A balance sheet provides a snapshot of a company’s financial position at a specific point in time by showing what the company owns and owes, and the residual value attributable to owners. The core balance sheet equation is Assets = Liabilities + Shareholders’ Equity. That is why the best description among the choices is “assets, debts, and the amount invested in the companyâ€â€”assets correspond to resources owned, debts correspond to liabilities owed, and the “amount invested†corresponds to equity (often including paid-in capital and retained earnings). This aligns with how fundamental analysis uses financial statements to evaluate issuer health, leverage, and capitalization.
Choice A (revenues and expenses) describes an income statement, which measures operating performance over a period of time (e.g., a quarter or a year), not a point-in-time snapshot. Choice B is misleading: while a balance sheet is indeed “at a specific point in time,†it does not show “earnings†at a point in time. Earnings are generated over a period and appear on the income statement; the balance sheet may reflect accumulated earnings through retained earnings, but it is not an earnings statement. Choice C is incorrect because the balance sheet does not include the “number of investors†as a standard line item. Public companies disclose shares outstanding elsewhere, but investor count is not a balance sheet category.
For SIE purposes, the key is recognizing which statement answers which question: balance sheet = financial position (assets, liabilities, equity), income statement = profitability (revenue, expenses, net income), and cash flow statement = sources/uses of cash.