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Why Is A Negative Cash Balance Reported As A Liability? |
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Answer» The following will illustrate why a negative cash balance is reported as a liability instead of being reported as a negative asset amount. COMPANY X writes checks for more than its bank balance and sends them to its vendors. When the checks get back to Company X's checking account, Company X's bank will have two options when Company X's checking account does not have sufficient funds to cover the checks:
Hopefully these two bank options illustrate why accountants will report a negative cash balance as a liability. By the way, checks not paid by the bank on which they are DRAWN are said to have "bounced" or are called "rubber checks" since they are bounced back through the banking system by the bank on which they were drawn. The following will illustrate why a negative cash balance is reported as a liability instead of being reported as a negative asset amount. Company X writes checks for more than its bank balance and sends them to its vendors. When the checks get back to Company X's checking account, Company X's bank will have two options when Company X's checking account does not have sufficient funds to cover the checks: Hopefully these two bank options illustrate why accountants will report a negative cash balance as a liability. By the way, checks not paid by the bank on which they are drawn are said to have "bounced" or are called "rubber checks" since they are bounced back through the banking system by the bank on which they were drawn. |
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