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This table contains information on the balance sheet of the general government sector. The balance sheet shows stock levels of assets and financial liabilities, as well as net worth of the general government sector. Assets are either financial (e.g. loans) or non-financial (e.g. non-residential buildings). The stock of assets equals the sum of the stock of financial liabilities and net worth. Stocks of assets and liabilities in this table are mostly valued at market value. This is the value of the asset or liability as if it were being acquired or sold on the date to which the balance sheet relates. When there are no observable market prices, estimates are made for the market value. Financial assets and liabilities that are not commonly traded on a market, such as cash, deposits, loans and other accounts receivable/payable are valued at nominal value.
The figures in this table are consolidated at the general government level. This means that stocks between units that both belong to the general government sector are eliminated.
The terms and definitions used are in accordance with the framework of the Dutch national accounts. National accounts are based on the international definitions of the European System of Accounts (ESA 2010). Small temporary differences with publications of the National Accounts may occur due to the fact that the government finance statistics are sometimes more up to date.
Data available from: 1995
Status of the figures: The figures for the period 1995-2022 are final. The figures for 2023 are provisional.
Changes as of 23 September 2024: Annual figures for 2023 are available. The financial assets and liabilities and the net saving and capital transfers of general government for 2022 have been revised due to updated information. In the context of the revision policy of the National accounts the annual figures from 1995 of the financial accounts of general government have been revised. The annual figures for 2022 are final.
When will new figures be published? New provisional data are published in July or August after the end of the reporting year. The previous provisional figures will become final and previous final figures can be revised at the same time. More information on the revision policy of National Accounts can be found under 'relevant articles' under paragraph 3.
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Graph and download economic data for Total Assets, All Commercial Banks (TLAACBQ158SBOG) from Q2 1973 to Q4 2024 about assets, banks, depository institutions, rate, and USA.
This table contains 38 series, with data starting from 1935 (not all combinations necessarily have data for all years). This table contains data described by the following dimensions (Not all combinations are available): Geography (1 items: Canada ...), Assets and liabilities (38 items: Total assets; Total; Government of Canada; bonds; Total; Government of Canada; direct and guaranteed securities; Government of Canada; Treasury Bills ...).
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View the total value of the assets of all Federal Reserve Banks as reported in the weekly balance sheet.
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United States - Residual (Assets Less Liabilities), Domestically Chartered Commercial Banks was 2343.79100 Bil. of U.S. $ in February of 2025, according to the United States Federal Reserve. Historically, United States - Residual (Assets Less Liabilities), Domestically Chartered Commercial Banks reached a record high of 2547.28860 in February of 2025 and a record low of 65.39110 in January of 1973. Trading Economics provides the current actual value, an historical data chart and related indicators for United States - Residual (Assets Less Liabilities), Domestically Chartered Commercial Banks - last updated from the United States Federal Reserve on March of 2025.
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Quarterly balance sheet of the other financial corporations sector presented on a modified whom-to whom basis at market value according to the Special Data Dissemination Standard Plus (SDDS plus).
In March 2003, banks and selected Registered Financial Corporations (RFCs) began reporting their international assets, liabilities and country exposures to APR in ARF/RRF 231 International Exposures. This return is the basis of the data provided by Australia to the Bank for International Settlements (BIS) for its International Banking Statistics (IBS) data collection. APR ceased the RFC data collection after September 2010.
The IBS data are based on the methodology described in the "http://www.bis.org/statistics/intfinstatsguide.pdf">BIS Guide on International Financial Statistics [PDF] (see Part II International banking statistics). Data reported for Australia, and other countries, on the BIS website are expressed in United States dollars.
Data are recorded on an end-quarter basis.
All banks operating in Australia complete ARF 231. Between March 2003 and September 2010, only those larger RFCs with sizeable overseas assets and/or liabilities completed RRF 231. Bank and RFC positions are reported in Australian dollars (AUD). Non-AUD denominated positions have been converted to AUD using an appropriate end-quarter exchange rate, so changes in reported data between quarters are due not only to changes in positions but also valuation gains or losses due to exchange rate changes.
