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Merchandise InventoryMerchandise Inventory
What is inventory? Items held for resale to customers
Who has inventory? Wholesaler or Retailer
- Merchandise Inventory
Manufacturer- Raw Materials- Work in Process- Finished Goods
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Merchandise InventoryMerchandise Inventory
1. Acquisition of inventory: What costs to capitalize?
2. Recording inventory activity: Which method?
3. Selling inventory: Which cost flow assumption?
4. Ending inventory: Lower-of-cost-or market valuation.
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1. Acquiring Inventory What items or units to include?
– General rule: complete and unrestricted ownership.
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Acquiring inventory - contd. Which costs are included in inventory?
– General rule: all costs associated with purchase or manufacture, including shipping to facility.
– Freight-in (transportation-in) adds to the cost of inventory.
– Purchase returns reduce the cost of purchases (contra) for returned inventory.
– Purchase allowances reduce the cost of purchases (contra) for reduced prices due to damage or errors.
– Purchase discounts from early cash payments (contra) reduce the cost of purchases.
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Figure 7.3: Perpetual System
December 10 Purchase of 100 units @ $20:Inventory 2,000
Accts. Pay. 2,000 December 20 Sale of 50 units @ $30:
Cash 1,500Sales 1,500
COGS 1,000Inventory 1,000
December 30 AJE to recognize loss of 5 units @$20 each (170 on hand, books show 175)Loss 100
Inventory 100
2. Perpetual Method
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Class Exercise E7-6
2008 2007
Sales $1,262 $1,277
Cost of Goods Sold (COGS):
BI $268 $287
Purchases 857 887
GAS $1,125 $1,174
Less: EI 239 268
COGS 886 906
Gross Profit $376 $371
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E7-6a. Assume that counting errors caused the
ending inventory (EI) in 2007 to be understated by $50 and the ending inventory in 2008 to be overstated by $50.
Compute the impact of these errors on cost of goods sold for the year ended December 31, 2007 and on the inventory balance as of December 31, 2007.
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E7-6b. Compute the impact of these errors on cost
of goods sold for the year ended December 31, 2008 and on the inventory balance as of December 31, 2008.
c. What is the impact of these errors on cost of goods sold over the two-year period ended December 31, 2008?
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E7-6
a. Error in Ending Inventory in 2007: The $50 understated error in the Ending inventory means that the Ending Inventory should have been $268 + $50 = $318. This would change the Cost of goods sold to $1,174 - $318 = $856 which would then increase the Gross profit to $421 ($1,277 - $856).
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E7-6
b. Error in Ending Inventory in 2008: =The 2007 error in the Ending Inventory changes the Beginning Inventory in 2008 and the Goods Available for sale to $318 + $857 = $1,175. To calculate the Cost of Goods Sold the Ending Inventory for 2008 is deducted from the revised Goods Available for Sale: $1,175 – ($239 - $50) = $986. The gross profit would then be $1,262 - $986 = $276.
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3. Cost Flow AssumptionsGiven: BI + P (net) = EI + COGSHow to assign costs of inflows [BI +
P(net)] to EI and COGS?Methods:Specific identificationAverage for both COGS and EIFIFO - (first-in, first-out) for COGS
– and LISH (last-in, still here) for EILIFO - (last-in, first-out) for COGS
– and FISH (first-in, still here) for EI
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International Perspective – Cost Flow Assumptions
Under IFRS the LIFO method is prohibited. This poses an important potential impediment to
the adoption of IFRS in the US. Most LIFO users in the US have chosen LIFO because it results in an income tax savings.
DuPont, for example, has saved over $150 million in income taxes because it uses LIFO.
A shift to IFRS could impose a huge and immediate tax burden on LIFO users in the US.
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Choosing an Inventory Cost Flow Assumption: Trade-Offs
Income and Asset MeasurementEconomic Consequences
– Income Taxes and Liquidity– Bookkeeping Costs– LIFO Liquidation and Inventory Purchasing
Practices– Debt and Compensation Practices– The Capital Market
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Ending Inventory: Applying the Lower-of-Cost-or-Market Rule
Applying the lower-of-cost-or-market rule to ending inventory is accomplished by comparing the cost allocated to ending inventory with the market value of the inventory. If the market value exceeds the cost, no adjustment is made and the inventory remains at cost. If the market value is less than the cost, the inventories are written down to market value with an adjusting journal entry.
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The Lower-of-Cost-or-Market Rule and Hidden Reserves
Based on conservatism, ending inventory is valued at cost or market value, whichever is lower.
Problem: can create hidden reserves– Recognizes price decreases immediately– Defers price increase recognition until sold
US GAAP and IFRS use different market values when applying the lower-of-cost-or-market rule. Under US GAAP the market value is usually the replacement cost. Under IFRS it is normally the realizable value.
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International Perspective: Japanese Business and Inventory Accounting Just-in-time (JIT) inventory systems, which
reduce the costs of carrying large amounts of inventory without jeopardizing customer service, have long been a characteristic of this Japanese system and have given the Japanese a definite advantage when competing against U.S. industry.
Japan has adopted international reporting standards (IFRS), which does not allow the use of LIFO.
CopyrightCopyright
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