Non-monetary items are assets and liabilities on a company's balance sheet whose value is not fixed in a specific number of currency units (like dollars or euros). Think of them as “things” rather than “claims to cash.” Their nominal monetary value can, and often does, change over time, especially in response to economic forces like inflation. This is the crucial difference between them and their counterparts, monetary items (like cash or accounts receivable), which have a fixed dollar value. For example, a pile of cash will always be worth its face value, but its purchasing power will erode with inflation. In contrast, the value of a factory, a warehouse full of products, or a strong brand name will likely rise in dollar terms during an inflationary period. Common examples of non-monetary items include inventory, property, plant, and equipment (PP&E), intangible assets such as patents and goodwill, and investments in common stock.
For a value investor, understanding non-monetary items is like having a secret weapon against inflation. In a world where the value of money is constantly being chipped away, these items can act as a sturdy shield, preserving and even growing a company's real worth. Imagine you have two choices: hold $100,000 in cash or own a small apartment worth $100,000. If inflation runs at 5% for a year, your cash can now only buy what $95,000 could have bought a year ago. Its purchasing power has shrunk. The apartment (a non-monetary asset), however, will likely see its market price rise to around $105,000, keeping pace with inflation. It has protected your wealth. The same logic applies to companies. A business rich in non-monetary assets—factories, real estate, valuable brands—is often better positioned to weather inflationary storms than one that primarily holds cash or receivables. These assets have a “real” value that tends to rise with the general price level, protecting shareholder value in the long run.
The balance sheet is your treasure map for finding these items. They are generally categorized as either assets or liabilities.
These are the most common and intuitive types of non-monetary items.
These are a bit trickier to grasp but are just as important. They represent obligations that will be settled by providing goods or services rather than a fixed amount of cash.
The magic really happens when a company cleverly combines non-monetary assets with monetary liabilities. Imagine a business that builds a factory (a non-monetary asset) for $50 million, financing it entirely with a 30-year, fixed-rate long-term debt (a monetary liability). Now, let's fast-forward through a decade of persistent inflation.
In this scenario, inflation has transferred wealth from the lender to the company and its shareholders. The company's real debt burden has shrunk, while the value of its real assets has grown. This is a powerful concept that legendary investors like Warren Buffett have used to identify wonderful businesses. The best businesses, he often notes, are those that can grow while requiring very little new capital investment (PP&E) but possess immense pricing power (a powerful intangible asset), making them fantastic inflation-proof engines of wealth creation.