The Simplest Example - 2 Periods, 3 Source Terms
START HERE - 2 MinutesThis is the simplest possible equity bridge. If you understand this example, you understand the entire framework. We'll walk through:
Time required: 2 minutes
Math difficulty: Addition and subtraction only
Company XYZ has equity at the beginning and end of the year:
Question: Equity increased by $150. Where did it come from?
The equity bridge decomposes the $150 change into explicit source terms:
| Source Term | Amount | Sign | IFRS/GAAP Standard |
|---|---|---|---|
| P - Net Income (Profit or Loss) | +$200 | Increases equity | IAS 1.106(a) |
| O - Other Comprehensive Income | $0 | (None this period) | IAS 1.82 |
| Owner - Dividends Paid | -$50 | Decreases equity | IAS 1.107 |
| Total Change (ฮE) | +$150 | $200 - $50 + $0 = $150 โ | |
The equity bridge formula states that equity change equals all source terms:
The equity bridge closes when all source terms are accounted for. No gaps, no magic.
Now that you understand the basic mechanics, you can explore:
Remember: If you can do this 3-term example, you can understand the 51-term version. It's the same structure, just more sources.
This simple example illustrates the core insight of the accounting conservation framework:
"Every dollar of equity change has an explicit source mandated by IFRS/GAAP."
Traditional accounting teaching shows ฮE = $150 and stops there. The framework asks: "What are the 51 IFRS/GAAP terms that sum to $150?" This decomposition enables: