ShmoopTube
Where Monty Python meets your 10th grade teacher.
Search Thousands of Shmoop Videos
Principles of Finance: Unit 3, The Logic of Balancing a Sheet 3 Views
Share It!
Description:
How does a balance sheet work, and how do you get it to...balance? We'll cover assets, liabilities, depreciation, liquidity, and all the good stuff in-between.
Transcript
- 00:00
principles of finance. a la shmoop. the logic of balancing a sheet. all right
- 00:08
will you taste it balance sheet light earlier in this course and now we're
- 00:11
going in for the heavy French reduction sauces. you know the cream ones. in case [sauces simmer on the stove]
- 00:16
you have the memory casing of a goldfish while we're reprinting the skeletal
- 00:19
bones of the balance sheet from earlier right here. now here's the balance sheet
Full Transcript
- 00:23
for lemonade stands are us three days before the Super Bowl kickoff.
- 00:27
alright skim through the numbers skimming skimming. let's take a little
- 00:30
tour down balance sheet Lane and figure out how we actually apply these terms or
- 00:35
concepts. well the first lines actually begin to tell the story of our little
- 00:39
company. it was capitalized with a loan from grandmama that was originally
- 00:43
granted as a one-year loan. today it's something less than a year, because it's
- 00:47
current ie the principle of five grand is owed within the next year. and we also
- 00:52
know that three grand of that five grand has been burned. we needed to build the
- 00:56
stand by stools and you know all that jazz. well keep reading and we find the
- 01:00
hundred grand peg, that's a lot of dough well the NFL promised to pay us a
- 01:03
hundred grand if we delivered one hundred thousand cups eliminate to the
- 01:06
game. but they're not paying us upfront so we have to front the cash for all the
- 01:11
supplies, and yeah that's risky. the NFL could fire us at the drop of a hat and
- 01:16
if they do we're bankrupt and then some. we'd never be able to pay back our Visa
- 01:19
credit card bill grandmama and the cups vendors by just selling lemonade's in [credit cards get paid in a bankruptcy]
- 01:23
front of our house at our stand. all right but if we do make this deal work
- 01:27
it quote makes us unquote will have massive profits and be able to open five
- 01:32
more lemonade stands. so we roll the dice as it were and pray a lot and hope for
- 01:37
ha thirst inducing weather yeah Pro global. warming screw the polar bears.
- 01:41
we really don't have any other assets at this point is we're skimming there's no
- 01:44
brand value for our lemonade at Inc country time or Minute Maid or
- 01:49
Grandmama's. it's just a name worth squat at this point. note that we have zero
- 01:53
dollars in long-term debt. if grandmama had given us debt due in three years
- 01:58
well then it would live in the long term line not the current one. and note that
- 02:03
our long-term assets are PP&E- plant property and equipment -and in this line
- 02:08
while the item is held as net not gross. usually. what does that mean?
- 02:13
net well we said we'd burned two grand since starting the company. yes we've had
- 02:17
sales and we've also had expenses but we've basically been running close to
- 02:22
break-even thus far. we spent twelve hundred bucks on stools and stand six
- 02:25
months ago, it's our gross value and we figure [balance sheet pictured]
- 02:28
they'll last three years, and then break because someone will sit on them or play
- 02:32
with them after hours and we're not watching the yellow dom.e so we think
- 02:35
that 1,200 bucks original cost will be worth zero in three years and that it
- 02:39
will decline in value arithmetically. in accordance with how most things like
- 02:43
furniture or depreciated in accounting land. so if it goes to zero in three
- 02:47
years than every six months while it will decline in value by 1/6
- 02:51
well 1/6 of 1,200 bucks is $200 so we took $200 off the value of the $1,200 we
- 02:57
started with, and now hold the value of our stools and signage as a grand on our
- 03:01
balance sheet. so how do we best disclose these moving parts on the balance sheet?
- 03:05
we show our work. we have a line for gross PP&E that'd be like 1,200 bucks in
- 03:09
this case, and then we have a line for depreciation of PPE like 200 bucks there,
- 03:14
and then like a line of net PP&E and that's like exactly our grand. all right
- 03:19
get it got it good. note that we could have accounted for this depreciation
- 03:23
value in other ways. we could have thought about it like will our signs and
- 03:27
stools are worth a hundred bucks today on eBay. if we ever went out of business
- 03:31
like if the NFL punted us tomorrow well the signs and stools would get
- 03:35
liquidated on eBay. and so we should carry them today at their liquid value.[boy smiles behind lemonade stand]
- 03:40
yeah not a stupid idea. sorry that was a bad voice. we won't do
- 03:43
that again. in reality that logic is actually closer to the religion of GAAP.
