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What Should I Do If My Accrual Basis Balance Sheet Is Out Of Balance?

Chief Mechanic · September 5, 2010 ·

A balance sheet in QuickBooks can be produced on either a cash or accrual basis.  A balance sheet that’s in balance is one where total assets are equal to the sum of total liabilities plus total equity.  Sometimes, if your company file (.qbw) has become damaged, this fundamental accounting relationship can be broken because of data damage to individual transactions.

Intuit has several troubleshooting steps to attempt to resolve problems with a balance sheet that’s out of balance.  These steps depend on which reporting basis balance sheet is out of balance.  In this article, we’ll summarize the steps to address an accrual basis balance sheet that’s out of balance.  See our related article on resolving problems with a cash basis balance sheet.  There are also other ways to use reports to assist rebuilding a damaged company file.

The most likely cause of an out-of-balance accrual basis balance sheet is an income or expense account with an account balance but without transactions that add up to that balance.  To fix this problem, Intuit recommends a multi-step process that involves:

  1. calculating the amount by which the balance sheet is out of balance
  2. identifying the problem account
  3. testing your account identification
  4. recording a check for $.01 to that account
  5. running the Rebuild Data utility
  6. deleting the check for $.01 previously recorded and testing the outcome

Step 1 – Calculate the Amount Your Balance Sheet is Out of Balance

Produce a standard balance sheet (Reports->Company & Financial->Balance Sheet Standard) and calculate the amount your balance sheet is out of balance.  Be sure to click the Modify Report… button and set the Dates to All and the Report Basis to Accrual.

QuickBooks Premier 2009 Modify Report Balance Sheet All Dates Accrual Basis

Step 2 – Identify the Problem Account

First, export your chart of accounts.  From the File->Utilities->Export->Lists to IIF Files… menu selection, choose Chart of Accounts in the Export window and click Ok.

QB_Premier 2009 Export Chart of Accounts

This export procedure will produce a delimited IIF file.  Open this file in Microsoft Excel.  Intuit recommends deleting the first 2 lines of this file, but we’ve kept them in the file in the screenshot below so you can see how the file will appear when you first open it in Excel.  Note that Name is in Column B and OBAMOUNT is in Column F.  Find the out-of-balance amount you calculated in the previous step in Column F, OBAMOUNT.  There are 2 ways to do this: a) use Excel’s Find capability or b) sort all rows below the first 3 rows in the original Excel file (below the first 1 row if you choose to delete the first 2) and scroll through the sorted list of numbers to locate the out-of-balance amount you previously calculated.

Write down the account name from Column B that matches the OBAMOUNT you locate.

Excel Chart of Accounts OBAMOUNT

Step 3 – Test To See If the Account You Identified Is the Problem Account

Return to QuickBooks and open your chart of accounts (Company->Chart of Accounts or the keyboard shortcut Ctrl + a).  Locate the account you identified in the previous step and double click on it to produce a QuickReport.  Be sure to set the Dates setting to All dates.  If there are no transactions in this account, then the identification process in Step 2 was successful.  You’ve located an account with a balance in the chart of accounts but without transactions that add up to that balance.

Step 4 – Record a Check For $.01 To The Problem Account

Record a check to the problem account for $.01 from the Banking->Write Checks menu selection or the keyboard shortcut Ctrl + w.  On the Expenses tab of the Write Checks window, enter the problem account previously identified.

Step 5 – Run the Rebuild Data Utility

From the Files->Utilities->Rebuild Data menu selection, run the Rebuild Data utility.  This utility will attempt to match the transactions in an account with the account’s balance, thereby resolving the out-of-balance problem on the balance sheet.

Step 6 – Delete the Check Previously Recorded and Test the Results

Delete the check you recorded in Step 4.  Open your chart of accounts (Company->Chart of Accounts or the keyboard shortcut Ctrl + a) and locate the problem account.

If the account you identified was a balance sheet account (accounts payable, accounts receivable, bank, credit card, equity, fixed asset, loan, long-term liability, other asset, other current asset, or other current liability), double click on the account to QuickZoom into that account’s register.  Locate the check for $.01 and delete it by clicking the Edit->Delete menu selection or using the keyboard shortcut Ctrl + d.

