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13y ago

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Is payment in advance a current asset or a liability in the balance sheet in the UK?

Advances from any other person to our firm how will i take - In Liability what is the head


Why both side equal of balance sheet?

Both sides of the Balance Sheet equal thanks to double entry accounting. For every debit there is a corresponding credit and vice versa. therefore when you take the balances of all the accounts into a Trial balance they have to balance. A Balance Sheet is derived from the TB so the same holds true.


How does the order of liquidity apply to the balance sheet?

The order of liquidity is applied in the balance sheet as a presentation of assets. It is in the order of the amount of time it would usually take to convert them into cash.


How do you calculate assets per share?

Take total assets from the balance sheet and divide it by total number of shares


Where does interest paid on loan go in the balance sheet?

INTEREST ON LOAN NEVER GOES TO THE BALANCE SHEET AS IT IS A REVENUE EXPENDITURE. IT WILL SHOWN AS AN EXPENSE FOR THE FINANCIAL YEAR AND DEBITED IN PROFIT AND LOSS ACCOUNT BEFORE ARRIVING AT NET PROFIT. MOHAMMED ASIF MUSCAT Mohammed, You are an idiot. Yes it does as interest payable. How do you pay for it? Obviously with cash. It therefore flows through the balance sheet. What state are you from so I can have them take away your cpa license. Chances are you don't have one. Joe Bob Interest paid on a loan does not go directly on the balance sheet as correctly stated by Muscat and instead is seen as a line item on the profit and loss statement. Indirectly however, paid interest is a reduction of cash (cr entry) and owners' equity (dr entry) which obviously effects the balance sheet. Unpaid accrued interest can however be seen on the balance sheet as a short-term liability. Accrued interest in the case of a term note represents interest unpaid from the last note payment to the ending date of the balance sheet. For example, if the last note payment was on 12/20/y0, the balance sheet would show 11/31th of the interest associated with the 01/20/y1 note payment in accrued interest. So... be nice; both of your answers have a component that correctly answers the question. Regards, MJG


Liability in a sentence?

I can't take you with me because you're a social liability.


Which statement has the average liabilities?

Balance sheet What you'll need is two quarterly balance sheet Example Balance sheet from 2008 and one from 2009 to get the average liabilities you'll take total liabilities from 2008 add it to 2009 total liabilities and divide both by two example 2008 total liabilities = 8 2009 total liabilities = 10 Average liabilities = 8 + 10 = 18 18 / 2 = 9 You will do the same with assets. Usually the average is provided for you in a the problem.


Are notes receivable liability?

NO, notes receivable is an asset and are listed as such. A receivable is something the company expects to collect over time, account receivable is the account used for accounts that will be paid for in a year or less, while a note receivable is used for ones that are expected to take over a year to pay. Both Accounts receivable and Notes receivable are assets and are listed on the Balance Sheet as such. (GAAP)


What is the difference between a debt and a liability?

A liability is generally anything that costs you money. A phone bill is a liability. A debt is a kind of liability. You can take out a loan for a car- that is a debt; something owed in the future.


What is a contingent?

Contingent means that something can change. When you have a contingency plan you have a plan in place that will take effect if the environment changes.


What types of accounts have debit balances?

Well, it depends on if your talking about international trade or GAAP accounting, because they are vice versa on a balance sheet. Just remember for accounting purposes that the debits (+) are all on the left side of the balance sheet, and credits/equity on the right (Debt and Shareholder equity). If they are assets that are potentially future income (such as your asset holdings, accounts receivable, etc.) that they belong on the left side of the balance sheet with cash and what not. If it is a debt (or credit) such as notes payable, long term debt, and equity (in the form of issued stock) it belongs on the right side of an accounting balance sheet. If your question is based on international economics, well that may take more time to explain than I care to type. I hope this helps to answer your question.


What is the Accounting Journal Entry for Excess Inventory Reserve?

you take it in the closing stock .. it means that you have already added with in closing stock .. therefore you are closing stock reduce ... so excess stock entry will be made directly for the purpose of balance sheet. you are give this effect on it stock sheet only..