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There are three GAAP-specified categories of contingent liabilities: probable, possible, and remote. Probable contingencies are likely to occur and can be reasonably estimated.
There are three primary types of liabilities: current, non-current, and contingent liabilities. Liabilities are legal obligations or debt. Capital stack ranks the priority of different sources of financing.
Liabilities can be broken down into two main categories: current and concurrent. Current liabilities are short-term debts that you pay within a year. Concurrent liabilities, or long-term liabilities, are debts that are not due within a year. List your long-term liabilities separately on your balance sheet.
Examples of Noncurrent Liabilities include debentures, long-term loans, bonds payable, deferred tax liabilities, long-term lease obligations, and pension benefit obligations. The portion of a bond liability that will not be paid within the upcoming year is classified as a concurrent liability.
A liability is something a person or company owes, usually a sum of money. Recorded on the right side of the balance sheet, liabilities include loans, accounts payable, mortgages, deferred revenues, earned premiums, unearned premiums, and accrued expenses. Even marriages can change your liability.
Rules specify that contingent liabilities should be recorded in the accounts when it is probable that the future event will occur and the amount of the liability can be reasonably estimated. This means that a loss would be recorded (debit) and a liability established (credit) in advance of the settlement.
Contingent liabilities must pass two thresholds before they can be reported in financial statements: it must be possible to estimate the value of the contingent liability, and the liability must have greater than a 50% chance of being realized.
Contingent liability recognition typically depends on two things, the likelihood of loss and the ability to estimate the loss. There are three descriptors to estimate the likelihood. These range from remote, to reasonably probable, to probable.
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