Her phone buzzed. Leo (Singapore): “Hey Maya, our receivables from New York are $5.12M.”
She clicked a button in the template:
| Transaction Date | Entity (From) | Entity (To) | Invoice # | Nature | Amount (USD) | Status | |---|---|---|---|---|---|---| | 01/15/2026 | Singapore | New York | INV-IC-101 | Loan Interest | $20,000 | Mismatch | | 02/01/2026 | Mexico | Germany | PO-8842 | Parts | $1,000 | Mismatch | | 02/10/2026 | London Hub | Singapore | SRV-202 | IT Services | $12,500 | Matched ✅ | | 02/10/2026 | London Hub | New York | SRV-203 | IT Services | $12,500 | Missing in NY | intercompany transactions reconciliation template excel
“No, the email says 4.5%,” Clara fired back. Her phone buzzed
Leo and Clara stopped arguing. The CFO gave Maya a bonus. And the Intercompany Reconciliation Template became company policy. Moral of the story: “Intercompany transactions are like a marriage. Both sides must agree on the numbers. An Excel template isn’t just a spreadsheet — it’s the peace treaty.” The CFO gave Maya a bonus
The problem?