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Chapter 4 — Cash and Cash Equivalents

4.1 Definition of Cash and Cash Equivalents

4.1 Definition of Cash and Cash Equivalents

ASC Master Glossary
Cash
Consistent with common usage, cash includes not only currency on hand but demand deposits with banks or other financial institutions. Cash also includes other kinds of accounts that have the general characteristics of demand deposits in that the customer may deposit additional funds at any time and also effectively may withdraw funds at any time without prior notice or penalty. All charges and credits to those accounts are cash receipts or payments to both the entity owning the account and the bank holding it. For example, a bank’s granting of a loan by crediting the proceeds to a customer’s demand deposit account is a cash payment by the bank and a cash receipt of the customer when the entry is made.
Example 4-1
Entity A invests excess funds in short-term (less than three months) bank repurchase agreements. The underlying securities in the transaction may have maturities greater than three months. Entity A may classify these repurchase agreements as cash equivalents in its balance sheet and statement of cash flows. The investment (the repurchase agreement), in substance, meets the criteria in ASC 230. The critical factor is the maturity of the repurchase agreement itself, not the underlying securities that serve to secure the investment.