> However, it seems to be lacking in one area. Consider buying and > selling stock. I buy $100 of stock, so I transfer $100 from my bank > account into a stock account that is using a particular commodity (that > I defined). Now suppose that the price of that commodity increases so > that my investment is now worth $200. I can now sell the stock by > transferring $200 out of that stock account back into my bank account. > And just like that, my books are no longer balanced. Gnucash has allowed > me to increase my assets by $100 without recording any income.
This is a long-standing issue raised quite often. My understanding is that (1) The report generation should take care of the accounting of commodities related incomes/losses, but it lacks some information on how to do it, information that should be provided by a "lot" management (a lot is a group of related transactions on a given commodity, you tell that the one you sold are those you bought at this date). I think this is still under developpement. (2) Another way of doing it is to keep separate accounts for the financial value and the count of commodities, but this is not the way the accounting management of gnucash is designed. So the answer is "wait and hope";-) -- Fabien COELHO _____ [EMAIL PROTECTED] _____ http://www.coelho.net _______________________________________________ gnucash-devel mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://www.gnucash.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/gnucash-devel