There are two sets of IBS data: locational data, which are used to gauge the role of banks and financial centres in the intermediation of international capital flows; and consolidated data, which can be used to monitor the country risk exposure of national banking systems. Only locational data are reported in this statistical table.
All assets are reported at market value. While some liabilities are reported at market value, contractual or nominal values are used where market values are not appropriate.
The locational data reported in this statistical table are on international assets and liabilities, comprise loans and deposits, securities and other assets and liabilities vis- -vis non-residents in all currencies and vis-A -vis residents in foreign currency. The main balance sheet items included as claims (i.e. assets) are deposits and balances placed with banks, loans and advances to banks and non-banks and holdings of securities. The main liabilities include deposits and loans received from banks and non-banks. Reporting entitiesa own issues of securities in international markets are also included as liabilities. (See notes to statistical tables B12.1 and B12.2 for more detail on the types of assets and liabilities included.)
aTotal banks and RFCsa is also reported in United States dollar (USD) equivalent amounts, using the end-quarter AUD/USD exchange rate from statistical table F11.
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Reserve Bank of India: Total Liabilities or Assets data was reported at 72,958,300.000 INR mn in 07 Mar 2025. This records an increase from the previous number of 72,338,130.000 INR mn for 28 Feb 2025. Reserve Bank of India: Total Liabilities or Assets data is updated daily, averaging 16,501,020.000 INR mn from Oct 1996 (Median) to 07 Mar 2025, with 1482 observations. The data reached an all-time high of 73,082,710.000 INR mn in 27 Sep 2024 and a record low of 2,213,130.000 INR mn in 28 Feb 1997. Reserve Bank of India: Total Liabilities or Assets data remains active status in CEIC and is reported by Reserve Bank of India. The data is categorized under High Frequency Database’s Monetary – Table IN.KBA003: Assets and Liabilities: Reserve Bank of India: Weekly.
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This table contains 77 series, with data for years 1970 - 1990 (not all combinations necessarily have data for all years), and is no longer being released. This table contains data described by the following dimensions (Not all combinations are available): Geography (1 item: Canada); Assets, liabilities and members' equities (77 items: Total assets;Cash and demand deposits;On hand;Demand deposits; ...).
This table contains 110 series, with data starting from 1946 (not all combinations necessarily have data for all years). This table contains data described by the following dimensions (Not all combinations are available): Geography (1 items: Canada ...), Assets and liabilities (110 items: Total assets; Total; Canadian dollar assets; Total of foregoing assets; Total; foreign currency assets ...).
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Graph and download economic data for Total Assets, All Commercial Banks (TLAACBM027NBOG) from Jan 1973 to Feb 2025 about assets, banks, depository institutions, and USA.
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This table contains information on the balance sheet of the general government sector. The information is limited to financial assets and liabilities. For each reporting period the opening and closing stocks, financial transactions and other changes are shown. Transactions are economic flows that are the result of agreements between units. Other changes are changes in the value of assets or liabilities that do not result from transactions such as revaluations or reclassifications. The figures are consolidated which means that flows between units that belong to the same sector are eliminated. As a result, assets and liabilities of subsectors do not add up to total assets or liabilities of general government. For example, loans of the State provided to social security funds are part of loans of the State. However, these are not included in the consolidated assets of general government, because it is an asset of a government unit with a government unit as debtor. Financial assets and liabilities in this table are presented at market value. The terms and definitions used are in accordance with the framework of the Dutch national accounts. National accounts are based on the international definitions of the European System of Accounts (ESA 2010). Small temporary differences with publications of the National Accounts may occur due to the fact that the government finance statistics are sometimes more up to date.
Data available from: Yearly figures from 1995, quarterly figures from 1999.
