Current Assets
Current assets are resources a company expects to convert to cash, sell, or consume within one year. They appear at the top of the assets section on the balance sheet and indicate short-term liquidity—how readily a company can meet near-term obligations.
Why current assets matter
- Show a company’s ability to pay short-term liabilities and fund operations.
- Are used by management, creditors, and investors to assess liquidity and working capital needs.
- Feed into common liquidity ratios (current ratio, quick ratio, cash ratio) that compare current assets to current liabilities.
Common types of current assets
Listed roughly in order of liquidity:
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- Cash and cash equivalents
- Includes on-hand cash, demand deposits, money market funds, treasury bills, and short-term CDs that have no restrictions on liquidity.
- Marketable securities
- Liquid investments traded on public markets that can be sold quickly without materially affecting price.
- Accounts receivable
- Amounts owed by customers for goods or services delivered. Net of an allowance for doubtful accounts to reflect likely uncollectible receivables.
- Inventory
- Raw materials, work in progress, and finished goods. Liquidity varies by product and industry.
- Prepaid expenses
- Payments made in advance for goods or services (e.g., insurance). Not convertible to cash but free up future cash flows.
- Other short-term investments
- Short-duration instruments or excess cash invested temporarily.
Current vs. noncurrent assets
- Current assets: convertible to cash or consumed within one year.
- Noncurrent (long-term) assets: held longer than one year (property, plant, equipment, long-term investments). Noncurrent assets are generally recorded at cost and depreciated or amortized; current assets are carried at fair value or net realizable value.
How to calculate total current assets
Total current assets is the sum of all qualifying short-term asset accounts shown on the balance sheet:
Current Assets = Cash + Cash Equivalents + Marketable Securities + Accounts Receivable (net) + Inventory + Prepaid Expenses + Other Short‑term Assets
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Most balance sheets present a subtotal called “Total Current Assets.”
Real-world examples
- Walmart (FY2024) — Total current assets: $76.9 billion
- Cash & short-term investments: $9.9B
- Accounts receivable: $9.0B
- Inventory: $54.9B
- Other current assets: $3.3B
- Microsoft (FY2023) — Total current assets: $184.3 billion
- Cash & short-term investments: $111.3B
- Accounts receivable: $48.7B
- Inventory: $2.5B
- Other current assets: $21.8B
Key liquidity ratios using current assets
- Current ratio = Total Current Assets / Current Liabilities
- Measures ability to cover short-term obligations with all current assets. A higher ratio indicates more cushion; too high may indicate idle assets.
- Quick ratio (acid-test) = (Cash + Cash Equivalents + Marketable Securities + Accounts Receivable) / Current Liabilities
- Excludes inventory; focuses on the most liquid assets.
- Cash ratio = Cash and Cash Equivalents / Current Liabilities
- Most conservative; shows ability to pay current liabilities immediately with cash on hand.
Practical considerations
- Order of presentation reflects liquidity, but classifications can vary by company and industry.
- Inventory and certain receivables may be less liquid than they appear—industry context matters.
- Management decisions (e.g., investment of excess cash in short-term securities) and accounting policies (e.g., valuation of inventory, allowance for doubtful accounts) affect reported current assets.
Bottom line
Current assets summarize the short-term resources a company can use to operate and meet obligations within a year. Reviewing their composition and related liquidity ratios helps stakeholders judge a company’s short-term financial health and operational flexibility.