- 03:47
than not right you want to be the most conservative that you can. it's a
- 03:51
realistic however there was one mitigating factor. we're not dead yet.
- 03:55
that is at this moment anyway life is looking bright. the odds of the Super
- 03:59
Bowl happening are high. and if it goes through as planned we make Bank. so since
- 04:03
we are healthy ish we don't need to depreciate everything suddenly to just
- 04:08
being liquidation value like that hundred-dollar thing on eBay. should
- 04:11
things change however we'll want our finger on the red button to bring those
- 04:15
values down fast. hopefully we don't have to do that it's not pretty.
- 04:19
in the same vein note the little note on inventory that it's held at cost. well
- 04:23
we'll have hated dime a cup for the massive cups, but
- 04:27
if we had to turn around and sell them again on eBay or somewhere because all
- 04:30
sales from cups are us are final, then we're likely to get less than a dime for
- 04:35
them so shouldn't we hold the value of that inventory at less? no because we're
- 04:40
still a going concern doing just fine. thank you very much. and we're optimist
- 04:45
at heart and that's why we're entrepreneurs and not you know college
- 04:48
professors or government workers or something. so let's take a pause here and [professor teaches class]
- 04:52
add things up thus far in our little history. on the Left we have two grand in
- 04:56
our Bank of America account a hundred grand in accounts receivable. we've build
- 05:00
the NFL they've promised to pay the week after the Super Bowl.
- 05:03
if 15 grand in inventory $1,000 in equipment the EE of PP&E all of the left
- 05:08
side totals $118,000. okay Alex the right side for 500. all right well we have
- 05:14
$5,000 in short-term debt tick-tick-tick it's coming due soon and
- 05:19
grandmama will send the baseball bat boys if we don't pay. she's a tough old
- 05:24
bird. ten grand payable to cups R Us five
- 05:26
thousand dollars owed on our Visa card for buying sugar and lemons at Costco
- 05:30
and that's about it. so on the right side we have a total of 20 grand.
- 05:33
oh wait that's not balanced at all. isn't the right side supposed to equal the
- 05:37
left like it does in the contested political states like Ohio and Florida?
- 05:41
yes it is. well what's left is shareholders equity. well how do we get
- 05:46
there well we just subtract the liabilities from the assets and we get
- 05:49
118 thousand minus 20,000 equals 98 grams. that means our company's worth 98
- 05:54
grand? well yeah kind of sort of. least the shareholders equity is. there's one more
- 05:58
wrinkle we have to digest first. the equity of the company. see that was the
- 06:02
easy Segway there. if you watch the opening of the sauce company and you [equity explained]
- 06:06
don't have short-term memory issues well you'll recall that in order to
- 06:09
capitalize the company to form it financially the founders wrote a check
- 06:13
for a very small amount of money to buy common stock in their own company. in
- 06:17
this case and let's say that our lemonade stand business is capitalized
- 06:20
with 10 million shares at 100th of a cent each. why so many shares and why so
- 06:25
cheap per share well we're glad you asked. the high number of shares allows
- 06:28
us as a founder CEO financial manager to grant shares to employees who want to
- 06:32
come on board later and help us grow the company.
