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Inventory
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Inventory (British English) or stock (American English) is a quantity of the goods and materials that a business holds for the ultimate goal of resale, production or utilisation.[nb 1]
Inventory management is a discipline primarily about specifying the shape and placement of stocked goods. It is required at different locations within a facility or within many locations of a supply network to precede the regular and planned course of production and stock of materials.
The concept of inventory, stock or work in process (or work in progress) has been extended from manufacturing systems to service businesses [1][2][3] and projects,[4] by generalizing the definition to be "all work within the process of production—all work that is or has occurred prior to the completion of production". In the context of a manufacturing production system, inventory refers to all work that has occurred—raw materials, partially finished products, finished products prior to sale and departure from the manufacturing system. In the context of services, inventory refers to all work done prior to sale, including partially process information.
Business inventory
[edit]Reasons for keeping stock
[edit]There are five basic reasons for keeping an inventory:
- Time: The time lags present in the supply chain, from supplier to user at every stage, requires that you maintain certain amounts of inventory to use in this lead time. However, in practice, inventory is to be maintained for consumption during 'variations in lead time'. Lead time itself can be addressed by ordering that many days in advance.[5]
- Seasonal demand: Demands varies periodically, but producers capacity is fixed. This can lead to stock accumulation, consider for example how goods consumed only in holidays can lead to accumulation of large stocks on the anticipation of future consumption.
- Uncertainty: Inventories are maintained as buffers to meet uncertainties in demand, supply and movements of goods.
- Economies of scale: Ideal condition of "one unit at a time at a place where a user needs it, when he needs it" principle tends to incur lots of costs in terms of logistics. So bulk buying, movement and storing brings in economies of scale, thus inventory.
- Appreciation in value: In some situations, some stock gains the required value when it is kept for some time to allow it reach the desired standard for consumption, or for production. For example, beer in the brewing industry.
All these stock reasons can apply to any owner or product.
Special terms used in dealing with inventory management
[edit]- Stock Keeping Unit (SKU) SKUs are clear, internal identification numbers assigned to each of the products and their variants. SKUs can be any combination of letters and numbers chosen, just as long as the system is consistent and used for all the products in the inventory.[6] An SKU code may also be referred to as product code, barcode, part number or MPN (Manufacturer's Part Number).[7]
- "New old stock" (sometimes abbreviated NOS) is a term used in business to refer to merchandise being offered for sale that was manufactured long ago but that has never been used. Such merchandise may not be produced anymore, and the new old stock may represent the only market source of a particular item at the present time.
- ABC analysis (also known as Pareto analysis) is a method of classifying inventory items based on their contribution to total sales revenue.[citation needed] This can be used to prioritize inventory management efforts and ensure that businesses are focusing on the most important items.[citation needed]
Typology
[edit]- Buffer/safety stock: Safety stock is the additional inventory that a company keeps on hand to mitigate the risk of stockouts or delays in supply chain. It is the extra stock that is kept in reserve above and beyond the regular inventory levels. The purpose of safety stock is to provide a buffer against fluctuations in demand or supply that could otherwise result in stockouts.
- Reorder level: Reorder level refers to the point when a company place an order to re-fill the stocks. Reorder point depends on the inventory policy of a company. Some companies place orders when the inventory level is lower than a certain quantity. Some companies place orders periodically.
- Cycle stock: Used in batch processes, cycle stock is the available inventory, excluding buffer stock.
- De-coupling: Buffer stock held between the machines in a single process which serves as a buffer for the next one allowing smooth flow of work instead of waiting the previous or next machine in the same process.
- Anticipation stock: Building up extra stock for periods of increased demand—e.g., ice cream for summer.
- Pipeline stock: Goods still in transit or in the process of distribution; e.g., they have left the factory but not arrived at the customer yet. Often calculated as: Average Daily / Weekly usage quantity X Lead time in days + Safety stock.
