Updated August, 2008
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William Edwards

Your Net Worth Statement

William Edwards, extension economist, 515-294-6161, wedwards@iastate.edu



 

ould you like to know more about the current financial situation of your farming operation? A simple listing of the property you own and the debts you owe can provide valuable insights. Such a listing is called a net worth statement, or sometimes a financial statement, or balance sheet.

The net worth statement is based on the relationship:

assets = liabilities + net worth, or
assets - liabilities = net worth

Most farm businesses are made up of a combination of land, livestock, crops, and machinery acquired with debt (liabilities) or contributed by the operator (net worth or owner’s equity). The net worth statement is like a photograph of these assets and liabilities on a given date.

Comparing net worth statements made at the end of each year over several years can help you measure the progress of your farm business. The net worth statement also helps you judge the ability of the farm operation to pay off current debts and take on additional ones.

Developing the Statement

A net worth statement may include only the farm business, or it may include household and personal assets and debts as well. For business analysis purposes, only information pertaining to the farming operation is needed. Information about nonfarm assets and liabilities can be added in a separate section and used for analyzing debt repayment capacity. For a farm partnership, include only items owned or owed by the partnership, not by the partners individually.

Most families make out a net worth statement as of December 31 or January 1 because this is the end of their accounting year. However, it is possible to develop a statement at any date and as often as needed. A blank form for completing a net worth statement is available at the end of this publication. You can also create your own net worth statement using Decision Tool Net Worth Statement. If you also want to create an income statement, cash flow statement and calculate financial performance measures use Decision Tool Complete Financial Statementsor the blank worksheets available in ISU Extension publication FM 1824/AgDM C3-56 Farm Financial Statements.

Valuing Assets

Assets are generally listed on the left-hand side and liabilities on the right-hand side. Both assets and liabilities are divided into current and fixed items.

Current assets include cash, bank accounts, crops, livestock, and supplies that will normally be sold or used within a year.
List the current balances for all your savings and checking accounts used for farm receipts and expenses. If you obtain your current checking account balance from your bank, remember to subtract the value of any checks that are still outstanding.

The key to correctly listing current assets is to accurately estimate both the number and value of items on hand.  ISU Extension publication FM 1490/AgDM C1-40, Suggested Closing Inventory Prices is helpful for valuing current assets.

For market livestock, begin with an up-to-date inventory of the number of head and estimated weight for each class of livestock. Value them at current market prices, minus potential marketing and transportation costs. Check with local markets or use local prices available from newspapers, radio, or other sources of marketing information.

For grain and feed, including hay, silage, straw, and supplements:

Other current assets include:

Fixed assets are those used in farm production, but not intended to be sold or converted directly into marketable products during the year (except for breeding livestock to be culled).

For breeding and dairy livestock:

For machinery, equipment, and vehicles:

Do not include machinery, equipment, or breeding livestock that you are leasing, unless they are shown on your tax depreciation schedule.

For perennial or long-term crops such as alfalfa, orchard crops, or some vegetables, sum up all the costs incurred for establishing the crop and depreciate that amount over its productive life.

Other fixed assets include land, buildings, and other improvements. They often have the largest dollar value of any assets on the net worth statement. On some statements, fixed assets are divided into intermediate and long-term assets.

List the cost basis of farm real estate under the cost value column:

List owned farm real estate at a conservative current value in the market value column.

Shares in other farming entities such as a sow cooperative should also be shown under fixed assets.

Personal assets such as family bank accounts, retirement accounts, stocks and bonds, household goods, vehicles, housing or other real estate can be listed separately at the bottom of the assets side of the statement.

Listing liabilities

Liabilities are generally listed on the right-hand side of the net worth statement and include all debts and obligations to pay that the farm business or family has on the date of the statement. Liabilities are usually listed according to the length of time before they become due. You may want to list the creditor’s name and the purpose of each liability, as well as the amount, on a separate page.

Current liabilities are those due within the next 12 months.

Example 4Fixed liabilities include debts payable more than one year in the future.

Personal liabilities can be shown at the bottom of the liabilities column. These include consumer debts, credit card balances, home mortgages, and bills to pay.

