Just realized something about how accounting actually works that most people get wrong. When companies lend money to each other via notes, there's this weird thing nobody talks about - the way you calculate interest receivable is totally different from how you'd think.



So here's the thing: the financial world doesn't use a 365-day year like the rest of us. They use 360 days. Sounds random, but it matters when you're calculating how much interest you're actually owed. Let me break this down with a real example.

Imagine your company gets a $10,000 note at 9% annual interest that matures in 60 days. To figure out your interest receivable, you'd do: $10,000 × 9% × (60/360) = $150. Simple formula, but the 360-day assumption is key. Most people miss this.

Now here's where it gets interesting - calculating interest revenue is a separate thing entirely. You record revenue before you actually get paid, which is the whole point of accrual accounting. Say that note was issued December 10th and you need to close the books on December 31st. You've only earned 21 days of interest at that point, so it's $10,000 × 9% × (21/360) = $52.50. You'd record that $52.50 as interest revenue even though the borrower hasn't paid you yet.

The rest of the interest receivable gets recorded later as you actually earn it. This is why understanding the mechanics matters - revenue recognition timing can completely change how your financials look month to month. It's one of those accounting quirks that seems confusing until you actually see it in practice.
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