Hi Bo, I think I understand what has happened. Accounts of type stock should have an Asset account as their parent account not a Liability account. When you are issued stock as unpaid the Liability account will simply be an account of type Liability not of type Stock. A possible account tree to cover this might look like (":" denoting a subaccount).
Assets:Investments:Brokerage:ABCCorp Liabilities:Investments:Unpaid Stock:ABCCorp Here Assets, Assets:Investments and Assets Investments:Brokerage will be accounts of type Asset and ABCcorp is of type Stock and Liabilities, Liabilities:Investments, Liabilities:Investments:Unpaid Stock and Liabilities:Investments:Unpaid Stock:ABCCorp are all accounts of type Liability. The type and parent are set in the Edit Account dialog. You should be able to change them in the dialog A typical transaction on issues of 100 shares the stock with a face value of $10 might look something like: no Price Debit Credit Assets:Investments:Brokerage:ABCCorp 100 $10 $1000 Liabilities:Investments:Unpaid Stock:ABCCorp $1000 With any luck when you have them setup like this they should then appear correctly in the Balance Sheet. Give it a try and let us know how you go. David On Mon, 2020-01-27 at 02:17 +0000, Bo Byrd via gnucash-user wrote: > > Hi yes exactly - it its the other case you describe for "unpaid" issues. > Under report options I select all accounts, > and those liabilities do show up - but they show up in the assets section at > the top of the report (where the > calculation correctly subtracts them from my assets). All that is at the > bottom of my balance sheet report is A/P and > Credit Card accounts. > > I think it has something to do with how I created a "stock" account under the > top-level Liabilites account, and then > how I must record transactions - for example if I am to show receipt of 100 > units, I will enter "-100" under the "Tot > Shares" column for the liability account split, and then a "+100" under the > "Tot Shares" for the asset account side > split. > > But then the liability doesnt show up under liabilities - it shows up in the > top section "Assets" (as a negative > value). So its not really off at all as far as the numbers/maths go, its just > weird that its showing up top. > > > > On Sunday Jan 26, 2020; 5:47pm CST, David Cousens <davidcous...@bigpond.com> > wrote: > > > The situation you are describing is not clear. By stock do you mean shares > which are issued to you but which you have not purchased, perhaps as part of > a stock option? > > It is not clear why you would record this with splits to both Assets and > Lliabilities. You mention "their liability account". Their liability account > should not appear in your books , only liabilities, that is obligations you > have to pay someone, that you have incurred. One would normally record any > acquistion of stock as an asset against equity, either the temporary income > and expense accounts of equity or a permanent equity account or as a > transfer from another asset account. You would normally only incur a > liability if you borrowed the money to purchase the stock for example, but > you borrow it not the asset you purchase with it. > > The other case could be if the stock was "unpaid" shares for example where > you receive an issue, but may be called upon to pay for them at a future > date. Then it may be appropriate to record that future possible demand for > payment as a liability. In this case the asset value is neutral in your > accounts (apart from capital gains and dividends) and it should be included > in both the totals for assets and liabilities. You may need to check which > accounts are selected for inclusion in the Balance sheet report and which > are selected to be displayed explicitly in the report in the Edit->Report > Options. > > You may have to describe the situation in a bit more detail but this may > really an accounting question and perhaps you should seek professional > advice in your jurisdiction on how to record the particular situation. > > David Cousens > > > > ----- > David Cousens -- Dr David R Cousens B.Sc, M.Prof. Acc., Ph.D., G.C.Ed _______________________________________________ gnucash-user mailing list gnucash-user@gnucash.org To update your subscription preferences or to unsubscribe: https://lists.gnucash.org/mailman/listinfo/gnucash-user If you are using Nabble or Gmane, please see https://wiki.gnucash.org/wiki/Mailing_Lists for more information. ----- Please remember to CC this list on all your replies. You can do this by using Reply-To-List or Reply-All.