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receivables

Receivables are financial assets that represent amounts owed to a business by customers or other parties as a result of delivering goods or services on credit. They arise from credit sales, notes received from customers, or other rights to receive payment. In financial reporting, receivables are typically classified as current assets when collection is expected within one year, with non-current receivables shown separately.

The major categories are accounts receivable (trade receivables), notes receivable, and other receivables such as interest

Measurement and impairment: Receivables are initially recognized at fair value, usually equal to the invoiced amount,

Management and risk: Effective receivables management includes credit risk assessment, setting credit limits, invoicing and collections,

Financial reporting and liquidity: On the balance sheet, receivables contribute to liquidity and working capital. Changes

receivable
or
tax
refunds.
Trade
receivables
arise
from
ordinary
business
operations;
notes
receivable
involve
formal
written
promises
to
pay
with
specified
terms;
other
receivables
cover
non-trade
amounts.
and
may
include
related
transaction
costs.
They
are
subsequently
measured
at
a
cost
basis,
commonly
amortized
cost,
and
assessed
for
impairment.
Under
standards
such
as
IFRS
9,
companies
recognize
expected
credit
losses
and
set
up
an
allowance
for
doubtful
accounts;
under
US
GAAP,
similar
allowances
and
bad
debt
expense
apply.
In
practice,
receivables
are
presented
net
of
the
allowance.
and
monitoring
aging.
An
aging
analysis
groups
receivables
by
age
to
identify
potential
losses
and
adjust
allowances.
Receivables
can
be
sold
or
factored
to
improve
liquidity,
and
large
exposures
may
be
collateralized
or
securitized.
in
the
allowance
for
credit
losses
affect
the
income
statement
and
provide
insight
into
credit
quality
and
collection
practices.
Receivables
intersect
with
revenue
recognition,
discounting
policies,
and
payment
terms.