Status of the figures: The figures for the period 1995-2022 are final. The figures for 2023 and 2024 are provisional.
Changes as of 24 December 2024: Figures on the third quarter of 2024 are available. The figures for the second quarter of 2024 have been adjusted.
When will new figures be published? Provisional quarterly figures are published three months after the end of the quarter. In September the figures on the first quarter may be revised, in December the figures on the second quarter may be revised and in March the first three quarters may be revised. Yearly figures are published for the first time three months after the end of the year concerned. Yearly figures are revised two times: 6 and 18 months after the end of the year. Please note that there is a possibility that adjustments might take place at the end of March or September, in order to provide the European Commission with the most actual figures. Revised yearly figures are published in June each year. Quarterly figures are aligned to the three revised years at the end of June. More information on the revision policy of Dutch national accounts and government finance statistics can be found under 'relevant articles' under paragraph 3.
The Financial Balance Sheets show financial assets, liabilities and net financial worth (assets minus liabilities) at the end of the period. This table is on a non-consolidated basis, meaning that it shows all assets and liabilities of units in a sector or subsector (or the economy as a whole), in contrast with consolidated balance sheets in which counterpart assets and liabilities of units within the same sector or subsector (or the economy as a whole) would be removed.
In this table, the presentation is on a country-by-country basis. Users are recommended to select one country (or area) at a time in the ‘Reference area’ filter. The default view of the table is for the economy as a whole, but you can use the ‘Institutional sector’ filter to select specific sectors such as Non-financial Corporations, Financial Corporations, General Government and Households, as well as the Rest of the world account. For each sector, the table presents breakdowns by financial instrument, for example currency and deposits, debt securities, loans, equity and investment fund shares, insurance and pensions. Users can also choose to compare a single financial instrument, such as listed shares, for several countries.
Users should note that Australia does not produce non-consolidated accounts.
These indicators were presented in the previous dissemination system in the QASA_TABLE720R dataset.
Explore also the OECD Financial Accounts and Balance Sheets webpage: Financial Accounts and Balance Sheets webpage
OECD statistics contact: STAT.Contact@oecd.org
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United States - Residual (Assets Less Liabilities), All Commercial Banks was 1978.11500 Bil. of U.S. $ in April of 2022, according to the United States Federal Reserve. Historically, United States - Residual (Assets Less Liabilities), All Commercial Banks reached a record high of 2068.47100 in August of 2021 and a record low of 35.63260 in January of 1973. Trading Economics provides the current actual value, an historical data chart and related indicators for United States - Residual (Assets Less Liabilities), All Commercial Banks - last updated from the United States Federal Reserve on March of 2025.
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The balance sheet files are provided monthly or quarterly, depending on the financial institution type. They contain the Balance Sheet for financial institutions (document code 4010) and the Financial Consolidate (document code 4040). In order to highlight the source of the resource, the direction of the credit and the nature of the operations, the Asset and Liability accounts are subdivided into five levels, but for the publication all accounts are disclosure up to level three. For more information about the levels of accounts, see link http://www.bcb.gov.br/?COSIF, Chapter 1 – Basic Rules – General Principles – Classification of Accounts. According to Communicate 20.467/2011, the disclosure of all documents from the Chart of Accounts for Financial Institutions (COSIF) must occur 60 days after the document closing date, except for December, which must be disclosed up to 90 days of the closing date. According to Law 4.595/64, the financial institutions must calculate loss and profits on June, 30th and on December, 31st, every year, observing accounting rules established by the Nacional Monetary Council (CMN). The loss and profit accounts, both debtor or creditor positions, must be liquidated (zeroed) by the closing dates on June and December. Balance Sheet Files Fields Description Date: Reference date for the document (formatted as YYYYMM). CNPJ: Institution identifier from the National Corporate Taxpayers Registry (CNPJ), maintained by Brazilian Federal Revenue Office (RFB). Institution