If the account you identified was an income statement account (income, expense, other income, other expense, or cost of goods sold), double click on the account to produce a QuickReport.  Be sure to change the Dates setting to All.  Locate the check for $.01 and double click on that entry on the QuickReport.  Delete the check by clicking the Edit->Delete menu selection or using the keyboard shortcut Ctrl + d.

Repeat the steps in Step 1 to produce a standard balance sheet and verify that the balance sheet is in balance.  Be sure to confirm your Dates setting is set to All and your Report Basis is set to Accrual.

Sometimes, if you have several problem accounts, repeating this entire series of steps can restore balance to your balance sheet.  For more serious data problems, send us an email.

To follow Intuit’s discussion of these steps, consult this Intuit knowledge base article.

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How Does QuickBooks Calculate and Record a Home Currency Adjustment?

Chief Mechanic · September 2, 2010 ·

In QuickBooks the home currency adjustment is calculated based on the difference between the exchange rate recorded with each transaction and the exchange rate as of the home currency adjustment.  It’s calculated on:

  1. Open Accounts Payable transactions in a foreign currency
  2. Open Accounts Receivable transactions in a foreign currency
  3. Balance sheet account balances for which transactions in a foreign currency are supported (i. e., bank accounts and credit cards)

It’s important to note that income and expense accounts, as well as other asset and liability are always recorded in the firm’s home currency.  Therefore, home currency adjustments do not apply to these account types.

Home currency adjustments are recorded on the Company->Manage Currency->Home Currency Adjustment menu selection.

A home currency adjustment represents the unrealized gain or loss from holding balances in a foreign currency after the original transaction date (for open transactions) or after the date the transaction was closed.  For example, if a firm did not extend credit to customers (i. e., it has no Accounts Receivable), did not receive credit from vendors (i. e., it has no Accounts Payable), and had no bank or credit card balances, its home currency adjustment would be zero.

From the Home Currency Adjustment window, QuickBooks automatically posts home currency adjustments by a General Journal entry to the Exchange Gain or Loss account that is automatically created by QuickBooks as an Other Expense account type.  Therefore, debits to this account will represent exchange losses and increase this expense; credits will represent exchange gains and decrease this expense.

Home currency adjustments are normally recorded to prepare financial statements, so that balances held in foreign currencies can be converted to the exchange rate as of the financial statement date.  If foreign balances were not adjusted to current exchange rates, the balances reported on the balance sheet could materially mis-state a firm’s financial position.  The home currency adjustment records an exchange gain or loss to reflect the change in the value of a firm’s balance sheet accounts.

Transactions in a foreign currency involve both realized and unrealized gains/losses.  For closed Accounts Payable and Accounts Receivable transactions in a foreign currency, the difference between the exchange rate recorded with each transaction and the exchange rate at the time the transaction was closed (i. e., the vendor bill or the customer invoice was paid) represents a realized gain or loss.  Thereafter, holding foreign account balances (i. e., bank and credit card balances) that result from closing such foreign transactions produce unrealized gains or losses.  Holding open Accounts Payable and Accounts Receivable balances similarly produces unrealized gains or losses.

The Exchange Gain or Loss account automatically created by QuickBooks records both realized and unrealized gains/losses.

A few examples will better illustrate how QuickBooks calculates and records home currency adjustments.  In all cases, the home currency is the US Dollar (or simply, USD).

Example 1 – Home Currency Adjustment for an Open Customer Invoice

An customer is invoiced for 10,000 € (Euros, or simply EUR) on 12/15/2012 and the invoice is unpaid.  The exchange rate recorded with the transaction is 1 EUR = 1.5 USD.

The exchange rate later became 1 EUR = 1.75 USD; after this exchange rate change, the open customer invoice was more valuable in USD.  The result would be an unrealized gain of $2500, or the difference between the converted value as of the home currency adjustment date ($17,500) and the converted value as of the transaction date ($15,000).

QuickBooks Premier 2009 Multicurrency Home Currency Adjustment 1

The Home Currency Adjustment records a General Journal entry as a debit (increase) to the foreign balance Accounts Receivable asset account and a credit (decrease) to the Exchange Gain or Loss other expense account.

