What is Balance Sheet? How to prepare Balance Sheet | Lecture 14 | JKSSB ACCOUNTS ASSISTANT EXAM |

What is Balance Sheet? How to prepare Balance Sheet | ACCOUNTS ASSISTANT EXAM - FINANCE DEPARTMENT | LECTURE 14 | CA MOHAMAD LATEEF (AIR-35 CA FINAL) Website :- www.eactclasses.com Link of Book:- https://drive.google.com/file/d/10iXL... BALANCE SHEET A Balance Sheet is a statement of financial position of a business concern at a given date. It is called a Balance Sheet because it is a sheet of balances of those ledger accounts (Real & Personal Accounts) which have not been closed till the preparation of Trading and Profit and Loss Account. After the preparation of Trading and Profit and Loss Account the balances left in the trial balance represent either personal or real accounts. In other words, they either represent assets or liabilities existing on a particular date. Excess of assets over liabilities represent the capital and is indicative of the financial soundness of a company. A Balance Sheet is also described as a “Statement showing the Sources and Application of Capital”. It is a statement and not an account and prepared from real and personal accounts. The left-hand side of the Balance Sheet may be viewed as description of the sources from which the business has obtained the capital with which it currently operates and the right-hand side as a description of the form in which that capital is invested on a specified date. Characteristics of Balance sheet The characteristics of a Balance Sheet are summarised as under: 1. A Balance Sheet is only a statement and not an account. It has no debit side or credit side. The headings of the two sides are ‘Assets’ and ‘Liabilities’. 2. A Balance Sheet is prepared at a particular point of time and not for a particular period. The information contained in the Balance Sheet is true only at that particular point of time at which it is prepared. 3. A Balance Sheet is a summary of balances of those ledger accounts which have not been closed by transfer to Trading and Profit and Loss Account. 4. A Balance Sheet shows the nature and value of assets and the nature and the amount of liabilities at a given date. Classification of assets and liabilities in a balance sheet Assets Assets are the properties possessed by a business and the amount due to it from others. The various types of assets are:  Fixed Assets: All assets that are acquired for the purpose of using them in the conduct of business operations and not for reselling to earn profit are called fixed assets. These assets are not readily convertible into cash in the normal course of business operations. Useful life more than one year.  Current Assets: All assets which are acquired for reselling during the course of business are to be treated as current assets. Examples are cash and bank balances, inventory, accounts receivables, etc.  Tangible Assets: There are definite assets which can be seen, touched and have volume such as machinery, cash, stock, etc.  Intangible Assets: Those assets which cannot be seen, touched and have no volume but have value are called intangible assets. Goodwill, patents and trade marks are examples of such assets.  Fictitious Assets: Fictitious assets are not assets at all since they are not represented by any tangible possession. They appear on the asset side simply because of a debit balance in a particular account not yet written off e.g. Deferred revenue expenditure, discount on issue of Debentures etc.  Contingent Assets: Contingent assets come into existence upon the happening of a certain event or the expiry of a certain time. If that event happens, the asset becomes available otherwise not, for example, sale agreement to acquire some property, hire purchase contracts etc. Liabilities A liability is an amount which a business is legally bound to pay. It is a claim by an outsider on the assets of a business. The liabilities of a business concern may be classified as:   Long Term Liabilities: The liabilities or obligations of a business which are not payable within the next accounting period but will be payable within next five to ten years are known as long term liabilities. Public deposits, debentures, bank loan are the examples of long-term liabilities.  Current Liabilities: All short-term obligations generally due and payable within one year are current liabilities. This includes trade creditors, bills payable etc.  Contingent Liabilities: A contingent liability is one which is not an actual liability. They become actual on the happenings of some event which is uncertain. In other words, they would become liabilities in the future provided the contemplated event occurs. Since such a liability is not actual liability it is not shown in the Balance Sheet. Usually it is mentioned in the form of a footnote below the Balance Sheet. #Balance_Sheet #jkssb #Accounts_Assistant

Bank Reconciliation Statement | Lecture 15 | JKSSB ACCOUNTS ASSISTANT EXAM | CA MOHAMAD LATEEF
▶︎

