Money and Banking – Part 1: Balance Sheet (2024)

By Eric Tymoigne

I struggled a few years to get an M&B course together. It lacked coherency and students had difficulty to link the different parts of the course. A good part of the problem comes from the M&B textbooks that, besides having outdated presentations, are a disparate collection of chapters without a coherent core. So I gave up with textbooks and went my own way, and comprehension dramatically increased among my students.

The core of the financial system consists of financial documents and among them are balance sheets. Balance sheets provide the foundation upon which most of an M&B course can be taught: monetary creation by banks and the central bank, nature of money, financial crises, securitization, financial interdependencies, you name it, it has to do with one or several balance sheet(s). As Hyman P. Minsky used to note, if you cannot put your reasoning in terms of a balance sheet there is a problem in your logic.

So chapter 1 in my M&B “textbook” is about balance-sheet mechanics. Yes accounting is tedious, but one must get a good grasp of key accounting concepts to understand financial mechanics. The “money” chapter, usually first in M&B texts, only comes much later once balance-sheet mechanics and financial concepts such as present value have been well understood. This will not cover everything I do in M&B. I will focus on banks, central bank, macroeconomic topics related to the financial system, and money.

What is a balance sheet?

It is an accounting document that records what an economic unit owns (its “assets”) and owes (its “liabilities”). The difference between its assets and liabilities is called net worth, or equity, or capital.

Money and Banking – Part 1: Balance Sheet (1)

Figure 0a. A balance sheet

There are many different ways to classify assets and liabilities. For our purpose, a balance sheet can be detailed a bit more as follows:

Money and Banking – Part 1: Balance Sheet (2)

Figure 0b. A simple balance sheet

Financial assets are claims on other economic units and real assets may be reduced to physical things (cars, buildings, machines, pens, desks, inventories, etc.) but may also include intangible things (e.g., goodwill). Demand liabilities are liabilities that are due at the request of creditors (e.g., cash can be withdrawn from bank accounts at will by account holders), contingent liabilities are due when a specific event occurs (e.g., life insurance payments to a widow), dated liabilities are due at specific periods of time (e.g., interest and principal mortgage payments are due every month).

Balance sheets can be constructed for any economic unit. That unit can be a person, a firm, a sector of the economy, a country, anybody or anything with assets and liabilities. Table 1 is the balance sheet of U.S. households (and non-profit organizations) in the United States. In the third quarter of 2015, U.S. households owned $99.6 trillion worth of assets and owed $14.4 trillion worth of liabilities, making net worth equal to $85.2 trillion (99.6 – 14.4). Households held $30.6 trillion of real assets, $68.9 trillion of financial assets. Their two main liabilities were home mortgages ($9.5 trillion) and consumer credit, i.e. credit cards, student debts, etc. ($3.5 trillion).

Balance sheet rules

A balance sheet follows double-entry accounting rules so A BALANCE SHEET MUST ALWAYS BALANCE, that is, the following must always be true:

Assets = Liabilities + Net Worth

The practical, and central, implication is that a change in one item on the balance sheet must be offset by at least one change somewhere else so that a balance sheet stays balanced.

Let’s start with a very simple balance sheet. The only asset is a house worth $100k that was purchased by putting down 20k and asking for $80k from a bank:

Money and Banking – Part 1: Balance Sheet (4)

Figure 1. A simple balance sheet

What is the impact of a bank forgiving $40k of principal (i.e. outstanding amount owed) on the mortgage?

Money and Banking – Part 1: Balance Sheet (5)

Figure 2. Effect of Repayment of Mortgage Principal

The value of mortgage went down by 40k and the value of net worth went up by 40k so that the accounting equality is preserved.

Going back to the first balance sheet, what is the impact of the value of the house going up by $20k?

Money and Banking – Part 1: Balance Sheet (6)

Figure 3. Effect of higher house price

The asset value went up by $20k and the net worth went up by $20 and here again the accounting equality is preserved.

Sometimes, to get to the point more quickly and to highlight the changes, economists prefer to use so-called “T-accounts” (because the shape of the table looks like a T) that record only the changes in the balance sheet.

