• dhork@lemmy.world
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    15 hours ago

    I’m not an accountant, but you can certainly balance books while showing a loss. Double-entry bookkeeping simply means that every transaction has two parts, and “balancing” simply means that all the transactions cancel out properly.

    I joke with my accountant friends that their entire job is counting to zero.

    • uninvitedguest@piefed.ca
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      14 hours ago

      A loss is not an imbalance of debits and credits, but how much of those debits end up in expenses and the credits end up in revenue.

      DR Expense $1,000
      CR Cash $1,000
      

      With no other activity in a period, that is a $1,000 loss funded by cash.

      DR Expense $1,000
      CR Loan $1,000
      

      Is a loss funded by borrowings.

      DR Sales Discounts $1,000
      CR Sales Revenue $1,000
      

      Is 0 profit/expense as the sale was marked down to 0 (assuming no cost of sales).

      • dhork@lemmy.world
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        13 hours ago

        Exactly. My terminology might not be correct, but my point is that their books can be perfectly balanced, and they can also be losing a shit-ton of money, as long as investors keep shoveling money in.

        • uninvitedguest@piefed.ca
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          12 hours ago

          Yeah the terminology

          the books are balanced, there are just more debits than credits

          is the opposite of everything discussed above.