archived_user
New member
- Jun 18, 2026
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I have been looking into this topic for many hours and it seems to be totally ambiguous and I’ve been seeing different answers. Want to have a concrete understanding of how the cashflow statement works. Would appreciate if someone could check if my assumptions listed here are right:
Let’s say a financial institution has both borrowed and lent out money in the form of a loan…
Here are how I am assuming a financial institution would treat each entry:
You Borrow Money
Beginning of t = 0
DR Cash –> Cash received from borrowing money –> CFF Inflow
CR Loan Payable –> Initial record to show you (the bank) owe a party money –> No CF/S Entry
End of t = 0
DR Interest Expense –> Paying interest to the party that you owe money to –> CFO outflow
DR Loan Payable (aka loan amortization) –> You paying off the principal that you owe –> CFF outflow
_________
You Lend Out Money
Beginning of t = 0
DR Loan Receivable –> Initial record to show you’ve lent out $$, so no CF/S entry
CR Cash –> You lent out $ as loan –> CFF outflow
End of t = 0
CR Loan Receivable (aka loan amortization) –> You receive some principal amount from the party that owes you money, so CFF inflow
CR Interest Revenue –> Interest received on money you lent out, so CFO inflow
Let’s say a financial institution has both borrowed and lent out money in the form of a loan…
Here are how I am assuming a financial institution would treat each entry:
You Borrow Money
Beginning of t = 0
DR Cash –> Cash received from borrowing money –> CFF Inflow
CR Loan Payable –> Initial record to show you (the bank) owe a party money –> No CF/S Entry
End of t = 0
DR Interest Expense –> Paying interest to the party that you owe money to –> CFO outflow
DR Loan Payable (aka loan amortization) –> You paying off the principal that you owe –> CFF outflow
_________
You Lend Out Money
Beginning of t = 0
DR Loan Receivable –> Initial record to show you’ve lent out $$, so no CF/S entry
CR Cash –> You lent out $ as loan –> CFF outflow
End of t = 0
CR Loan Receivable (aka loan amortization) –> You receive some principal amount from the party that owes you money, so CFF inflow
CR Interest Revenue –> Interest received on money you lent out, so CFO inflow