The inventory is divided into three areas:
- Assets
- Debts
- Equity capital
Assets include fixed and current assets. The former refers to all items that are permanently part of your company, like land and machinery. Current assets, on the other hand, include items that are only in the company for a short period, like raw materials. This also includes finished or semi-finished products that are still in operation on the day of the stock count and have not yet been sold. The second point in your directory is debt: all liabilities that you have not yet settled belong here. This also includes short-term invoices that still have to be paid. In addition, debt capital (e.g. bank loans) within the company counts towards the debt.
Finally, you calculate the equity capital from the two areas. This is your net assets, the difference between assets, and liabilities. It is the capital that your company raises itself. If equity is positive, it appears as liabilities in the balance sheet. If your debts exceed your assets and your equity is negative (i.e. missing), it belongs on the assets side of the balance sheet.
When designing your directory, you must also pay attention to certain structuring rules:
- All items must be numbered through
- You also divide the assets in your list into current and fixed assets
- In addition, you should sort your assets by increasing liquidity: the items that you can next convert into credits are listed at the end
- You divide the debts into short-term and long-term, sorted by due date
Your list must be orderly, clear, and above all, verifiable. Even uninvolved third parties – e.g. auditors – must be able to trace your records. However, a well-structured inventory list is worthwhile for you, because it serves as the basis for your balance sheet. You are obliged to keep your inventory lists for at least 10 years.