Lesson 112 min

Balance Sheet Structure

Learn the fundamental structure and layout of the balance sheet.

Learning Objectives

  • Understand the balance sheet equation
  • Learn the difference between assets, liabilities, and equity
  • Recognize that the balance sheet is a snapshot in time
  • Navigate the standard balance sheet format

Balance Sheet Structure#

The balance sheet tells you what a company owns and owes at a specific moment in time. It's like a photograph of the company's financial position.

While the income statement shows performance over a period (like a movie), the balance sheet shows position at a single point in time (like a photograph). It's always dated "as of" a specific date.

The Fundamental Equation#

The balance sheet is built on one equation that must always hold true:

Assets = Liabilities + Shareholders' Equity

This is called the accounting equation or balance sheet equation. It's why the statement is called a "balance" sheet—the two sides must always balance.

What Each Component Represents#

ComponentWhat It MeansAnalogy
AssetsWhat the company ownsYour house, car, savings
LiabilitiesWhat the company owesYour mortgage, car loan, credit cards
Shareholders' EquityNet worth (Assets minus Liabilities)Your net worth

Why It Must Balance#

Think of it this way: every asset must be funded somehow. Either:

  • Someone lent the company money (liability), or
  • The company earned it or shareholders invested it (equity)

There's no other way to get assets—they come from debt or equity.

Rearranging the Equation

You can rearrange the equation to show net worth:

Shareholders' Equity = Assets - Liabilities

This is the company's "book value"—what shareholders theoretically own after paying all debts.

Balance Sheet Format#

Balance sheets typically follow this structure:

ASSETS
├── Current Assets
│   ├── Cash and Cash Equivalents
│   ├── Accounts Receivable
│   ├── Inventory
│   └── Prepaid Expenses
└── Non-Current Assets
    ├── Property, Plant & Equipment
    ├── Intangible Assets
    └── Long-term Investments

LIABILITIES
├── Current Liabilities
│   ├── Accounts Payable
│   ├── Short-term Debt
│   └── Accrued Expenses
└── Non-Current Liabilities
    ├── Long-term Debt
    └── Deferred Tax Liabilities

SHAREHOLDERS' EQUITY
├── Common Stock
├── Additional Paid-in Capital
├── Retained Earnings
└── Treasury Stock

Current vs. Non-Current#

The key distinction on both sides is timing:

Current (Short-term)#

  • Expected to be converted to cash (assets) or paid (liabilities) within one year
  • Indicates short-term liquidity

Non-Current (Long-term)#

  • Not expected to be converted to cash or paid within one year
  • Represents long-term structure

This current/non-current split helps you assess both liquidity (can the company pay its bills?) and solvency (is the company financially stable long-term?).

A Simple Example#

Here's a simplified balance sheet:

ASSETSAmount
Cash$50,000
Accounts Receivable$30,000
Inventory$40,000
Total Current Assets$120,000
Property & Equipment$200,000
Total Assets$320,000
LIABILITIESAmount
Accounts Payable$25,000
Short-term Debt$15,000
Total Current Liabilities$40,000
Long-term Debt$100,000
Total Liabilities$140,000
SHAREHOLDERS' EQUITYAmount
Common Stock$50,000
Retained Earnings$130,000
Total Equity$180,000

Check: Assets ($320,000) = Liabilities ($140,000) + Equity ($180,000) ✓

Point-in-Time Nature#

The balance sheet is dated "as of" a specific date—typically the last day of a quarter or year.

Window Dressing

Companies sometimes engage in "window dressing"—taking actions right before quarter-end to make the balance sheet look better. For example, collecting receivables aggressively or delaying payments. Compare multiple periods to spot unusual patterns.

Key Ratios Preview#

The balance sheet is the source for many important financial ratios:

RatioWhat It MeasuresFormula Preview
Current RatioShort-term liquidityCurrent Assets ÷ Current Liabilities
Debt-to-EquityLeverageTotal Debt ÷ Shareholders' Equity
Book Value per ShareNet worth per shareEquity ÷ Shares Outstanding

We'll explore these ratios in detail in Module 5.

How to Read a Balance Sheet#

Step 1: Check the Date#

  • When is this snapshot from?
  • Is it the most recent period?

Step 2: Review Total Assets#

  • How large is the company?
  • What's the mix of current vs. non-current assets?

Step 3: Examine Liabilities#

  • How much debt does the company have?
  • What's due soon vs. long-term?

Step 4: Calculate Net Worth#

  • Assets minus Liabilities = Shareholders' Equity
  • Is equity growing over time?

Step 5: Compare to Prior Periods#

  • How have assets, liabilities, and equity changed?
  • Are trends moving in the right direction?

Key Takeaways

  • The balance sheet shows what a company owns (assets) and owes (liabilities) at a point in time
  • The fundamental equation: Assets = Liabilities + Shareholders' Equity
  • Current items are expected to convert or be paid within one year
  • Non-current items are longer-term
  • The balance sheet always balances—every asset is funded by debt or equity
  • Compare multiple periods to identify trends and spot window dressing