Inventory examples
[edit]While accountants often discuss inventory in terms of goods for sale, organizations—manufacturers, service-providers and not-for-profits—also have inventories (fixtures, equipment, furniture, supplies, parts, etc.) that they do not intend to sell. Manufacturers', distributors', and wholesalers' inventory tends to cluster in warehouses. Retailers' inventory may exist in a warehouse or in a shop or store accessible to customers. Inventories not intended for sale to customers or to clients may be held in any premises an organization uses. Stock ties up cash and, if uncontrolled, it will be impossible to know the actual level of stocks and therefore difficult to keep the costs associated with holding too much or too little inventory under control.
While the reasons for holding stock were covered earlier, most manufacturing organizations usually divide their "goods for sale" inventory into:
- Raw materials: Materials and components scheduled for use in making a product.
- Work in process (WIP): Materials and components that have begun their transformation to finished goods. These are used in process of manufacture and as such these are neither raw material nor finished goods.[8]
- Finished goods: Goods ready for sale to customers.
- Goods for resale: Returned goods that are salable.
- Stocks in transit: The materials which are not at the seller's location or buyers' location but in between are "stocks in transit". Or we could say, the stocks which left the seller's plant but have not reached the buyer, and are in transit.
- Consignment stocks: The inventories where goods are with the buyer, but the actual ownership of goods remains with the seller until the goods are sold. Though the goods were transported to the buyer, payment of goods is done once the goods are sold. Hence such stocks are known as consignment stocks.
- Maintenance supply.
For example:
Manufacturing
[edit]A canned food manufacturer's materials inventory includes the ingredients to form the foods to be canned, empty cans and their lids (or coils of steel or aluminum for constructing those components), labels, and anything else (solder, glue, etc.) that will form part of a finished can. The firm's work in process includes those materials from the time of release to the work floor until they become complete and ready for sale to wholesale or retail customers. This may be vats of prepared food, filled cans not yet labeled or sub-assemblies of food components. It may also include finished cans that are not yet packaged into cartons or pallets. Its finished good inventory consists of all the filled and labeled cans of food in its warehouse that it has manufactured and wishes to sell to food distributors (wholesalers), to grocery stores (retailers), and even perhaps to consumers through arrangements like factory stores and outlet centers.
Capital projects
[edit]The partially completed work (or work in process) is a measure of inventory built during the work execution of a capital project,[9][10][11] such as encountered in civilian infrastructure construction or oil and gas. Inventory may not only reflect physical items (such as materials, parts, partially-finished sub-assemblies) but also knowledge work-in-process (such as partially completed engineering designs of components and assemblies to be fabricated).
Virtual inventory
[edit]A "virtual inventory" (also known as a "bank inventory") enables a group of users to share common parts, especially where their availability at short notice may be critical but they are unlikely to required by more than a few bank members at any one time.[12] Virtual inventory also allows distributors and fulfilment houses to ship goods to retailers direct from stock, regardless of whether the stock is held in a retail store, stock room or warehouse.[13] Virtual inventories allow participants to access a wider mix of products and to reduce the risks involved in carrying inventory for which expected demand does not materialise.[14]
Costs associated with inventory
[edit]There are several costs associated with inventory:
- Ordering cost
- Setup cost
- Holding cost
- Shortage costs (the costs arising out of inability to supply, including lost revenue, reputational damage, and potential loss of customer loyalty).[15]
Principle of inventory proportionality
[edit]Purpose
[edit]Inventory proportionality is the goal of demand-driven inventory management. The primary optimal outcome is to have the same number of days' (or hours', etc.) worth of inventory on hand across all products so that the time of runout of all products would be simultaneous. In such a case, there is no "excess inventory", that is, inventory that would be left over of another product when the first product runs out. Holding excess inventory is sub-optimal because the money spent to obtain and the cost of holding it could have been utilized better elsewhere, i.e. to the product that just ran out.
The secondary goal of inventory proportionality is inventory minimization. By integrating accurate demand forecasting with inventory management, rather than only looking at past averages, a much more accurate and optimal outcome is expected. Integrating demand forecasting into inventory management in this way also allows for the prediction of the "can fit" point when inventory storage is limited on a per-product basis.
Applications
[edit]The technique of inventory proportionality is most appropriate for inventories that remain unseen by the consumer, as opposed to "keep full" systems where a retail consumer would like to see full shelves of the product they are buying so as not to think they are buying something old, unwanted or stale; and differentiated from the "trigger point" systems where product is reordered when it hits a certain level; inventory proportionality is used effectively by just-in-time manufacturing processes and retail applications where the product is hidden from view.