Name: Name of the financial institution, as stated in the Brazilian Central Bank Entity Registry (Unicad). Attribute: Represented by letters (from A to Z), it identifies the type of institution that can use a certain account (for more information see link http://www.bcb.gov.br/?COSIF, Chapter 2 - Chart of Accounts – Comments). Document: Identifier for the accounting report in question, from the Documents Catalog (Cadoc) (see document format at http://www.bcb.gov.br/?COSIF, chapter 3 - Documents). Account: Account identifier for the balance in question, following standards defined in the Cosif (see link http://www.bcb.gov.br/?COSIF, chapter 2 - Chart of Accounts – for information on how each account must be calculated). Account Name: Full account name, as defined by Cosif. Balance: Account outstanding balance. Must be formatted with 2 decimal places (the proper formatting must be applied depending on the software application used to read the file). The field must be presented using the proper currency label, which must be one of the following, according to the statement closing date. Real (R$): from 07/1994 to date Cruzeiro Real (CR$): from 08/1993 to 06/1994 Cruzeiro (Cr$) : from 03/1990 to 07/1993 Cruzado Novo (NCz$): from 01/1989 to 02/1990
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United States - Residual (Assets Less Liabilities), Large Domestically Chartered Commercial Banks was 1615.73910 Bil. of U.S. $ in March of 2025, according to the United States Federal Reserve. Historically, United States - Residual (Assets Less Liabilities), Large Domestically Chartered Commercial Banks reached a record high of 1766.92740 in February of 2025 and a record low of 66.02750 in October of 1999. Trading Economics provides the current actual value, an historical data chart and related indicators for United States - Residual (Assets Less Liabilities), Large Domestically Chartered Commercial Banks - last updated from the United States Federal Reserve on March of 2025.
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This table contains 85 series, with data for years 1972 - 1990 (not all combinations necessarily have data for all years), and is no longer being released. This table contains data described by the following dimensions (Not all combinations are available): Geography (1 item: Canada); Assets, liabilities and shareholders' equity (85 items: Total assets;Cash and demand deposits;Chartered banks;Canadian currency; ...).
This table contains 29 series, with data starting from 1953 (not all combinations necessarily have data for all years). This table contains data described by the following dimensions (Not all combinations are available): Geography (1 item: Canada), Assets and liabilities (29 items: Total assets; Total, Government of Canada, direct and guaranteed securities; Government of Canada, Treasury Bills; Total, Government of Canada, bonds; ...).
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This table presents financial transactions, other changes in assets and financial balance sheets of the (sub)sectors of the national economy. The data provide a detailed overview of the changes to the financial relations between sectors and with the rest of the world. The financial flows are a logical extension of the current and capital accounts within sector accounts. The financial balance sheets present outstanding assets and liabilities at the beginning and at the end of a period. Both financial transactions and other changes reflect the changes in value of these assets and liabilities during a particular period. These changes could be the result of agreements between parties (transactions) or the result of other causes such as revaluations (other changes). Balance sheets, financial transactions and other changes are related: Closing balance sheets last period (=opening balance sheets current period) plus financial transactions current period plus other changes current period = closing balance sheets of current period.
Data of the financial balance sheets, financial transactions and other changes are available for the main sectors of the economy: non-financial corporations, financial corporations, general government, households including non-profit institutions serving households (NPISH) and the rest of the world. The sectors financial corporations and general government are broken down into subsectors. Assets and liabilities are broken down into a variety of financial instruments.
Data available from: Years from 1969 to 2013 Quarters from first quarter 2005 to fourth quarter 2013.
Status of the figures: The figures concerning 2011, 2012, 2013 and 2014 are (revised) provisional. Because this table is discontinued, figures will not be updated anymore.
Changes as of June 25th 2014: None, this table is discontinued.
When will new figures be published? Not applicable anymore. This table is replaced by table Sector accounts; financial balance sheets and transactions. See paragraph 3.