- 06:34
it also lets us not have to sell fractions of a share
- 06:38
we find other investors who want to put money into us. for example if we
- 06:42
capitalize the company with just 10 shares at $100 to start well then we'd
- 06:46
write a check for a thousand bucks to capitalize the company, but what happens
- 06:50
if we do really well and I don't know in a year an investor is willing to give us
- 06:54
a company valuation of a million bucks and they want to buy 5% of the company
- 06:58
for an investment of 50 grand? well we'd have to sell them half a share and yes
- 07:02
that would be a pain. and the tiny amount per share reflects a few things. here
- 07:05
first that we are not rich and don't have a ton of money to capitalize the
- 07:09
company properly with an injection of a hundred grand or more of our own money. [lemonade stand stocks as example]
- 07:14
we're tiny .and second that our common stock sits behind pretty much every
- 07:18
other class of stock that other investors would buy in our company. if
- 07:22
things go poorly and we have to sell while the bank's get paid first for
- 07:26
their lines of credit, like grandmama then the bondholders get paid yeah,
- 07:30
that's the grandma laughing, then the preferred stockholders like venture
- 07:33
capital people get paid, and then at the very end of the brown rainbow we get
- 07:37
paid our common which is likely a lot of nothing. so we don't want to have a ton
- 07:41
of financial exposure to common stock at this point via our hard-earned cash
- 07:44
savings. we'll own 100 percent of the common stock on day one anyway we're the
- 07:48
sole founder here. so with ten million shares at a hundredth of a cent each
- 07:52
we've written a check to the company for a grand.
- 07:54
note that the notations then under the shareholders equity lines our retained
- 07:59
earnings are ninety seven thousand dollars yeah it's a lot an enormous
- 08:03
value we've created in a short time. Thank You Super Bowl contract .if the
- 08:06
Super Bowl goes well and we actually get paid we're stylin. [stacks and stacks of cash]
- 08:10
all right when you see the word other. you should split your brain in half half
- 08:13
of it should just ignore the term and the other half should get all uptight
- 08:16
about it all. right here's to the uptightness.
- 08:18
note that other comes up a bunch in all flavors of statements. income cash flow
- 08:24
and balance sheets note here that other short-term assets could be things like
- 08:28
prepaid rent or prepaid insurance or prepaid power gas and electric bills.
- 08:33
dicey startup companies are often asked to pay for things well in advance
- 08:37
because war-weary landlords have too many scars from small companies sneaking
- 08:42
off into the night and not paying the rent they owed last month. right but
- 08:46
think about how prepaid rent could should be is
- 08:49
asset. and it could be long-term and short-term right you have three year
- 08:53
prepaid rent on a place for three grand a month 36 months. you are funded by
- 08:59
venture capitalists and at that time you were swimming in cash. the time you know
- 09:03
when you set the rent deal with landlord. in order to get into the best building
- 09:06
in town at a nice discount per month you had to pay all three years of rent in
- 09:11
advance. that's 36 months times 3 grand or 108 thousand bucks .well at the moment
- 09:15
you sign the lease and paid the dough you had a short-term or current asset 12
- 09:21
times 3 grand 36,000 that was current asset got it and a long term asset of 72 [equations]
- 09:26
grand. the remaining 24 months a year or more later at 3 grand a month. all right
- 09:30
as the first 24 months went by the value of long-term asset gradually declined to
- 09:34
zero, and then when there was one year left on the lease it was $36,000 as a
- 09:39
current asset. well funky things happen in big bull markets with regard to rent.
- 09:44
as well oftentimes if long-term rentals happen at the bottom of a bad market the
- 09:49
value of the real estate goes up a lot as time goes by and in theory companies
- 09:54
could quote flip unquote their leases to the market which was paying 3 grand a
- 09:59
month but currently would be happy taking over the lease for 5 grand a
- 10:02
month. in theory companies could mark to market a gain of their current assets in
- 10:07
the rent lease thing, but since they almost never intend to move out of their
- 10:11
offices during the time of their lease and moving costs are usually really high,
- 10:15
in a pane they just leave the numbers as they are but you should know about all
- 10:18
that stuff so you get all this information from shmoop for no extra
- 10:21
cost what a deal. all right liquidity is a hugely important concept to understand [man straightens tie]
- 10:25
and be able to apply as well it's such a big deal that balance sheets are
- 10:29
organized under its auspices. note how our balance sheet is laid out. cash comes
- 10:33
first then accounts receivable then inventory then other think prepaid rent
- 10:37
here then long-term assets like PP&E and lastly other long termers. did things
- 10:42
happen in this order by accident? no not on your life. they're organized by
- 10:47
liquidity and there are really two reasons for that
- 10:50
well first should the company have to be liquidated the easy to sell stuff is
- 10:54
almost always the most liquid stuff and second the values of the more liquid
- 10:59
stuff are way tighter. meaning it become eighty-three thousand two hundred thirty
- 11:03
one dollars in cash in the bank well that cash is worth eighty three
- 11:07
thousand two hundred thirty one dollars. very liquid very precise not a lot of
- 11:10
debate no worries about conflicts of interest in selling that cash or
- 11:13
transferring it or whatever .it's worth what it's worth. but what about a 14-year
- 11:17
old tractor smelting plant or a 22 year old newspaper printing plant. well they
- 11:23
both still function but like what are they worth on eBay? the company paid a
- 11:27
million dollars for the printing plant twenty two years ago is it still worth
- 11:31
the million? well prices have gone up a ton over that time with inflation
- 11:35
printing plants are rare maybe the parts are worth a lot. or is it just scrap [value chart pictured with inflation factored in]
- 11:39
metal worth 10 grand waiting to be hauled away at a price and then melted
- 11:42
down. hmm very wide range there. low liquidity
- 11:45
low precision. anyway if you think about it cash would be super easy to liquidate.