QuickBooks Premier 2009 Multicurrency Home Currency Adjustment General Journal

Example 2 – Home Currency Adjustment for a Closed Customer Invoice

An customer is invoiced for 10,000 € (Euros, or simply EUR) on 12/15/2012 and the invoice is initially unpaid.  The exchange rate recorded with the transaction is 1 EUR = 1.5 USD.  A short time later, the customer paid the invoice in full after the exchange rate changed to 1 EUR = 1.6 USD.

Immediately upon recording the customer payment at the new exchange rate, QuickBooks records a realized exchange gain for $1000, or the difference between the converted value as of the date the transaction was closed ($16,000) and the converted value as of the original transaction date ($15,000).  This realized gain is not the home currency adjustment.  Because both realized and unrealized exchange gains/losses are recorded in the Exchange Gain or Loss account, that’s where we’ll find this gain.  Here’s a QuickZoom report of the Exchange Gain or Loss account after recording the customer payment.

QuickBooks Premier 2009 Multicurrency Home Currency Adjustment Realized

After the customer payment, the company’s foreign bank account transacting in Euros has a balance – the funds just received from the customer.  If the exchange rate then changed to 1 EUR = 1.75 USD, this would represent an unrealized gain that occured as a result of holding a foreign bank balance.  However, only part of the overall gain is unrealized: the difference between the converted bank balance as of the home currency adjustment date ($17,500) and the converted value of the transaction as of when it was closed ($16,000).  The home currency adjustment is only the unrealized portion of the overall gain, or $1500.

QuickBooks Premier 2009 Multicurrency Home Currency Adjustment 2

The overall exchange gain from this series of transactions is the same as the first example – a gain of $2500, because in both examples the exchange rate changed from 1 EUR = 1.5 USD to 1 EUR = 1.75 USD.  Here’s the QuickZoom report for the Exchange Gain or Loss account showing the overall exchange gain/loss:

QuickBooks Premier 2009 Multicurrency Home Currency Adjustment Report

The first line is the realized portion of the exchange gain; the second line – the General Journal entry – is for the unrealized home currency adjustment.

This second example illustrates another aspect of foreign exchange gain/loss reporting: if every transaction were recorded using the same exchange rate, there would be no realized gains or losses.  All exchange gains or losses would be unrealized and result from the difference between the converted value on the financial statement date and the converted value as of the transaction date for each foreign balance on the balance sheet.  These foreign balances can include Accounts Payable, Accounts Receivable, bank accounts, and credit cards.  If you do not record transactions using accurate exchange rates as of the transaction date, you’ll magnify the amount of the unrealized exchange gains or losses shown on financial statements when you do decide to perform a home currency adjustment.

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How Do I Print a Report of Invoices In Number Order To Identify Missing Invoice Numbers?

Chief Mechanic · August 23, 2010 ·

It’s relatively straightforward to prepare a report of invoices in number order and have QuickBooks automatically identify missing invoice numbers, such as where there are gaps in the sequence of numbers.

The key to preparing this report is to use another report as a building block. Identifying sequential transactions and those items missing from the list are common requirements for Banking reports. That causes the Missing Checks report to come to mind. This report is found on the Reports->Banking->Missing Checks menu selection.

Let’s start with this report. By default, this report asks you to specify a Bank account. Instead, simply choose an Accounts Receivable account.

QuickBooks Enterprise Solutions 10 Missing Checks

With the account selected, set a Filter for the Transaction Type. In the pulldown list on the left side of the Filters window, choose to include transactions having a Transaction Type of Invoice. If you have multiple Accounts Receivable accounts that you’d like to include, you can modify the Filter for Account on this screen as well. Although the Missing Checks report only allows you to select 1 account when first creating the report, you can select multiple accounts at this stage.

QuickBooks Enterprise Solutions 10 Transaction Type Filter

To complete the report, change the Report Title on the Header/Footer tab to reflect the actual contents of the report, which is a list of Missing Invoices.

QuickBooks Enterprise Solutions 10 Missing Invoices Header

The result is a list of invoices in invoice number order with each break in the sequence marked.

QuickBooks Enterprise Solutions 10 Missing Invoices Report

When the report is complete, click the Memorize… button to save these steps that created the report.

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