Week 08 - 03 - Module 20 - Accounting For Inventories
Week 08 - 03 - Module 20 - Accounting For Inventories
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Inventories
Have you ever heard of the Goldilocks principle? It has its foundations in the
children's story of Goldilocks and the three bears. In the story, the bears'
preferences are stuck at either extreme (too hot or too cold porridge, too
hard or too soft beds, etc.) And it's always the middle that is always 'just right
for Goldilocks. Basically, the Goldilocks principle dictates that the ideal
should always fall between certain extremes - basically getting everything
'just right. And getting everything 'just right is exactly what inventory
management is all about. Good inventory management is all about having the
right amount of product, at the right price, at the right time, and in the right
place.
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(3) the amount is material. The note disclosure gives the relevant aspects of the
contingency. No entry is required for purchase contracts subject to revision
and cancellation.
When purchase contracts are non-cancelable, and when a loss is probable and
material and can be reasonably estimated, the loss and related liability should be
recorded in the accounts.
To illustrate, assume that on October 1, 2016, ABC entered into a non-cancelable
commitment to purchase six months after the date, 100,000 (1.00 x 100,000 units)
is recorded on December 31, 2016, as:
Loss on Purchase Commitments 100,000
Estimated Liability on Purchase Commitments 100,000
When the actual purchase was made on April 1, 2017, the cost of the inventory item
decreased further to P8.50 per unit. The purchase is recorded as:
Purchases 850,000
Loss on Purchase Commitments 50,000
The loss is thus assigned to the period in which the decline takes place. It is reported
on SCOI as income among the operating expenses, while the estimated liability on
purchase commitments is reported on the statement of financial position as a
current liability.
When there is a full or partial recovery of the purchase price, the recovery would be
recognized as a gain in the period during which the recovery takes place. Thus, if the
inventory cost on April 1, 2017, is P9.25 per unit, the purchase entry would be as
follows:
Purchases 925,000
Estimated Liability on Purchase Commitments 100,000
Accounts Payable 1,000,000
Recovery of Loss on Purchase Commitments 25,000
Recovery of loss on purchase commitments is reported on the Statement of
Comprehensive Income as other operating income. The amount of recovery that is
taken up, however, is limited to the loss recorded in the previous period for the
same purchase commitment.
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Inventories
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B. A purchase on credit is omitted from the Philippines account, but the
ending inventory is correct. Purchases are recorded in the succeeding year.
1. Statement of Comprehensive Income
Current year- Profit is overstated because purchases are understated and,
therefore, the cost of goods sold is understated.
Succeeding year- Profit is understated because purchases are overstated and,
therefore, the cost of goods sold is overstated.
2. Statement of Financial Position
Current year- Accounts payable are understated because a purchase has been
omitted. The balance of retained earnings is overstated because profit is overstated.
Succeeding year- No error exists anymore in the statement of financial position.
The overstatement in profit of the previous year is counterbalanced by the
understatement in profit for this year.
However, each entity should determine what is relevant to its own business.
3. The number of inventories recognized as an expense in the period. To achieve
this, the cost of sales needs to be disclosed.
4. The amount of any write-down of inventories recognized as an expense in the
period, the amount of any reversal of any write-down that is recognized as a
reduction in the amount of inventories recognized as an expense in the period, and
the circumstances or events that led to the reversal of a write-down of inventories.
In either of these situations, we assume that the entity can easily determine (1)
exactly what inventory has been written down to net realizable value, and (2) at the
next balance sheet date, which of the items that were previously written down are
still held and are now stated at a higher amount. However, it may not always be
possible to do this in practice.
5. The carrying amount of inventories pledged as security for liabilities if any.
6. The carrying amount of inventories carried at fair value fewer costs to sell.
But this applies only to certain agricultural products and commodities, as referred
to in paragraphs 3–5 of PAS 2.
To see a disclosure example from Good Group, refer below. Please note that this
example does not include the disclosures with respect to the requirements of
paragraph 36(d-h) of PAS 2.
Accounting policy
Inventories
Inventories are valued at a lower cost and net realizable value.
Costs incurred in bringing each product to its present location and condition are
accounted for as follows:
Raw materials – purchase cost on a first in, first out basis.
Finished goods and work in progress – cost of direct materials and labor and a
proportion of manufacturing overheads based on normal operating capacity but
excluding borrowing costs.
Cost of inventories includes the transfer from the equity of gains and losses on
qualifying cash flow hedges in respect of the purchases of raw materials.
Net realizable value is the estimated selling price in the ordinary course of
business, the less estimated cost of completion, and the estimated cost necessary
to make the sale.