One early example of inventory proportionality used in a retail application in the United States was for motor fuel. Motor fuel (e.g. gasoline) is generally stored in underground storage tanks. The motorists do not know whether they are buying gasoline off the top or bottom of the tank, nor need they care. Additionally, these storage tanks have a maximum capacity and cannot be overfilled. Finally, the product is expensive. Inventory proportionality is used to balance the inventories of the different grades of motor fuel, each stored in dedicated tanks, in proportion to the sales of each grade. Excess inventory is not seen or valued by the consumer, so it is simply cash "sunk into the ground". Inventory proportionality minimizes the amount of excess inventory carried in underground storage tanks. This application for motor fuel was first developed and implemented by Petrolsoft Corporation in 1990 for Chevron Products Company. Most major oil companies use such systems today.[16]
Roots
[edit]The use of inventory proportionality in the United States is thought to have been inspired by Japanese just-in-time parts inventory management made famous by Toyota Motors in the 1980s.[17]
High-level inventory management
[edit]It seems that around 1880[18] there was a change in manufacturing practice from companies with relatively homogeneous lines of products to horizontally integrated companies with unprecedented diversity in processes and products. Those companies (especially in metalworking) attempted to achieve success through economies of scope—the gains of jointly producing two or more products in one facility. The managers now needed information on the effect of product-mix decisions on overall profits and therefore needed accurate product-cost information. A variety of attempts to achieve this were unsuccessful due to the huge overhead of the information processing of the time. However, the burgeoning need for financial reporting after 1900 created unavoidable pressure for financial accounting of stock and the management need to cost manage products became overshadowed. In particular, it was the need for audited accounts that sealed the fate of managerial cost accounting. The dominance of financial reporting accounting over management accounting remains to this day with few exceptions, and the financial reporting definitions of 'cost' have distorted effective management 'cost' accounting since that time. This is particularly true of inventory.
Hence, high-level financial inventory has these two basic formulas, which relate to the accounting period:
- Cost of beginning inventory at the start of the period + inventory purchases within the period + cost of production within the period = cost of goods available
- Cost of goods available − cost of ending inventory at the end of the period = cost of goods sold.
The benefit of these formulas is that the first absorbs all overheads of production and raw material costs into a value of inventory for reporting. The second formula then creates the new start point for the next period and gives a figure to be subtracted from the sales price to determine some form of sales-margin figure.
Manufacturing management is more interested in inventory turnover ratio or average days to sell inventory since it tells them something about relative inventory levels.
- Inventory turnover ratio (also known as inventory turns) = cost of goods sold / Average Inventory = Cost of Goods Sold / ((Beginning Inventory + Ending Inventory) / 2)
and its inverse
- Average Days to Sell Inventory = Number of Days a Year / Inventory Turnover Ratio = 365 days a year / Inventory Turnover Ratio
This ratio estimates how many times the inventory turns over a year. This number tells how much cash/goods are tied up waiting for the process and is a critical measure of process reliability and effectiveness. So a factory with two inventory turns has six months stock on hand, which is generally not a good figure (depending upon the industry), whereas a factory that moves from six turns to twelve turns has probably improved effectiveness by 100%. This improvement will have some negative results in the financial reporting, since the 'value' now stored in the factory as inventory is reduced.
While these accounting measures of inventory are very useful because of their simplicity, they are also fraught with the danger of their own assumptions. There are, in fact, so many things that can vary hidden under this appearance of simplicity that a variety of 'adjusting' assumptions may be used. These include:
- Specific Identification
- Lower of cost or market
- Weighted Average Cost
- Moving-Average Cost
- FIFO and LIFO.
- Queueing theory.[19]
Inventory Turn is a financial accounting tool for evaluating inventory and it is not necessarily a management tool. Inventory management should be forward looking. The methodology applied is based on historical cost of goods sold. The ratio may not be able to reflect the usability of future production demand, as well as customer demand.
Business models, including Just in Time (JIT) Inventory, Vendor Managed Inventory (VMI) and Customer Managed Inventory (CMI), attempt to minimize on-hand inventory and increase inventory turns. VMI and CMI have gained considerable attention due to the success of third-party vendors who offer added expertise and knowledge that organizations may not possess.
