Accounts Receivable Financing
  
You make unicycles. You've sold 800 of them to the Giraffe Watchers Club of the Serengeti. They owe you a million bucks. Unfortunately, they won't be back from safari for a month, assuming the lions don't get to them first. But you need that million bucks today, so you can build out the unicycle order for The Congressional Clown Club, otherwise known as Congress.
To get that money, you can apply for accounts receivable financing, wherein you pledge as collateral the promise of payment of that million bucks from the Giraffe Watchers Club, owed 27 days from now. You can take the money to a bank, or to what is called a factor, who will then gladly pay you something like $970,000 today in return for your million bucks I.O.U. in about a month. The factor takes on the risk of the Giraffe Watchers Club becoming lion dinner and not paying, and in return, if you do the advanced math here, that factor makes 3% interest for that one month of risk, or an annualized return of 12 x 3% = 36%. As long as those owing their bills actually pay their bills, the business of being an accounts receivable financier is enormously lucrative. You just have to stay away from the lions.
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Finance: What is a Balance Sheet?47 Views
finance- a la shmoop. what is a balance sheet? well it's a snapshot. a financial
reckoning of what you own ,and what you owe at a given moment in time. well note
that a balance sheet is divided into columns like this. on the left are good [balance sheet pictured]
things like things you own. on the right side are things you owe like debts or
obligations you have to pay off. well think for the balance sheet of little
brother Inc. you have total assets of $142 with current assets of a hundred
bucks .80 bucks of that current asset set is cash and twenty dollars is an IOU
from the tooth fairy ie dad ,who woke you up last night [clown next to child's bed]
replacing the tooth and since you're old enough you just winked and he said yeah
I'll get you a twenty from my wallet in the morning. note that if he'd said I'll
get it for you a year and change from now. it wouldn't be a current asset it
would be a long-term asset, because current means that a promise or a
product or whatever turns into cash within a year. you mowed the lawn for the [assets listed]
summer for mrs. garden bottom and billed her $500. she paid you four hundred
ninety dollars and still owes you ten bucks. that money lives in your balance
sheet on the assets side as an account receivable. you have four hundred ninety
seven little blue marbles as your only asset which your friend Billy has
offered you tons of times to buy for twenty four dollars so you can hold that [kids exchange marbles and money]
amount as inventory. it's an asset. since you know you deal in marbles regularly.
and you paid ten dollars for ten year rights to enter your sister Jeannie's
room anytime you want. you still have eight years to go on that paper so you'd
depreciate its value at a dollar a year worth eight bucks today. total everything [balance sheet shown]
up and you have that one hundred forty two dollars in assets on your own
personal balance. sheet okay so what about your liabilities. well you have
total liabilities of a hundred dollars. you owe Joe lunch bully thirty bucks to
learn why you'll stop hitting yourself. or rather to stop doing so you owe him
thirty bucks tomorrow and you know you'll owe him sixty bucks a year in
change from now maybe more in the future and maybe not if you grow and put on a [ laughing boy is offered cash]
few pounds. but you are conservative financially so you reserve that 60 bucks
as if it's a certain long-term debt, so it goes down there on
line 13 .you borrowed ten bucks from your boo
Amy the auditor for lunch she actually submitted to you an invoice. albeit
romantically. so you have ten bucks on line eight there .so you have one hundred
forty two dollars in total assets and a hundred dollars in total liabilities, but
wait they don't balance. oh no what shall we do ?well a balance sheet accounts for
this it's called ale and it stands for assets minus liabilities equals equity. [man gives thumbs up]
well you have assets $142 we just outlined and you can subtract your
liabilities which we just outline of a hundred bucks and you have net equity
value to your life of $42. it looks like little brother Inc doesn't have to worry
about filing for bankruptcy anytime in the near future which is good because
with Joe lunch bully in the picture, life is hard enough as it is. [kid frowns as bully pushes his own hand in his face]
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