Money and Banking – Part 1: Balance Sheet (7)

Figure 4. T-account that records the repayment of the mortgage principal

Money and Banking – Part 1: Balance Sheet (8)

Figure 5. T-account that records the higher house value

The offsetting is shown more clearly. It comes from opposite changes in two items on the right side of the balance sheet (Figure 4), and a change in asset and net worth by the same amount (Figure 5). Of course these are not the only two ways the offsetting is done to preserve the accounting equality. We will encounter other cases as we move forward. The point is that one must change at least two things in a balance sheet to make sure that the equality A = L + NW is preserved. One must always ask: what is the offsetting entry change? This has practical implications when studying how banks and central bank operate.

What makes the balance sheet change?

One can classify factors that change a balance sheet in three categories:

  • Cash inflows and outflows: net cash flow
  • Incomes and expenses: net income
  • Capital gains and capital losses: net change in the market value of assets and liabilities

These categories are recorded more carefully in other accounting documents than the balance sheet, but this section focuses on their relation to the balance sheet.

Net Cash Flow

Cash inflows and cash outflows lead to a change in the amount of monetary balances held by an economic unit, i.e. a change in the amount of physical currency or funds in a bank account held on the asset side. Some assets lead to cash inflows while some liabilities and capital (dividend payments) lead to cash outflows.

Money and Banking – Part 1: Balance Sheet (9)

Figure 6. Balance sheet and cash flow

If the cash inflows are greater than the cash outflows, monetary assets held by an economic unit go up. The economic unit can use them to buy assets or pledge them to leverage its balance sheet (see Post 7). If net cash flow is negative, then monetary-asset holdings fall and the economic unit may have to go further into debt to pay some of its expenses.

Going back to our very simple balance sheet, assume that a salary of $40k is earned and that part of the salary is used to service a 30-year fixed-rate 10 % mortgage. Assuming linear repayment of principal to simplify (actual mortgage servicing is calculated differently), the cash flow structure looks like this:

Money and Banking – Part 1: Balance Sheet (10)

Figure 7. Balance sheet and cash flows, an example

The balance sheet at the beginning of the following year is (assuming all cash flows involve actual cash transfer instead of electronic payments):

Money and Banking – Part 1: Balance Sheet (11)

Figure 8. Balance sheet after the cash-flow impacts

Quite a few things have change in the balance sheet. There is a net inflow of cash of $29.3k, the principal of the mortgage fell by the amount of principal repaid, and net worth accounts for these two changes.

Net Income

Net income leads to a change in the net worth:

Current Net worth = Previous Net worth + Net income of the period

Net income (e.g., earnings before taxes is a proxy of net income) can be positive or negative so net worth may rise or fall. In the previous example (Figures 7 and 8), net cash flow and net income are the same thing; however, not all incomes necessarily lead to cash inflows (see Post 4, and 10).

Capital Gains and Capital Losses

Finally, the value of assets and liabilities may change because of changes in their market value. If accounting is done on a “mark-to-market” basis, i.e. by valuating balance-sheet items based on their current market value, these changes will be accounted in the balance sheet and net worth will be affected accordingly:

Current Net Worth = Previous Net Worth + Net income of the period + Net capital gains of the period

The example of Figure 3 is a simple illustration of the impact of capital gains.

The effect of a change in the market value of assets and liabilities may not be accounted in the balance sheet if they are valued on a cost basis. For financial assets, there are three options to record their value. Level 1 valuation uses the available market price. Level 2 valuation, for assets that do not have an active market, uses a proxy market as a point of reference. Level 3 valuation, also called mark-to-model (or more cynically “mark-to-myth”), uses an in-house model to give a dollar value to the asset. During the 2008 crisis, major financial institutions argued that the market prices of some assets did not reflect their true value because of a panic in markets. The Securities and Exchange Commission allowed them to move to level 2 or level 3 valuation to keep up the value of their assets. Many analysts have been critical of this decision and considered it to be a convenient way to hid major losses of institutions.

That is it for today! Following posts will apply all this to banks and central bank.

[Revised 7/21/2016]

Money and Banking – Part 1: Balance Sheet (2024)

FAQs

What is the basic equation for a bank's balance sheet ____? ›

The balance sheet is based on the fundamental equation: Assets = Liabilities + Equity. As such, the balance sheet is divided into two sides (or sections).

Which of the following would not be an asset on a bank's balance sheet? ›

Answer and Explanation: The correct option is b. Checkable deposits. Checkable deposits appear on the liabilities of a bank's balance sheet.

