What is a balance sheet?

The balance sheet (statement of financial position under IFRS) is a snapshot of what a company owns, what it owes and what shareholders have invested at a single point in time. It rests on the accounting identity: Assets = Liabilities + Equity. Under IAS 1 and US GAAP (ASC 210), it is presented either current/non-current or by order of liquidity.

The three blocks

  • Assets — what the company owns.
  • Liabilities — what the company owes.
    • Current liabilities: payables, accrued expenses, short-term debt, deferred revenue (<12 months).
    • Non-current liabilities: long-term debt, lease liabilities, deferred tax.
  • Equity — residual claim of shareholders. Paid-in capital, retained earnings, other comprehensive income, treasury shares.

Balance sheet vs. related statements

Diagnostic ratios

  • Current ratio: liquidity headroom.
  • Debt-to-equity: leverage and risk profile.
  • Return on equity (ROE): profitability against shareholders’ invested capital.
  • Working capital: current assets − current liabilities — operational runway in the short term.

Do: reconcile the balance sheet monthly; tie every account to a sub-ledger or schedule.
Don’t: rely on the income statement alone — a profitable company can still run out of cash if its balance sheet is choked by stale receivables or building inventory.