Reserve (accounting)
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.
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.
Types of reserves in accounting treatment
There are different types of reserves used in financial accounting, including 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 laws 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
Sometimes reserve is used in the sense of provision. This is inconsistent with the terminology suggested by International Accounting Standards Board. For more information about provisions, see provision. The preceding is, indeed, correct IASB usage, but be aware in the U.S., under U.S. Generally Accepted Accounting Principles, "provision" refers to a debit balance, not a credit balance. "Provision" is a dangerous word to use in attempting to achieve clear communications in conversations with U.S. and IASB conversations. "Provision for Income Taxes" means expense in U.S. GAAP and liability in IASB vernacular.
Ideal operating reserves
There is no single ideal operating reserve ratio. The purpose of the reserve is to keep the organization intact and to continue providing services during a temporary financial shock. The reserves need to be large enough to support all normal operating activities during an unexpected decline in income.A large organization that has a steady, reliable income source is unlikely to burn through more than about three months' expenses during an unexpected financial shock. A smaller organization or one with volatile income sources could be vulnerable even if it had more than six months' expenses in reserve. Grantmakers, for example, frequently maintain operating reserves of more than 12 months because their income often depends on a volatile stock market. A large animal protection organization has about a 10% chance of losing a quarter of their revenue during a year, which would require about three months' reserves to cover, and a 1% risk of losing half their revenue during a difficult year, which would require reserves equal to six months' expenses. Small animal protection organizations have more volatile income patterns, so they need higher reserves, potentially exceeding more than a year's worth of expenses.