liabilities exceed assets, the firm is balance sheet insolvent.
How the Three Statements Connect
graph TD IS[Income Statement Revenue − Expenses = Net Income] BS[Balance Sheet Assets = Liabilities + Equity Snapshot in time] CF[Cash Flow Statement Operating + Investing + Financing Period of time] IS -->|Net Income flows into| RE[Retained Earnings in Owners Equity] RE -->|Part of Equity on| BS CF -->|Ending cash balance appears as| Cash[Cash Asset on Balance Sheet] Cash --> BS IS -. Accrual basis: Income not equal Cash .-> CF
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1. Balance Sheet
What it is: A snapshot of financial position at a single point in time.
Formula: Assets = Liabilities + Owners’ Equity
Assets (listed in order of liquidity — most liquid first)
Current Assets — convertible to cash within 1 year:
- Cash (perfectly liquid)
- Accounts Receivable
- Merchandise Inventory (least liquid current asset)
- Prepaid Expenses
Fixed Assets — long-term use or value:
- Land, buildings, equipment, machinery
- Subject to depreciation = spreading an asset’s cost over its useful life
Intangible Assets — non-physical but economically valuable:
- Patents, trademarks, copyrights, franchise fees
- Goodwill = amount paid for a business beyond the value of its net assets
Liabilities (listed in order they are due)
Current Liabilities — due within 1 year:
- Accounts Payable = unpaid supplier bills
- Wages payable, taxes payable
Long-Term Liabilities — not due for at least 1 year:
- Loans, bonds — borrowed funds on which the company pays interest
Owners’ Equity
- Paid-in Capital = money invested by owners
- Retained Earnings = accumulated net profits not paid out as dividends
Balance Sheet Insolvency: Assets < Liabilities. Even selling all assets will not cover debts. This is an accounting term — Insolvency does not equal Bankruptcy (which is a legal term).
2. Income Statement (Profit-and-Loss Statement)
What it is: A record of revenues and expenses over a period of time.
Formula: Revenues − Expenses = Net Income (or Loss)
The Income Cascade
flowchart LR R[Revenue / Net Sales Top Line] --> GP[Gross Profit = Revenue minus COGS] GP --> OI[Operating Income = Gross Profit minus Operating Expenses] OI --> NI[Net Income Bottom Line = Operating Income minus Taxes]
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| Line | Formula |
|---|---|
| Revenue (Net Sales) | Top line — all money from selling goods/services |
| − Cost of Goods Sold (COGS) | Direct costs of producing the product |
| = Gross Profit | Revenue − COGS |
| − Operating Expenses | Overhead: salaries, R&D, advertising, admin |
| = Operating Income | Gross Profit − Operating Expenses |
| +/− Other income/expense | Interest income, non-operating items |
| − Income Taxes | |
| = Net Income | The bottom line |
EBITDA = Earnings Before Interest, Taxes, Depreciation, and Amortization — strips out accounting and tax effects to reveal core operating performance.
3. Statement of Cash Flows
What it is: Tracks actual cash moving in and out of the business over a period of time.
Formula: Starting Cash + Cash Inflows − Cash Outflows = Ending Cash
Three Activities
| Activity | What it covers |
|---|---|
| Operating | Day-to-day: cash from sales, cash paid to employees/suppliers/rent |
| Investing | Buying/selling long-term assets (equipment, buildings) |
| Financing | Raising or repaying capital: loans, issuing stock, paying dividends |
Dividends are NOT an expense — they are a redistribution of earnings to shareholders.
Critical Distinction: Cash does not equal Net Income
Accrual Accounting records revenue when a deal is made (product delivered), not when cash changes hands. A company can look profitable and still go bankrupt.
‘A firm with high net income but poor cash flow may have problems financing day-to-day activities. Cash is king.‘
| Statement | Metaphor | Time frame |
|---|---|---|
| Balance Sheet | Photograph | Point in time |
| Income Statement | Scoreboard | Period of time |
| Cash Flow Statement | Checkbook | Period of time |
Cash Flow Insolvency (Liquidity Crisis): A company cannot convert assets to cash fast enough to pay its bills — even if it has more assets than liabilities. This is a liquidity problem, distinct from balance sheet insolvency.
Cross-Course Connections
FinancialRatios — ratios are calculated from balance sheet and income statement data
Accounting — who prepares these statements; IFRS/ASPE standards
FinancialManager — uses these statements for planning and control
LongTermFinancing — debt and equity structures appear on the balance sheet
ShortTermFinancing — current liabilities and working capital management
Key Points for Exam
- Assets = Liabilities + Owners’ Equity — must always balance after every transaction
- Balance sheet = snapshot (point in time); income statement and cash flow = period
- Assets listed in order of liquidity (most liquid first); liabilities in order due (current first)
- Net income feeds into retained earnings which appears as owners’ equity on the balance sheet
- Ending cash from cash flow statement appears as Cash asset on the balance sheet
- Cash does not equal Income — accrual accounting books revenue when deal is made, not when paid
- Balance sheet insolvency = assets < liabilities (accounting term, not bankruptcy)
- Cash flow insolvency = cannot convert assets to cash fast enough (liquidity crisis)
- Gross Profit = Revenue − COGS
- Operating Income = Gross Profit − Operating Expenses
- Net Income = Operating Income − Taxes
- EBITDA = strips out interest, taxes, depreciation, amortization to show core operations
Open Questions
- How does revenue recognition differ under IFRS vs. ASPE?