Welcome back to Accounting stuff I’m James and today i’ll show you how to make a Balance Sheet the Balance Sheet is one of the three main Financial Statements the other two called the Income
statement which we did in the last CashNews.co and the Cash Flow statement which we’ll cover next time a Balance Sheet or a statement of financial position is a financial report that gives us a snapshot of a business’s Assets,
Liabilities and Equity at a single point in time now if you’ve watched my CashNews.cos before then you’ve probably heard this one the stuff that a business owns is equal to the stuff that a business owes in other words a business owns
Assets and it owes Liabilities to third parties the difference between the two is called Equity which is what the business owes back to its owners and so we have the Accounting equation Assets are equal to
Liabilities plus Equity when we take a snapshot of this Accounting equation at a single point in time we’re looking at a Balance Sheet we’ll call this one the basic Balance Sheet and as its name
suggests it’s got to balance that means that total Assets must always equal total Liabilities and Equity a detailed Balance Sheet would look something like this we expand out Assets into current and
non-current current Assets are short-term Assets things like receivables and prepaid expenses on the other hand non-current Assets are long-term Assets there are two main types the ones that you can touch and the ones that you
can’t touch we do the same thing with Liabilities current Liabilities are short-term Liabilities payables, accrued expenses and deferred Revenue and non-current Liabilities long-term
Liabilities stuff like long-term Loans Equity on the other hand is a different kettle of fish first we have Capital contributions which is the money invested into the business by its owners for a company with shareholders we might
call this common stock and then we have the businesses retained earnings which are its accumulated Profits held for future use i do have a Balance Sheet cheat sheet which summarizes all of this the link’s in the description anyways How do you make a basic
Balance Sheet? first you need another Accounting report called a trial balance this shows us the closing balances for every general ledger account at a point in time here’s a trial balance for a dating app called Tumble it was run at the end of Tumble’s
financial year December 31st and it’s an adjusted trial balance because all adjusting entries have already been posted we can see all of Tumble’s accounts and balances debits are on the left and Credits are on the right at the bottom we can see that the debits total to
$87,700,000 which matches the total Credits exactly this means that Tumble’s trial balance is in balance which is very important because if the trial balance is in balance then the Balance Sheet also has to balance i don’t think i’ve ever said
balance so much in my life accounts in a trial balance are usually arranged in a pattern above this line we have the stuff that Tumble owns its Assets and below the line we have the stuff that Tumble owes its Liabilities and Equity we also have its
Revenue and expense accounts which we used last time to make the Income statement by the way if you’re finding these CashNews.cos useful and you’d like to support the channel then you can click on the join button below thanks to all my channel members
who’ve done that already you guys are absolute legends and i really appreciate it thank you! So how do we make a Balance Sheet? There’s two ways to do this the right way and the wrong way and i’ll show you both We’ll start with the wrong way because this is
a really easy mistake to make and it goes something like this we take all of tumble’s Assets, Liabilities and Equity accounts and we pop them in their sections of the Balance Sheet in theory it’s the right thing to do
but check this out total Assets add up to $36,350,000 and total Liabilities plus Equity add up to $25,650,000 that’s the difference of $10,700,000 so this Balance Sheet doesn’t balance what went wrong? We forgot to
include Tumble’s Revenue and expenses these are part of Tumble’s retained earnings it’s Profits held for future use which also sit in the Equity section of its Balance Sheet when we include them total
Liabilities plus Equity also add up to $36,350,000 so Tumble’s basic Balance Sheet is in balance remember the Balance Sheet is a snapshot of a businesses Assets, Liabilities and
Equity at a single point in time on the left side we can see what the business owns and on the right side we can see what it owes to third parties and its owners How do we make a detailed Balance Sheet? we follow the same process but first we need to divide
Tumble’s Assets and Liabilities into current and non-current cash, accounts receivable, other receivables and prepaid expenses are all current Assets property, plant and equipment and intangibles are non-current Assets
accounts payable, Taxes payable, accrued expenses and deferred Revenue are all current Liabilities and long-term Loans is a non-current liability in the Equity section common stock is a type of
Capital contribution and everything below that is retained earnings these are Tumble’s Profits held for future use their opening retained earnings at the start of the year less Dividends plus Tumble’s net Profit in the
current year and that’s it we can pick up all these numbers and put them in our detailed Balance Sheet so we’ve got current Assets $31,050,000 and $5.3m in non-current Assets current Liabilities of $14.4m and
non-current Liabilities of $1.2m dollars then we have $1,050,000 in common stock which is a type of Capital contribution and finally $19,700,000 in retained earnings or Profits held for future use total Assets are equal to total
Liabilities plus Equity so this Balance Sheet is in balance thanks for watching remember to like and subscribe if you found this useful in the next CashNews.co we’ll cover the Cash Flow statement see you then
CashNews, your go-to portal for financial news and insights.
⏱️TIMESTAMPS
00:00 – Intro
00:17 – Balance Sheet Definition
00:33 – What is a Basic Balance Sheet?
01:15 – What is a Detailed Balance Sheet?
02:18 – How to Make a Basic Balance Sheet
05:11 – How to Make a Detailed Balance Sheet
Tkvibq
This was excellent 🔥
how can i make myself start liking accounting? i get distracted so easily? how can I focus?
SIR, PLEASE CHECK THE RETAINED EARNING CALCULATION ONCE IN THE TRIAL BALANCE "OPENING RETAINED EAR+REVENUE
DIVIDENDS -PREPAID EXPENSESADMIN COST- COGS- SELLING AND MARKETING COST- DEP & AMORT – INTEREST EXPENSE – TAX EXPENSE = 19700. PLEASE CORRECT ME IF I'M WRONGIs the total of balance sheet and total net assent balance the same? I need guidance.and im looking details in sage 50 accounts.
Please how did you get your retained earnings
Bro is better than my teacher
Oh dear – I'm 2:01 in and my brain just stopped. I really want to learn this stuff but I'm going stick with IN and OUT and find an accountant (used to be married to one) 🤣
Is this balance sheet same as the Indian accounts book's balance sheet???
why would 'cost of sales' and all other expenses form part of equity?
Why did I start a business?!! Lol! This was like trying to understand chinese to me. All these comments are going on about how great this is, but I can't get my head wrapped around this madness. I should've just started a lemonade stand in front of my house haha!
This guy is amazing thank you so much
lovely
Keep up the good work(especially the videography)!
Balance CHECKER please explain in separate video
I appreciate so much your video, can you please explain why Prepaid Expenses are located under Assets, since I would consider it as an expense? 🤔Thank you
https://youtu.be/GVF3_UWBWEA?si=Mrko9OZ7rTy5XZwF
Why are dividends grouped in the retained earnings section. I thought they have to be deducted.
very helpful, Thank you
Thanks For This ,Love From Kenya
The comments are hilarious. This is far from difficult. Try Finance if you want difficult.
Thank you very much, you are a good teacher.
Writing accounting in thr next 1 hr, bruh you helped so much 😊much luv❤🗿
I do think my financial accounting lecturer has to go through this video so that he can learn how to do his work properly.
Where do these two things go on the BS and IS
– 12% bank loan 60,000 (credit)
– Interest paids so far – 6000
It was from an exam I had and i wasn't sure for the accounting adjustment
Having trouble understand why assets must equal liabilities or vise versa. What happens if these two dont equal out?
What about trading profit and loss accounts 😮😮😮