When a bank's assets are not large enough to cover its liabilities, it is? ›

A bank must have positive net worth; otherwise it is insolvent or bankrupt, meaning it would not have enough assets to pay back its liabilities.

Which of the following are bank assets? ›

Bank assets consist mainly of various kinds of loans and marketable securities and of reserves of base money, which may be held either as actual central bank notes and coins or in the form of a credit (deposit) balance at the central bank.

What questions does a balance sheet answer? ›

The balance sheet can help users answer questions such as whether the company has a positive net worth, whether it has enough cash and short-term assets to cover its obligations, and whether the company is highly indebted relative to its peers.

What is the basic formula that all balance sheets follow? ›

The Balance Sheet Formula is a fundamental accounting equation that mentions that, for a business, the sum of its owner's equity & the total liabilities is equal to its total assets, i.e., Assets = Equity + Liabilities.

What are the three key assets on a bank's balance sheet? ›

The assets are items that the bank owns. This includes loans, securities, and reserves. Liabilities are items that the bank owes to someone else, including deposits and bank borrowing from other institutions.

What are the major assets on a bank's balance sheet? ›

Major assets and claims on a commercial bank's balance sheet

The major assets are cash in hand, reserves, and property owned by the bank. Claims are liabilities that have to be given up and paid. The claims are outstanding stock, checkable deposits.

What are the four functions of money? ›

The Four Basic Functions of Money

Money serves four basic functions: it is a unit of account, it's a store of value, it is a medium of exchange and finally, it is a standard of deferred payment.

What is the largest liability on a bank's balance sheet? ›

Deposits are the largest liability for the bank and include money-market accounts, savings, and checking accounts.

What happens when a bank has more liabilities than assets? ›

Key Takeaways. If a company's liabilities exceed its assets, this is a sign of asset deficiency and an indicator the company may default on its obligations and be headed for bankruptcy.

What is considered a liability on a bank's balance sheet? ›

Liabilities are what the bank owes to others. Specifically, the bank owes any deposits made in the bank to those who have made them. The net worth, or equity, of the bank is the total assets minus total liabilities. Net worth is included on the liabilities side to have the T account balance to zero.

Is money in bank an asset? ›

Cash, stocks, bonds, mutual funds, and bank deposits are all are examples of financial assets. Unlike land, property, commodities, or other tangible physical assets, financial assets do not necessarily have inherent physical worth or even a physical form.

What are liabilities in banking? ›

Liability for a bank is anything that it owes to the outsiders. Examples of liabilities for a bank include distribution payments to customers from stock, interest paid to customers for savings and fixed deposits. The most common bank liabilities are: Loans taken from the central bank.

What happens if assets are less than liabilities? ›

If liabilities exceed assets and the net worth is negative, the business is "insolvent" and "bankrupt". Solvency can be measured with the debt-to-asset ratio. This is computed by dividing total liabilities by total assets. For example, a ratio of .

What makes up a banks balance sheet? ›

In short, a bank's balance sheet is a record of everything it owns, is owed, or owes. The balance sheet comprises three distinct parts: assets, liabilities and shareholder equity.

What is the basic balance sheet equation in Quizlet? ›

The basic accounting equation: assets will always equal the sum of liabilities and equity: Equity + Liabilities = Assets or Assets - Liabilities = Equity. Report a company's financial position on a particular date.

What is the formula for bank accounting? ›

Basic Accounting Equation: Assets = Liabilities + Equity

The accounting equation is a core principle in the double-entry bookkeeping system, wherein each transaction must affect at a bare minimum two of the three accounts, i.e. a debit and credit entry.

How to calculate the balance of a bank? ›

How is monthly average balance calculated by my bank? Banks use the formula: MAB = (total of end of the day closing balances) / (number of days in one month) to calculate the MAB of an account holder.

Top Articles
Latest Posts
Article information

Author: Rubie Ullrich

Last Updated:

Views: 5855

Rating: 4.1 / 5 (72 voted)

Reviews: 95% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Rubie Ullrich

Birthday: 1998-02-02

Address: 743 Stoltenberg Center, Genovevaville, NJ 59925-3119

Phone: +2202978377583

Job: Administration Engineer

Hobby: Surfing, Sailing, Listening to music, Web surfing, Kitesurfing, Geocaching, Backpacking

Introduction: My name is Rubie Ullrich, I am a enthusiastic, perfect, tender, vivacious, talented, famous, delightful person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.