SEC-Filed Financial Data

Free As Reported Balance Sheet Statements

Access balance sheet statements exactly as filed with the SEC for any publicly traded company. View assets, liabilities, and stockholders' equity with original line items — updated annually and quarterly.

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Enter a stock symbol above and click "Load Data" to view as-reported balance sheet statements.

What Is an As-Reported Balance Sheet Statement?

An as-reported balance sheet statement presents a company's financial position exactly as it was filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC). Unlike standardized financial statements that normalize data across companies, as-reported statements preserve the original line items, account names, and classifications used by the company in its 10-K (annual) and 10-Q (quarterly) filings. This gives investors and analysts access to the most granular, unmodified financial data — including items like cash and cash equivalents, marketable securities, property, plant & equipment, and stockholders' equity — as the company itself reported them.

How to Use This As-Reported Balance Sheet Tool

  1. 1

    Enter a Stock Symbol

    Type any ticker symbol (e.g., AAPL, MSFT, GOOGL) in the Symbol field to look up that company's as-reported balance sheet history.

  2. 2

    Select the Reporting Period

    Choose between Annual (10-K) or Quarterly (10-Q) filings. Annual statements provide a full fiscal year snapshot, while quarterly statements let you track changes throughout the year.

  3. 3

    Analyze the Results

    Review the summary table showing total assets, liabilities, and equity. Click "Expand" on any row to see the full breakdown of all balance sheet line items. Export to CSV for further analysis in Excel or Google Sheets.

Understanding Balance Sheet Sections

Current Assets

Assets expected to be converted to cash within one year, including cash and cash equivalents, marketable securities, accounts receivable, and inventory. A strong current asset base indicates short-term liquidity.

Non-Current Assets

Long-term assets including property, plant & equipment (PP&E), non-current marketable securities, and other long-term investments. These represent the company's long-term productive capacity and strategic investments.

Current Liabilities

Obligations due within one year, such as accounts payable, commercial paper, current portion of long-term debt, and deferred revenue. Comparing current liabilities to current assets reveals the company's short-term solvency.

Non-Current Liabilities

Long-term obligations including non-current long-term debt and other non-current liabilities. High non-current liabilities relative to equity may indicate elevated financial leverage and risk.

Stockholders' Equity

The residual interest in assets after deducting liabilities. Includes common stock, additional paid-in capital, retained earnings, and accumulated other comprehensive income. Growing equity signals long-term value creation for shareholders.

Accounting Equation

The fundamental equation Assets = Liabilities + Stockholders' Equity must always balance. The "Liabilities + Equity" field in the as-reported data should equal Total Assets, confirming the integrity of the filing.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the difference between as-reported and standardized balance sheets?

Standardized balance sheets reclassify and normalize line items across companies to make them comparable. As-reported balance sheets preserve the exact account names, classifications, and values that the company used in its SEC filings (10-K and 10-Q). As-reported data is more granular and reflects the company's own accounting choices, which can reveal important details that standardization may obscure.

How often is the as-reported balance sheet data updated?

Data is updated as companies file their financial statements with the SEC. Annual data (10-K filings) is typically available within 60–90 days after the fiscal year ends. Quarterly data (10-Q filings) is usually available within 40–45 days after each fiscal quarter. Our tool reflects the latest available filings.

What do the balance sheet line items mean?

The balance sheet is divided into three main sections: Assets (what the company owns), Liabilities (what the company owes), and Stockholders' Equity (the residual value belonging to shareholders). Current items are expected to be settled within one year, while non-current items extend beyond one year. Key items include cash and equivalents, accounts receivable, PP&E, accounts payable, long-term debt, retained earnings, and accumulated other comprehensive income.

Why might the reported currency show as null or missing?

Some filings may not explicitly specify the reporting currency in the structured data feed. For US-listed companies, the reporting currency is almost always USD. When the field shows as "-" or null, you can safely assume the values are denominated in US dollars unless the company is a foreign filer that reports in a different currency.

Is this as-reported balance sheet data free to use?

Yes, the Pineify As-Reported Balance Sheet tool is completely free. You can look up balance sheet data for any publicly traded company, expand detailed line items, export results to CSV, and refresh data at any time — no registration or subscription required.

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