Bank Reconciliation Statement | Lecture 15 | JKSSB ACCOUNTS ASSISTANT EXAM | CA MOHAMAD LATEEF

What is Profit and Loss Account? How to Prepare Profit & Loss account | Lecture 13 |JKSSB |CA LATEEF
▶︎

What is Profit and Loss Account? How to Prepare Profit & Loss account | Lecture 13 |JKSSB |CA LATEEF

How to Read & Analyze the Balance Sheet Like a CFO | The Complete Guide to Balance Sheet Analysis
▶︎

How to Read & Analyze the Balance Sheet Like a CFO | The Complete Guide to Balance Sheet Analysis

Public Financial Management System (PFMS) | Lecture 22 | JKSSB ACCOUNTS ASSISTANT EXAM | CA LATEEF
▶︎

Public Financial Management System (PFMS) | Lecture 22 | JKSSB ACCOUNTS ASSISTANT EXAM | CA LATEEF

The BALANCE SHEET for BEGINNERS (Full Example)
▶︎

The BALANCE SHEET for BEGINNERS (Full Example)

ONLY 20 mins FULL BALANCE SHEET Prep | Dr. Anil Lamba
▶︎

ONLY 20 mins FULL BALANCE SHEET Prep | Dr. Anil Lamba

Statistics Lecture 15 | Tabulation | FAA | Finance Accounts Assistant | Zaid Sir
▶︎

Statistics Lecture 15 | Tabulation | FAA | Finance Accounts Assistant | Zaid Sir

Partnership Accounts | Lecture 16 | JKSSB ACCOUNTS ASSISTANT EXAM | CA MOHAMAD LATEEF (AIR-35 )
▶︎

Partnership Accounts | Lecture 16 | JKSSB ACCOUNTS ASSISTANT EXAM | CA MOHAMAD LATEEF (AIR-35 )

How to Build a 3-Statement Financial Model From Scratch (Expert Guide + Free Template)
▶︎

How to Build a 3-Statement Financial Model From Scratch (Expert Guide + Free Template)

The INCOME STATEMENT Explained (Profit & Loss / P&L)
▶︎

The INCOME STATEMENT Explained (Profit & Loss / P&L)

SC-OBC छात्रों को बड़ी राहत! Domicile Certificate में बड़ा बदलाव | Dr Pankaj Mishra
▶︎

SC-OBC छात्रों को बड़ी राहत! Domicile Certificate में बड़ा बदलाव | Dr Pankaj Mishra

Trial Balance |Lecture 10 |  ACCOUNTS ASSISTANT EXAM - FINANCE DEPARTMENT | JKSSB | CA MOHD LATEEF
▶︎

Trial Balance |Lecture 10 | ACCOUNTS ASSISTANT EXAM - FINANCE DEPARTMENT | JKSSB | CA MOHD LATEEF

Statistics Lecture 11 | Methods of Collecting Secondary Data | Finance Accounts Assistant | Zaid Sir
▶︎

Statistics Lecture 11 | Methods of Collecting Secondary Data | Finance Accounts Assistant | Zaid Sir

Concept of Social Accounting | LECTURE 20  JKSSB |ACCOUNTS ASSISTANT  | CA LATEEF (AIR-35  CA FINAL)
▶︎

Concept of Social Accounting | LECTURE 20 JKSSB |ACCOUNTS ASSISTANT | CA LATEEF (AIR-35 CA FINAL)

How 2 kids exposed CBSE’s biggest BLUNDER
▶︎

How 2 kids exposed CBSE’s biggest BLUNDER

I speak 12 languages - copy my 30 min learning routine
▶︎

I speak 12 languages - copy my 30 min learning routine

A Complete Guide to Adjusting Entries
▶︎

A Complete Guide to Adjusting Entries

Financial Management | Lecture 18 | JKSSB ACCOUNTS ASSISTANT | CA MOHD LATEEF (AIR-35  CA FINAL)
▶︎

Financial Management | Lecture 18 | JKSSB ACCOUNTS ASSISTANT | CA MOHD LATEEF (AIR-35 CA FINAL)

Learn 80% of Accounting in under 20 Minutes
▶︎

Learn 80% of Accounting in under 20 Minutes