Inventory management also involves risk which varies depending upon a firm's position in the distribution channel. Inventory exposure, which has been defined as "the amount of committed inventory within the total supply chain based upon expected demand and the cumulative lead-times associated with the current supply chain",[20] can be measured in several ways. Some typical measures of inventory exposure are width of commitment,[definition needed] time or duration,[definition needed] and depth.[definition needed][21]
Modern inventory management is online oriented and more viable in digital. This type of dynamics order management will require end-to-end visibility, collaboration across fulfillment processes, real-time data automation among different companies, and integration among multiple systems.[22]
Accounting for inventory
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Each country has its own rules about accounting for inventory that fit with their financial-reporting rules.
For example, organizations in the U.S. define inventory to suit their needs within US Generally Accepted Accounting Practices (GAAP), the rules defined by the Financial Accounting Standards Board (FASB) (and others) and enforced by the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) and other federal and state agencies. Other countries often have similar arrangements but with their own accounting standards and national agencies instead.
It is intentional[clarification needed] that while financial accounting uses standards that allow the public to compare firms' performance, cost accounting functions internally to an organization, and potentially with much greater flexibility. A discussion of inventory from standard and Theory of Constraints-based (throughput) cost accounting perspective follows some examples and a discussion of inventory from a financial accounting perspective.
The internal costing/valuation of inventory can be complex. Whereas in the past most enterprises ran simple, one-process factories, such enterprises are quite probably in the minority in the 21st century. Where 'one process' factories exist, there is a market for the goods created, which establishes an independent market value for the good. Today, with multistage-process companies, there is much inventory that would once have been finished goods which is now held as 'work in process' (WIP). This needs to be valued in the accounts, but the valuation is a management decision since there is no market for the partially finished product. This somewhat arbitrary 'valuation' of WIP combined with the allocation of overheads to it has led to some unintended and undesirable results.[example needed]
Financial accounting
[edit]An organization's inventory can appear a mixed blessing, since it counts as an asset on the balance sheet, but it also ties up money that could serve for other purposes and requires additional expense for its protection. Inventory may also cause significant tax expenses, depending on particular countries' laws regarding depreciation of inventory, as in Thor Power Tool Company v. Commissioner.
Inventory appears as a current asset on an organization's balance sheet because the organization can, in principle, turn it into cash by selling it. Some organizations hold larger inventories than their operations require in order to inflate their apparent asset value and their perceived profitability.
In addition to the money tied up by acquiring inventory, inventory also brings associated costs for warehouse space, for utilities, and for insurance to cover staff to handle and protect it from fire and other disasters, obsolescence, shrinkage (theft and errors), and others. Such holding costs can mount up: between a third and a half of its acquisition value per year.
Businesses that stock too little inventory cannot take advantage of large orders from customers if they cannot deliver. The conflicting objectives of cost control and customer service often put an organization's financial and operating managers against its sales and marketing departments. Salespeople, in particular, often receive sales-commission payments, so unavailable goods may reduce their potential personal income. This conflict can be minimised by reducing production time to being near or less than customers' expected delivery time. This effort, known as "Lean production" will significantly reduce working capital tied up in inventory and reduce manufacturing costs (See the Toyota Production System).
Role of inventory accounting
[edit]By helping the organization to make better decisions, the accountants can help the public sector to change in a very positive way that delivers increased value for the taxpayer's investment. It can also help to incentive's progress and to ensure that reforms are sustainable and effective in the long term, by ensuring that success is appropriately recognized in both the formal and informal reward systems of the organization.
To say that they have a key role to play is an understatement. Finance is connected to most, if not all, of the key business processes within the organization. It should be steering the stewardship and accountability systems that ensure that the organization is conducting its business in an appropriate, ethical manner. It is critical that these foundations are firmly laid. So often they are the litmus test by which public confidence in the institution is either won or lost.
