I don’t think you need individual income sub-accounts, rather a more generic 
one could suffice and put the detail info either in the description, notes, or 
memo lines as appropriate for the situation.

This would allow you to see why you received that money, but you don’t 
necessarily need to see that in the CD asset account. (since the value of the 
asset never really changed anyway)

If for some reason you want the issuance of the interest payment to be 
reflected in the CD account as well, then additional cancelling splits can be 
added—e.g.,

Dr. Assets:CD           $10
Cr. Income:CD Income            $10
Dr. Assets:Checking     $10
Cr. Assets:CD                   $10

all in the same transaction.

But I don’t know what utility or advantage this would have over simply using a 
holding account (if needed) or just dropping the money straight to checking and 
bypassing the CD entirely. And I’d think it more likely to produce clutter and 
confusion.

I’d use the analogy of rental property here.

You wouldn’t record the receipt of rent in your asset account for the property 
and then move that money to checking or wherever else, you’d just record the 
transaction between income and checking and leave the asset out of it entirely. 
The value of the property itself never changed.

Certainly, if Art clarifies what he’s looking to see and how he wants to 
retrieve, report or analyze his info, that might guide a more tailored 
transaction entry example.

Regards,
Adrien

> On Feb 19, 2019, at 6:00 AM, David T. via gnucash-user 
> <[email protected]> wrote:
> 
> David,
> The income derived from that CD, so that's why I imagine he'd want the 
> connection. 
> Moreover, I don't think it's unreasonable for someone with stock holdings to 
> want to see the dividends associated with a given stock. Using income 
> subaccounts for each security breaks down when you either have a lot of 
> different holdings or you have closed out holdings. The account structures 
> are hellacious. Been there, gave that up. 
> Regardless, I was basing my hypothetical on Art's mention of the Quicken 
> InterestX (or whatever it's called) transaction type, which suggested to me 
> that he was looking for something like that. 
> Maybe Art will offer his perspective. 
> David T. 
> 


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