Structures of Key Financial Statements (2024)

Learning Outcome

  • Explain how key financial statements are structured

As you have seen, there are four basic financial statements: the Income Statement, the Statement of Owners’ Equity, the Balance Sheet, and the Statement of Cash Flows.

Income Statement

The income statement shows revenues less expenses, also known as net income. In accounting, the word “net” means the combined total of both negative and positive amounts. For financial statement purposes, accountants don’t identify account balances by debit and credit—that’s part of the internal process of accounting and bookkeeping that has to do with the double-entry system you studied earlier.

Here is the adjusted trial balance we created for our sample company:

Adjusted Trial Balance as of Jan 31, 20XX
DebitCredit
1101Checking16,050
1210Merchandise Inventory360
1320Prepaid Rent800
1620Furniture and Equipment2,750
2101Accounts Payable600
2201Wages Payable500
2550Notes Payable15,000
3310Capital Contributions5,000
4510Merchandise Sales400
5200Cost of Goods Sold240
5300Wage Expense500
5510Rent Expense200
5520Insurance Expense600
Total debits must equal total credits21,50021,500

The income statement always begins with revenue and then continues with a list of expenses for a period of time, either a month, a quarter, or most commonly, a year. Large companies summarize expenses into major categories, such as Cost of Goods Sold, and a broad category called Selling, General and Administrative (SG&A). For our sample company, however, we have just a very few accounts, so we can list them out, subtotal the expenses, and subtract that amount from revenue to show net income or net loss.

Your Company
Income Statement
For the month ended January 31, 20XX
Merchandise Sales$400
Expenses
Cost of Goods Sold$240
Wage Expense500
Rent Expense200
Insurance Expense600
Total Expenses1,540
Net Income/(Loss)$ (1,140)

The bottom line on the income statement is either an increase in owners’ equity, if it is net income, or a reduction in owners’ equity if it is a loss (expenses exceed revenues). It is like a moving picture of the company, showing amounts earned during the regular course of business (revenues) and the matching costs (expenses).

In our example from the previous section, expenses far exceeded revenues, which is common in the first few months of a new business, so the company is showing a net loss.

Statement of Owners’ Equity

The statement of owners’ equity, or owner’s equity if the company is a sole proprietorship, shows beginning owner capital, additions and subtractions to capital, including net income from the Income Statement. This gives the total owners’ capital at the end of the same specific time period as the Income Statement. This amount will be the beginning capital for the next Statement of Owners’ Equity. Both of the Income Statement and the Statement of Owners’ Equity, as well as the Statement of Cash Flows, show activities over a period of time, such as a year.

Your Company
Statement of Owner’s Equity
For the month ended January 31, 20XX
Beginning Capital$–
Owner Contributions5,000
Net Income/(Loss)(1,140)
3,860
Owner Withdrawals
Ending Capital
Ending Capital$3,860

Notice that the Statement of Owner’s Equity reflects the expanded accounting equation:

Equity = Owner Contributions – Owner Withdrawals + Revenues – Expenses.

Balance Sheet

The balance sheet, unlike the previous two statements, shows a snapshot of the business at a moment in time. Notice that the Income Statement and the Statement of Owners’ Equity both identify the period of time covered, but the Balance Sheet indicates a specific date that is always the last day of the time period covered by the prior two statements. The balance sheet is based on the accounting equation and show total assets, total liabilities, and owners’ equity, and shows as well how they balance.

Your Company
Balance Sheet
As of January 31, 20XX
Assets
Current Assets
Cash and Cash Equivalents$16,050
Merchandise Inventory360
Prepaid Expenses800
Total Current Assets17,210
Property, Plant, and Equipment2,750
Total Assets$ 19,960
Current Liabilities
Accounts Payable$600
Wages Payable500
Total Current Liabilities1,100
Long-term debt15,000
Total Liabilities$16,100
Owner’s Equity3,860
Total Liabilities and Owner’s Equity19,960

Notice that total assets of $19,960 is equal to total liabilities and equity of $19,960, and that the owner’s equity of $3,860 carried forward from the bottom line of the Statement of Owner’s Equity. Finally, the statement of cash flows reconciles beginning cash and cash equivalents from the balance sheet (ending cash from the prior set of financial statements) to ending cash from the current balance sheet, effectively reconciling accrual basis accounting to cash basis.

Your Company
Statement of Cash Flows
For the month ended January 31, 20XX
Cash provided by operating activities
Cash receipts from customers$400
Cash payments to vendors(1,600)
Cash provided by/(used by)operations(1,200)
Cash provided by investing activities
Purchases of fixed assets(2,750)
Cash provided by/(used by) investing(2,750)
Cash provided by financing
Long-term borrowing15,000
Owner contributions5,000
Cash provided by/(used by) financing20,000
Change in cash16,050
Beginning cash balance
Ending cash balance$16,050

In our sample company, both beginning equity and beginning cash were zero. This statement tells us that operations used $1,200 in cash, as opposed to accrual basis net income from the income statement in the amount of $1,140, and that investing in fixed assets used $2,750 in cash. It also tells us that cash was provided by a combination of borrowing and owner investment in the company.

Other Financial Statements

A Statement of Comprehensive Income is often included along with the Income Statement if the company has certain investments that are adjusted to fair market value. Some smaller companies not subject to the full disclosure of GAAP only prepare the three most basic financial statements, and exclude the Statement of Cash Flows and the Statement of Comprehensive Income, providing instead just the Income Statement, the Statement of Owners’ Equity, and the Balance Sheet.

practice questions

Contribute!

Did you have an idea for improving this content? We’d love your input.

Improve this pageLearn More

Structures of Key Financial Statements (2024)
Top Articles
Latest Posts
Article information

Author: Ms. Lucile Johns

Last Updated:

Views: 6637

Rating: 4 / 5 (41 voted)

Reviews: 80% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Ms. Lucile Johns

Birthday: 1999-11-16

Address: Suite 237 56046 Walsh Coves, West Enid, VT 46557

Phone: +59115435987187

Job: Education Supervisor

Hobby: Genealogy, Stone skipping, Skydiving, Nordic skating, Couponing, Coloring, Gardening

Introduction: My name is Ms. Lucile Johns, I am a successful, friendly, friendly, homely, adventurous, handsome, delightful person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.