Net Worth

The difference between total farm assets and total farm liabilities is the net worth, or equity, at the time the statement is made. It is the current value of your own investment in the farming operation. Adding net worth to total liabilities (which is the share of assets contributed by creditors) gives you a figure equal to total assets and serves as a check on your arithmetic.

The cost value net worth shows the value of your own investment excluding changes in the market values of machinery or real estate, while market value net worth does include these changes.

Farm and personal net worth can be added together to find the total family net worth.

Analyzing the Statement

Once you have completed your net worth statement, take time to look it over and understand what it can tell you. To begin, look at each major liability listed and see if a corresponding item can be found under the asset side. The corresponding item will usually be listed under the same section (current or fixed). If a corresponding asset cannot be found, you may have forgotten to list something. Or the asset originally acquired with borrowed money may have already been sold or used up before paying the corresponding liability. This is a danger sign. It means that you must generate funds to pay this debt elsewhere in the farm business.

Another danger sign is a liability that appears closer to the top of the statement than its corresponding asset. An example is a machinery item bought on a one-year note. It is usually difficult to pay for an asset over a period of time considerably shorter than its useful life.

Sometimes the value of a particular liability is greater than the value of its corresponding asset. This may mean that the debt is not adequately secured, or it may occur simply because rapid depreciation methods have been used.

Financial Ratios

Example 5Several ratios can be computed from the net worth statement, and used to help analyze the financial security of your business (see Example 5). More information on these ratios, including benchmark values, can be found in ISU Extension publication FM 1845/AgDM C3-55 Financial Performance Measures for Iowa Farms.

Debt-to-asset ratio (or percent debt) is equal to total liabilities divided by the market value of total assets. It indicates the portion of total capital supplied by creditors. A successful farm business will have a decreasing ratio over time, except in years when major assets such as land are purchased with borrowed capital. A low debt-to-asset ratio usually leads to less year-to-year variability in net farm income.

A personal debt-to-asset ratio also can be calculated, using total farm and personal asset and liability values.

A current ratio can be calculated by dividing total current assets by total current liabilities. This is a measure of liquidity, or the ability to pay bills and debts as they come due.

A farm business with good overall risk-bearing ability can still have liquidity problems. This may be caused by a low income year resulting in carryover operating debt, or too rapid investment of cash into intermediate and long-term assets, such as machinery or land.

Many lenders consider a current ratio of 2.0 or greater to show good short-term risk-bearing ability, while a ratio close to 1.0 or lower indicates potential cash flow problems. However, this is affected by the type of farm, volume of production, and financial structure. For example, farms with regular livestock sales, such as dairy, often require lower current ratios than crop farms that have production only late in the year.

Some lenders prefer to look at the difference between current assets and current liabilities rather than their ratio. This difference is called working capital, and indicates the potential cash available for meeting daily operating costs, consumption expenditures, and other items not listed under current liabilities.

In many cases current liabilities will be paid from income generated from sales of farm products that have not yet been produced and do not appear as current assets. A more accurate analysis of repayment capacity can be made by developing a cash flow budget, as explained in ISU Extension publication FM 1792/AgDM C3-15 Twelve Steps to Cash Flow Budgeting.

Year-to-year Comparisons

The financial progress of the farm business can be measured by comparing a current net worth statement with earlier ones.

The change in cost value net worth from one year to the next shows the growth (or loss) due to net income earned from the farm business, and consumption. The following formula summarizes the relation among cost value net worth, income, and consumption expenditures:

net farm income (accrual)
+ non-farm income, gifts, or inheritances invested in the farm business
- farm income used for living expenses, income tax payments, and other consumption
= change in cost value farm net worth

The change in market value net worth is found by subtracting the market net worth shown on last year’s financial statement from that shown on this year’s. It measures the change in the market value of your equity share of the farm business. It also depends on net income and consumption, but includes changes in the market value of land or machinery, as well.

A decrease in net worth from one year to the next may result from low net farm income or high consumption expenditures. It may also result from large changes in inventory prices of current and fixed assets. For this reason, it is useful to compare similar items on the balance sheet from one year to the next. Changes in their values may be due to changes in volume, changes in unit prices, or both.

Many different forms and formats exist for developing a net worth statement. However, all of them contain the same basic information. Completing an annual net worth statement is one of the simplest means available for analyzing the risk-bearing ability and financial progress of your farm business.

Net worth statement example

Net worth statement