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Financial Structure Print
Topic Contents
Financial Structure
Center of Conflict
Debt and Equity
Pure Management
Owners and Management
Center of Conflict

The Financial Structure of the firm is at the center of this conflict. Let's begin by identifying the stakeholders and their agendas.

We must make a distinction between "The Company" and "The People That Have a Claim on the Company". The Assets are The Company, and they are listed on the left side of the Balance Sheet. The Liabilities and Owner's Equity on the right side represent the people who paid for the Assets and their current stake. If a bulldozer scraped the Assets into a pile, it would consist of cash, invoices, inventory, bricks, and equipment. Next to the pile a row of people would line up to make a claim a vendor, banker, bondholder, stockholder, and (representing Retained Earnings) a manager. This is why a Balance Sheet always balances. The left is "what is owned"; the right is "who owns it" (see the example below).

Balance Sheet   Liab.& Owner's Equity   Stakeholders
Cash $4,262 Accounts Payable $7,583 Vendors
Accounts Receivable $9,278 Current Debt ;;;;;6,000 Bankers
Inventory $11,605 Long Term Debt $37,500 Bondholders
Total Current Assets $25,145 Total Liabilities $48,083  
         
Plant and equipment $113,800 Common Stock $20,276 Stockholders
Accum. Depreciation ($38,313) Retained Earnings $29,273 Mgt & Stockholders
Total Fixed Assets $75,487 Total Equity $47,549  
Total Assets $100,632 Total Liab. & O. E. $100,632