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Balance Sheet

Whether you're walking a tightrope or scribbling in your checkbook, balance is a good thing. And, one of the best ways to evaluate a company is to glance at its balance sheet to see what it owns with what it owes.

The balance sheet is a paragon of simplicity and is made up of three components: assets (the stuff it owns), liabilities (the money it owes), and shareholders' equity (the company's value to its shareholders).

Assets take two forms: short-term (or current) assets and long-term assets. Under short-term, there¿s good ol' hard cash. Then, there¿s something called "cash equivalents," which are assets like short-term bonds that can be sold so quickly, they might as well be cash. There you factor in inventory, which (if you're a reasonably competent business owner) you can sell to customers in return for--you guessed it--cash. (The raw materials a company owns to make that inventory also falls under this category.)

Long-term assets are things that are harder to convert into cash. (Think real estate and equipment.) Long-term assets depreciate, meaning they lose some value over time. Also under the long-term category are what's called intangible assets: things like patents and brands, that are important, but hard to quantify. Accountants earn their stripes figuring out the real overall value of these assets.

Once you know your assets, it's time for liabilities. As with assets, liabilities are separated into short-term or current, and long-term. Current liabilities are what a company owes in that year: Things like payments to employees or accounts payable to suppliers. Long-term liabilities are debts paid over several years.

Shareholders' equity is determined by subtracting the liabilities from the assets. That number represents the value of the company after all its bills are paid.

Obviously, investors should pay close attention to balance sheets. Spikes in the amount of debt carried, or a reduction in shareholders' equity, are usually red flags.

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National Coal Corp. CEO Daniel Roling to Present at Merrill Lynch Conference

 
Comtex
 

KNOXVILLE, Tenn., May 12, 2008 (BUSINESS WIRE) ----National Coal Corp. (Nasdaq: NCOC), a Central and Southern Appalachian coal producer, announces its President and CEO, Daniel Roling, is scheduled to make a presentation at the Merrill Lynch Metals and Mining Conference in Miami, Fla., on Tuesday, May 13, 2008, at 4:30 p.m. Eastern Time. This presentation will be accessible online via the Company's website at http://www.nationalcoal.com/investors.php.

National Coal recently updated its website, www.nationalcoal.com, where visitors can view the Company's most recent presentations, sign-up for news alerts, and read frequently updated information.

About National Coal Corp.

Headquartered in Knoxville, Tenn., National Coal Corp., through its wholly-owned subsidiary, National Coal Corporation, is engaged in coal mining in East Tennessee, and through its wholly-owned subsidiary, National Coal of Alabama, is engaged in coal mining in Alabama. Currently, National Coal employs about 350 people. National Coal sells steam coal to electric utilities and industrial companies in the Southeastern United States. For more information and to sign-up for instant news alerts visit www.nationalcoal.com.

SOURCE: National Coal Corp.

for National Coal Corp. Christine Pietryla, 865-690-6900, ext. 150 (Investor Relations)
   
Copyright Business Wire 2008
 

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