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Notes on inventories
2016 2015
Raw materials (at cost) 6,046 7,793
receive items as they are needed rather than maintaining high inventory levels, and
materials requirement planning (MRP), which schedules material deliveries based on
sales forecasts.
• Balancing the JIT Method
Companies can save significant amounts of money and reduce waste by using a JIT
inventory management system. JIT means that manufacturers and retailers keep
only what they need to produce and sell products in inventory, which reduces
storage and insurance costs, as well as the cost of liquidating or discarding unused,
unwanted inventory. To balance this style of inventory management, manufacturers
and retailers must work together to monitor the availability of resources on the
manufacturer's end and consumer demand on the retailer's. Otherwise, JIT
inventory management can be risky. For example, a furniture retailer keeps no more
than four mahogany dining room chairs in stock. The retailer displays the chairs in
its showroom; no additional chairs are stored in the back room. A manufacturer
orders no more than the amount of mahogany needed from its source to produce
those four chairs. During the retailer's peak season, when customers special order
24 chairs, the manufacturer acquires the exact amount of mahogany needed to
manufacture and ship 24 chairs. If the manufacturer cannot acquire the mahogany it
needs from its source, however, the retailer runs the risk of not being able to fill the
customers' special orders for both the manufacturer and retailer; being out of stock
results in lost revenue and diminished reputation.
• Balancing the MRP Method
The MRP inventory management method is the sales-forecast defendant. This
means that manufacturers must have accurate sales records to enable accurate
planning of inventory needs and to communicate those needs with materials
suppliers in a timely manner. For example, a ski manufacturer using an MRP
inventory system might ensure that materials such as plastic, fiberglass, wood, and
aluminum are in stock based on forecasted orders. Inability to accurately forecast
sales and plan inventory acquisitions results in a manufacturer's inability to fulfill
orders.
In addition, getting everything 'just right is exactly what inventory management is
all about. Good inventory management is all about having the right amount of
product, at the right price, at the right time, and in the right place.
1. The right amount
Stocking the right amount is really important. If you order too little, your customers
will start looking elsewhere when you're out of stock of popular items. But if you
order too much, there's a chance you'll be stuck with lots of extra stock that you'll be
forced to sell at clearance prices or risk having them become obsolete.
2. The right price
Entities don’t want to be paying more for their products than they have to, but lower
prices aren’t always better. Suppliers often promise price quantity breaks - they just
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have to order 20% more stock to save 10% - and may find themselves digging into
their savings to make this purchase.
But is that the best choice for your business? After all, purchasing stock is only the
beginning. There's a whole host of carrying costs attached to your products. The
more stock you have on hand, the more you'll have to spend on storage facilities
while increasing your risk of having products going out of date.
If you’re wondering how to minimize these carrying costs while matching customer
demand as much as possible, that’s where the Economic Order Quantity (EOQ)
formula comes in.
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4. The right place
Do you sell on multiple channels? If you do, ensuring you’ve got the right amount of
products in the right place is probably a challenge you face constantly.
The great thing about selling online is that you're fulfilling all orders from the same
pool of stock, so you don't have to think too much about how many items you want
to allocate to individual sales channels. But that can come with a whole different
host of problems: If your online inventory shows five items available, you want all
five ready for sale in your warehouse - not traveling the country in a mobile shop or
lying idle in your consignment store at the opposite end of the country. To prevent
situations like this from occurring, consider an inventory management system that
tracks inventory movement across all your sales channels in real-time. If you're
looking to reduce your risk of overselling, getting an inventory system that updates
your stock movements across all channels will get that down to zero.
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Inventories
Glossary
Purchase commitment: a firm commitment to acquire goods or services from a supplier.
Relative sales price method: a technique used to allocate joint costs based on the prices
at which products will be sold
Inventory errors: over or under-statements in the inventory that may affect the
current and subsequent periods.
Just-in-time (JIT) method: an inventory strategy companies employ to increase efficiency
and decrease waste by receiving goods only as they are needed in the production process,
thereby reducing inventory costs.
Materials requirement planning: an integrated information system used by businesses.
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3. Inventory Accounting For Purchase Commitments (Liabilities Vs Unrealized Losses);
https://www.youtube.com/watch/xgkm7KbEGhg/inventory-accounting-for-purchase-
commitments-liabilities-vs-unrealized-losses.html; 21 October 2017
4. Purchase Commitments; https://www.youtube.com/watch/9mbFt_a_r78/purchase-
commitments.html; 21 October 2017
5. Inventory Errors Accounting (Beginning & Ending Inventory Errors Affect On Net
Income); https://www.youtube.com/watch/w-Dok8h-MkM/inventory-errors-
accounting-beginning-ending-inventory-errors-affect-on-net-income.html ; 21 October
2017