Company A owns the following investments:
trading securities (fair value) 60,000
available for sale securities (fair value) 35,000
held to maturity securities (amortized value) 47,000
Do I add the 35,000 and the 47,000 to get 82,000?
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Company A owns the following investments:
trading securities (fair value) 60,000
available for sale securities (fair value) 35,000
held to maturity securities (amortized value) 47,000
Do I add the 35,000 and the 47,000 to get 82,000?
Add it for what purpose?
I assumed they were both investments.
Is this the correct assumption?
All three are investments. Trading securities are current. The other two can be current or long-term. I know you titled the thread long-term, but since trading securities aren't long-term, I really didn't know if that was relevant to your question or not. If they are long-term and you want to total them together, then yes. You weren't very clear about exactly what you were trying to accomplish.
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