Long term
The first one is unsecured, the second one secured.
Debt financing is when a firm raises money for working capital or capital expenditures. They can do this by selling bonds, bills, or notes to individual and/or institutional investors.
On a personal level, say credit card debt, a liability cannot become an asset to the same person. However a liability for you is an asset for someone else under accounts/notes receivable. In business, an unreceived revenue account can be purchased from another business, thus removing the liability from the financial statements for that business.
short notes on : 1. cost of capital of a bond. 2. cost of capital of an equity share. 3. discounted pay backperiod. 4. modified internal rate of return. 5. mutual funds in india.
Red seals and serial numbers indicate that a bill is a United States Notes. US Notes were very similar to the current Federal Reserve notes in that they weren't backed by gold or silver in the Treasury. US Notes were issued from 1862 up till the 1960s. Because there was no monetary difference between the 2 forms, US Notes were phased out and all subsequent bills were issued as Federal Reserve Notes to save on printing costs.
no
Notes Receivable are "not" classified as a liability at all, since they are receivable (meaning the company will receive them) they are classified as Long Term Assets. Accounts Receivable (Current Asset) Notes Receivable (Long Term Asset) Accounts "Payable" (Current Liability) Notes "Payable" (Long Term Liability)
Yes.
Current liability is a liability that will be paid for in a short period of time, usually consisting of less than a year. Accounts payable are current liabilities, while notes payable are long term liabilities.
Only the portion of it that is due within the next 12 months is current. The balance is a deferred or non-current liability.
Notes payable is same like accounts payable a liability of business and it is shown under current liability section of balance sheet.
Accounts payables and salaries payable are part of current liability in balance sheet while current portion of mortgage notes payable is part ot current liability and remaining portion is part of long term liability.
The first one is unsecured, the second one secured.
Notes payable is a liability for business payable in future time so like all liabilities which has credit balance, notes payable also has credit balance and shown under current liability section of balance sheet.
Long term = non current Payable = liability Therefore, I would put it under the Non-Current Liabilities heading in the balance sheet.
It is recorded as an asset.
" 'Renewable unsecured subordinated notes' are personalized, small-scale junk bonds. The debt is unrated, uninsured, has no sinking fund to pay off the notes and has no trading market." -quoted from Chuck Jaffe's MarketWatch article <a href="http://www.marketwatch.com/news/story/high-yield-enticing-unsecured-unrated/story.aspx?guid={D0A924C5-51FA-4C30-99EF-65FD95B1DC6B}"> Stupid Investment of the Week: High yield is enticing, but unsecured, unrated notes are not</a>