Finance should also be providing the information, analysis and advice to enable the organizations' service managers to operate effectively. This goes beyond the traditional preoccupation with budgets—how much have we spent so far, how much do we have left to spend? It is about helping the organization to better understand its own performance. That means making the connections and understanding the relationships between given inputs—the resources brought to bear—and the outputs and outcomes that they achieve. It is also about understanding and actively managing risks within the organization and its activities.
FIFO vs. LIFO accounting
[edit]When a merchant buys goods from inventory, the value of the inventory account is reduced by the cost of goods sold (COGS). This is simple where the cost has not varied across those held in stock; but where it has, then an agreed method must be derived to evaluate it. For inventory items that one cannot track individually, accountants must choose a method that fits the nature of the sale. Two popular methods in use are: FIFO (first in, first out) and LIFO (last in, first out).
FIFO treats the first unit that arrived in inventory as the first one sold. FIFO results in inventory on the balance sheet reflecting the most recent purchase costs, thereby providing a closer approximation of current inventory value. LIFO considers the last unit arriving in inventory as the first one sold. Which method an accountant selects can have a significant effect on net income and book value and, in turn, on taxation. Using LIFO accounting for inventory, a company generally reports lower net income and lower book value, due to the effects of inflation. This generally results in lower taxation. Due to LIFO's potential to skew inventory value, UK GAAP and IAS have effectively banned LIFO inventory accounting. LIFO accounting is permitted in the United States subject to section 472 of the Internal Revenue Code.[23]
Standard cost accounting
[edit]Standard cost accounting uses ratios called efficiencies that compare the labour and materials actually used to produce a good with those that the same goods would have required under "standard" conditions. As long as actual and standard conditions are similar, few problems arise. Unfortunately, standard cost accounting methods developed about 100 years ago, when labor comprised the most important cost in manufactured goods. Standard methods continue to emphasize labor efficiency even though that resource now constitutes a (very) small part of cost in most cases.
Standard cost accounting can hurt managers, workers, and firms in several ways. For example, a policy decision to increase inventory can harm a manufacturing manager's performance evaluation. Increasing inventory requires increased production, which means that processes must operate at higher rates. When (not if) something goes wrong, the process takes longer and uses more than the standard labor time. The manager appears responsible for the excess, even though s/he has no control over the production requirement or the problem.
In adverse economic times, firms use the same efficiencies to downsize, rightsize, or otherwise reduce their labor force. Workers laid off under those circumstances have even less control over excess inventory and cost efficiencies than their managers.
Many financial and cost accountants have agreed for many years on the desirability of replacing standard cost accounting. They have not, however, found a successor.
Theory of constraints cost accounting
[edit]Eliyahu M. Goldratt developed the Theory of Constraints in part to address the cost-accounting problems in what he calls the "cost world". He offers a substitute, called throughput accounting, which uses throughput (money for goods sold to customers) in place of output (goods produced that may sell or may boost inventory) and considers labor as a fixed rather than as a variable cost. He defines inventory simply as everything the organization owns that it plans to sell, including buildings, machinery, and many other things in addition to the categories listed here. Throughput accounting recognizes only one class of variable costs: the truly variable costs, like materials and components, which vary directly with the quantity produced
Finished goods inventories remain balance-sheet assets, but labor-efficiency ratios no longer evaluate managers and workers. Instead of an incentive to reduce labor cost, throughput accounting focuses attention on the relationships between throughput (revenue or income) on one hand and controllable operating expenses and changes in inventory on the other.
National accounts
[edit]Inventories also play an important role in national accounts and the analysis of the business cycle. Some short-term macroeconomic fluctuations are attributed to the inventory cycle.