- 11:50
an account receivable would be like collecting from the NFL the dough they
- 11:53
already committed to paying assuming the company performed on delivering that
- 11:57
service the a hundred thousand drinks and in order to show it as a receivable,
- 12:01
the service would have had to have been performed and delivered then collecting
- 12:04
from the NFL, well at that point should be very liquid. yeah it may take 30 days
- 12:09
but it's a pretty clear and safe bet to happen the NFL pays its bills alright.
- 12:13
then we go to inventory hmmm. this is harder who's gonna buy a million cops
- 12:17
and 5,000 pounds of sugar or whatever amounts you have on your books when you
- 12:22
go bankrupt. well tough to sell so the numbers get vague here really fast in
- 12:26
the form of the value you are carrying that inventory at Book value or what you
- 12:30
paid for it versus what the market will actually pay for [book value defined]
- 12:34
I don't know used sugar. what would they pay you in cash to buy all that used
- 12:38
cups anyone? yeah we think. not alright the others follow similar suit a
- 12:42
four months tail on a lease ain't worth much on the market. it's the league of
- 12:46
the 22 year old newspaper printing press thing not at all liquid. big discounts
- 12:51
big write downs at bankruptcy time and maybe big bargains for whoever is in the
- 12:54
market to buy a slightly used newspaper printing press. all right let's go back
- 12:58
to our balance sheets. most recent iteration and now look at this newly
- 13:02
updated one as of this morning. well so what happened here people well duh the
- 13:06
Super Bowl happened. Green Bay won forty two two three on a mercy field goal for
- 13:10
the other team at the end the NFL paid the inventory was used Grandmama's loan
- 13:14
was fully paid off the liability of ten grand to the cups
- 13:17
vendor and 5k to the Visa card and everything else it all adjusted. now how
- 13:21
much cash is in the bank? well a whopping $82,000 the value being held for the
- 13:27
stools didn't change and still about a grand everything else evaporated. and
- 13:31
note that the shareholders equity here is 82 grand. that is more or less the
- 13:36
company's entire Book value but a company that just generated such [balance sheets compared]
- 13:40
enormous pre-tax profits in such a short time, has to be worth a lot more than
- 13:45
$82,000 right? the market value of the company is a reflection of what an
- 13:48
outside investor would pay for a given percentage ownership of the company. if
- 13:53
you were thinking about raising capital at this moment with such a great
- 13:56
business momentum going well it's probably not a bad time to raise that
- 14:00
capital. there's one key and very important liability missing the above
- 14:03
sheet. any guesses right rhymes with sh max ? yep tax well you just made 50 grand
- 14:08
and change in profits you think the g-man is gonna let you keep all that
- 14:13
money guff ah. not gonna happen so if you live in a blue state assume you'll pay
- 14:18
about 30 percent of that 50 grand in taxes and well you should plug a fifteen
- 14:22
thousand dollar current liability of taxes payable here so it's obvious
- 14:26
you're thinking about it. no matter what kind of nightmares it gives you. [fancy car crashes]
Up Next
GED Social Studies 1.1 Civics and Government
Related Videos
What is bankruptcy? Deadbeats who can't pay their bills declare bankruptcy. Either they borrowed too much money, or the business fell apart. They t...
What's a dividend? At will, the board of directors can pay a dividend on common stock. Usually, that payout is some percentage less than 100 of ear...
How are risk and reward related? Take more risk, expect more reward. A lottery ticket might be worth a billion dollars, but if the odds are one in...