In March 2003, banks and selected Registered Financial Corporations (RFCs) began reporting their international assets, liabilities and country exposures to APR in ARF/RRF 231 International Exposures.…Show full descriptionIn March 2003, banks and selected Registered Financial Corporations (RFCs) began reporting their international assets, liabilities and country exposures to APR in ARF/RRF 231 International Exposures. This return is the basis of the data provided by Australia to the Bank for International Settlements (BIS) for its International Banking Statistics (IBS) data collection. APR ceased the RFC data collection after September 2010. The IBS data are based on the methodology described in the BIS Guide on International Financial Statistics PDF. Data reported for Australia, and other countries, on the BIS website are expressed in United States dollars. Data are recorded on an end-quarter basis. All banks operating in Australia complete ARF 231. Between March 2003 and September 2010, only those larger RFCs with sizeable overseas assets and/or liabilities completed RRF 231. Bank and RFC positions are reported in Australian dollars (AUD). Non-AUD denominated positions have been converted to AUD using an appropriate end-quarter exchange rate, so changes in reported data between quarters are due not only to changes in positions but also valuation gains or losses due to exchange rate changes. There are two sets of IBS data: locational data, which are used to gauge the role of banks and financial centres in the intermediation of international capital flows; and consolidated data, which can be used to monitor the country risk exposure of national banking systems. Only locational data are reported in this statistical table. All assets are reported at market value. While some liabilities are reported at market value, contractual or nominal values are used where market values are not appropriate. The locational data reported in this statistical table are on international assets and liabilities, comprise loans and deposits, securities and other assets and liabilities vis- -vis non-residents in all currencies and vis-A -vis residents in foreign currency. The main balance sheet items included as claims (i.e. assets) are deposits and balances placed with banks, loans and advances to banks and non-banks and holdings of securities. The main liabilities include deposits and loans received from banks and non-banks. Reporting entitiesa own issues of securities in international markets are also included as liabilities. (See notes to statistical tables B12.1 and B12.2 for more detail on the types of assets and liabilities included.) aTotal banks and RFCsa is also reported in United States dollar (USD) equivalent amounts, using the end-quarter AUD/USD exchange rate from statistical table F11.
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This table contains information on the balance sheet of the general government sector. The balance sheet shows stock levels of assets and financial liabilities, as well as net worth of the general government sector. Assets are either financial (e.g. loans) or non-financial (e.g. non-residential buildings). The stock of assets equals the sum of the stock of financial liabilities and net worth. Stocks of assets and liabilities in this table are mostly valued at market value. This is the value of the asset or liability as if it were being acquired or sold on the date to which the balance sheet relates. When there are no observable market prices, estimates are made for the market value. Financial assets and liabilities that are not commonly traded on a market, such as cash, deposits, loans and other accounts receivable/payable are valued at nominal value.
The figures in this table are consolidated at the general government level. This means that stocks between units that both belong to the general government sector are eliminated.
The terms and definitions used are in accordance with the framework of the Dutch national accounts. National accounts are based on the international definitions of the European System of Accounts (ESA 2010). Small temporary differences with publications of the National Accounts may occur due to the fact that the government finance statistics are sometimes more up to date.
Data available from: 1995
Status of the figures: The figures for the period 1995-2022 are final. The figures for 2023 are provisional.
Changes as of 23 September 2024: Annual figures for 2023 are available. The financial assets and liabilities and the net saving and capital transfers of general government for 2022 have been revised due to updated information. In the context of the revision policy of the National accounts the annual figures from 1995 of the financial accounts of general government have been revised. The annual figures for 2022 are final.
When will new figures be published? New provisional data are published in July or August after the end of the reporting year. The previous provisional figures will become final and previous final figures can be revised at the same time. More information on the revision policy of National Accounts can be found under 'relevant articles' under paragraph 3.