Assets - a worked example (feedback, please)
In mmex - the purchaseIn the "real" world - the purchase
I bought the property for £100,000 on 21 June 2000. I was a "cash buyer" - lucky me. The legal etc. fees for the purchase were £1000. On 19 June the balance in my bank account was more than £102k, and on 20 June I transferred £101k to a conveyancing solicitor, who completed the purchase and registered the property in my name on 21 June. My net worth changed:
- from £102k on 19 June (all in the bank account)
- to £1k on 20 June (in the bank account)
- to a nominal £101k on 21 June (consisting of £1k in the bank account plus the property, assigned a market value of £100k)
Step 1. I have one bank account, opened before 2000-06-19, whose reconciled balance on 2000-06-19 is more than £101k. I can afford the property purchase.
To keep it simple, an initial balance was used here and we can check it from the dashboard too. Step 2. On 2000-06-19, I created an asset "property-1" with an initial value of £0 and an associated asset account also named "Property" or "property-1" with an initial balance of £0, i.e., before any property-related transactions.
Here is a recommended way:
We created an Asset Account first, then an asset with the exact name property-1. Both have £0 balance and would be linked via the name. Step 3, I create a (non-asset) transaction on 2000-06-20 which transfers £100k from the bank account to the asset account and a withdrawal of £1k from the bank account, with payee "solicitor", on the same date.
Here is a recommended way:
transfer £101k only, and we can see the cash movement and will track the fee in an optimized way later. Step 4, I create a withdrawal/transfer asset transaction on 2000-06-21 for £100k, with payee "vendor".
Here is a recommended way:
we added an asset transaction to buy with the amount of £101k. then we spent £101k and got an asset worth £101k. Step 5, Revalued the asset to its real worth: £100k. After purchase, the property’s real value was £100k. The £1k legal fee was already included in the £101k total, making this a more accurate reflection of investment cost and ROI or G/L calculations.
Step 6, apply 5 percent yearly growth At least, we can review all these steps