From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary Englishbalance sheetˈbalance sheet noun [countable] BBBFa document showing a company’s financial position and wealth at a particular time, often the last day of the financial year a healthy balance sheet
Examples from the Corpus
balance sheet• Each produces an operating account and a balance sheet.• On the great balance sheet of a human life, the losses are seldom as memorable in the end as the gains.• And try to gauge whether the company is well-managed by checking its balance sheet and talking to experts about its business prospects.• It's a healthy company with a strong balance sheet.• Unlimited life goods are typically stored at historic cost in the balance sheet and there is no depreciation.• Unisys had $ 820 million in cash on the balance sheet at the close of the quarter.From Longman Business Dictionarybalance sheetˈbalance ˌsheet noun [countable]ACCOUNTING a document showing a company’s financial position and wealth at a particular time, often the last day of its financial yearThe company performed well last year, and has a healthy balance sheet with a good amount of cash.a strong balance sheeta clean balance sheet (=without debt or without too much debt) → off-balance sheet