Understanding the Balance Sheet Structure
A clear breakdown of assets, liabilities, and equity. Learn how these three components work together to show your company’s financial position.
Read MoreLearn the fundamentals of balance sheets, income statements, and cash flow reports. Master the essentials of financial reporting that every business owner and accountant should know.
Financial statements form the backbone of any business. They tell the real story of your company’s performance, financial health, and cash position. Whether you’re preparing statements for the first time or refining your skills, these guides cover what you actually need to know.
Explore in-depth articles covering everything from basic concepts to practical preparation techniques
A clear breakdown of assets, liabilities, and equity. Learn how these three components work together to show your company’s financial position.
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Walk through how revenue flows through your business. We break down operating expenses, non-operating items, and how they affect your bottom line.
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Cash flow isn’t profit. Discover why your business can be profitable yet run out of cash, and how to prepare this critical statement accurately.
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What you need to follow when preparing statements in Malaysia. We cover MFRS requirements, disclosure rules, and common compliance points businesses miss.
Read MoreThese fundamentals appear in every financial statement. Understanding them makes everything clearer.
Recording income and expenses when they’re earned or incurred, not when cash changes hands. This is why profit doesn’t equal cash in the bank.
Assets equal liabilities plus equity. Every transaction affects at least two sides of this equation. It’s the foundation of balanced financial statements.
What information matters enough to include in your statements? Malaysia’s standards guide what you must disclose and how to present it.
Statements assume your business will continue operating. If that’s not true, everything changes. It’s a critical assumption auditors always check.
These aren’t theoretical. They’re the things that actually prevent errors and make the process smoother.
Don’t wait until statement preparation time. Good records mean less work later and fewer mistakes. Use accounting software if you can.
Finding a discrepancy in December is painful. Monthly reconciliation catches errors early when they’re easier to fix.
Mixed accounts make statements messy and create confusion. Open a business account and keep it that way from the start.
How do you handle depreciation? When do you record revenue? Write it down. Consistency matters, and it helps when auditors ask questions.