it depends if you include current liablitites in total debt then yes total debt is equal to total liab otherwise not
Current liabilities are liabilities that are due within 12 months. Short term debt is a current liability. However, there are other current liabilities. For example, taxes payable, interest payable, wages payable, accounts payable. Therefore, short term debt is not the same as current liabilities. (Short term debt is a current liability, but not all current liabilities are short term debt.)
Essentially, yes.Many times a company has Long-term debt, with a certain amount to be repaid within the year. On the company's balance sheet they will have the remaining amount of their Long-term debtincluded in Non-Current Liabilities, while in Current liabilities they will have the Current portion of long-term debt.Basically, the balance sheet has a section for Current liabilities, which would include accounts with debts to be repaid in the short-term (generally within the year). Normally it is not listed as Short-term debt, but rather an account like Accounts payable or Bank loan, or as I stated earlier, Current portion of long-term debt.
Outstanding stock is an "owner's equity" account. It's on the same side of the accounting equation as liabilities, but it is not a liability.
If total liabilites increased would assests or stockholders equity?
If total assets decreased by $88,000 during a period of time and owner's equity increased by $65,000 during the same period, then the amount and direction (increase or decrease) of the period's change in total liabilities is d. $153,000 decrease
yes
Current liabilities are liabilities that are due within 12 months. Short term debt is a current liability. However, there are other current liabilities. For example, taxes payable, interest payable, wages payable, accounts payable. Therefore, short term debt is not the same as current liabilities. (Short term debt is a current liability, but not all current liabilities are short term debt.)
Total equity does not include total liabilities so both are not same
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.
Essentially, yes.Many times a company has Long-term debt, with a certain amount to be repaid within the year. On the company's balance sheet they will have the remaining amount of their Long-term debtincluded in Non-Current Liabilities, while in Current liabilities they will have the Current portion of long-term debt.Basically, the balance sheet has a section for Current liabilities, which would include accounts with debts to be repaid in the short-term (generally within the year). Normally it is not listed as Short-term debt, but rather an account like Accounts payable or Bank loan, or as I stated earlier, Current portion of long-term debt.
no they are not the same. the current ratio is current assets/current liabilities. but liquidity ratio or acid test ratio is current assets - stock/current liabilities. liquidity ratio shows you how able a business is to pay off its debt when stock is taken out of the equation.
Equity is the proportion of those assets you own, compared to the debt on those assets. An example would be a house. A house is an asset. The equity is the amount of the mortgage that is paid off plus any appreciation the value of the house. Same with a company. Its the difference between what you own and the debt or liabilities. Assets minus liabilities equals equity. You have equity in assets.
Outstanding stock is an "owner's equity" account. It's on the same side of the accounting equation as liabilities, but it is not a liability.
This is the same thing as book value per share. Net asset value is Total Assets - Total Liabilities. You take this number and divide it by the shares outstanding in the company, and you get net asset per share. Example: AT&T Total Assets: 1000 Total Liabilities: 500 Net asset value: 500 Shares outstanding:100 Net Asset per share: $5
yes because they both are liabilities so they are same..
No. Loans are never income. You are worth no more, and no less, before or after a loan. Your liabilities went up by the same amount as an asset...generally cash).(In fact, perhaps you need to really understand that...borrowing or debt is NEVER income...do not treat it as such).Improved:However, if any of your creditors are settling with you / forgiving a part of your debt as part of the process, the amount that is forgiven CAN be reported as imputed income and taxed.
If total liabilites increased would assests or stockholders equity?