Accountancy, asked by bainsjashan, 9 months ago

what is characteristic of reserve in accounts?​

Answers

Answered by itzJitesh
1

Answer:

A reserve can appear in any part of shareholders' equity except for contributed or basic share capital. In nonprofit accounting, an "operating reserve" is the unrestricted cash on hand available to sustain an organization, and nonprofit boards usually specify a target of maintaining several months of operating cash or a percentage of their annual income, called an Operating Reserve Ratio. [1]

There are different types of reserves used in financial accounting like capital reserves, revenue reserves, statutory reserves, realized reserves, unrealized reserves.

Equity reserves are created from several possible sources:

Reserves created from shareholders' contributions, the most common examples of which are:

legal reserve fund - it is required in many legislations and it must be paid as a percentage of share capital

share premium - amount paid by shareholders for shares in excess of their nominal value

Reserves created from profit, especially retained earnings, i.e. accumulated accounting profits, or in the case of nonprofits, operating surpluses. However, profits may be distributed also to other types of reserves, for example:

legal reserve fund from profit - many legislations require creation of the fund as a percentage of profits

remuneration reserve - will be used later to pay bonuses to employees or management.

translation reserve - arises during consolidation of entities with different reporting currencies

Answered by Anonymous
1

Answer:

here is your answer

Explanation:

In financial accounting, "reserve" always has a credit balance and can refer to a part of shareholders' equity, a liability for estimated claims, or contra-asset for uncollectible accounts.

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