Distressed inventory
[edit]Also known as distressed or expired stock, distressed inventory is inventory whose potential to be sold at a normal cost has passed or will soon pass. In certain industries it could also mean that the stock is or will soon be impossible to sell. Examples of distressed inventory include products which have reached their expiry date, or have reached a date in advance of expiry at which the planned market will no longer purchase them (e.g. 3 months left to expiry), clothing which is out of fashion, music which is no longer popular and old newspapers or magazines. It also includes computer or consumer-electronic equipment which is obsolete or discontinued and whose manufacturer is unable to support it, along with products which use that type of equipment e.g. VHS format equipment and videos.[24]
In 2001, Cisco wrote off inventory worth US$2.25 billion due to duplicate orders.[25] This is considered one of the biggest inventory write-offs in business history.[citation needed]
Stock rotation
[edit]Stock rotation is the practice of changing the way inventory is displayed on a regular basis. This is most commonly used in hospitality and retail - particularity where food products are sold. For example, in the case of supermarkets that a customer frequents on a regular basis, the customer may know exactly what they want and where it is. This results in many customers going straight to the product they seek and do not look at other items on sale. To discourage this practice, stores will rotate the location of stock to encourage customers to look through the entire store. This is in hopes the customer will pick up items they would not normally see.[26]
Inventory credit
[edit]Inventory credit refers to the use of stock, or inventory, as collateral to raise finance. Where banks may be reluctant to accept traditional collateral, for example in developing countries where land title may be lacking, inventory credit is a potentially important way of overcoming financing constraints.[27] This is not a new concept; archaeological evidence suggests that it was practiced in Ancient Rome. Obtaining finance against stocks of a wide range of products held in a bonded warehouse is common in much of the world. It is, for example, used with Parmesan cheese in Italy.[28] Inventory credit on the basis of stored agricultural produce is widely used in Latin American countries and in some Asian countries.[29] A precondition for such credit is that banks must be confident that the stored product will be available if they need to call on the collateral; this implies the existence of a reliable network of certified warehouses.[30] Banks also face problems in valuing the inventory. The possibility of sudden falls in commodity prices means that they are usually reluctant to lend more than about 60% of the value of the inventory at the time of the loan.
Journal
[edit]- International Journal of Inventory Research
- Omega - The International Journal of Management Science
See also
[edit]Notes
[edit]- ^ The word inventory is American English and also in business accounting. In the rest of the English-speaking world, stock is more commonly used, although inventory is recognised as a synonym.
References
[edit]- ^ "Production and Operations Management: Manufacturing and Services", R.B. Chase, N.J. Aquiline and F.R. Jacobs, Eighth Edition, 1998, pp 582-583
- ^ "Operations and Supply Chain Management: The Core", Third Edition, F. Robert Jacobs and Richard B. Chase, p 346
- ^ Maynard's Industrial Engineering Handbook, Fifth Edition, Kjell B. Landin (ed.), McGraw-Hill 2001, p G.8
- ^ "Factory Physics for Managers", E.S. Pound, J.H. Bell, and M.L. Spearman, McGraw-Hill 2014, p 47
- ^ NetSuite.com (2023-02-26). "What Is Inventory? Types, Examples and Analysis". Oracle NetSuite. Retrieved 2023-06-09.
- ^ "SKUs and UPCs: do your products have a unique identity?". www.tradegecko.com. Archived from the original on 2015-11-23. Retrieved 2015-11-23.
- ^ "Specialinvestor.com". www.specialinvestor.com. Archived from the original on 31 December 2006. Retrieved 8 May 2018.
- ^ Jaiswal, Vishal. "Types of Inventory and Quality Standards". www.mechanicalsite.com. Mechanical Site. Archived from the original on December 21, 2019. Retrieved 2 December 2019.
- ^ “Construction: one type of Project Production System”, Proceedings of 13th Annual Conference of the International Group for Lean Construction. Sydney, Australia, 19–21 Jul 2005. pp 29–35
- ^ “Strategic Positioning of Inventory to match demand in a capital projects supply chain”, K. D. Walsh, J. C. Hershauer, I.D. Tommelein and T. A. Walsh, Journal of Construction Engineering and Management, Nov–Dec 2014, p 818
- ^ Shenoy, R. G.; Zabelle, T. R. (Nov 2016). "New Era of Project Delivery – Project as Production System". Journal of Project Production Management. 1: 13–24. Archived from the original on 2017-02-18.
- ^ Inventory and Logistics Operations, CIPS Study Materials, Profex Publishing, 2012, page 54
- ^ PLS Logistics, More Inventory, Less Warehouse Space: How Virtual Inventory Works Archived 2018-02-08 at the Wayback Machine, published 22 March 2016, accessed 7 February 2018
- ^ Symes, S., The Purpose of Creating a Virtual Inventory, Chron (Houston Chronicle), accessed on 14 July 2024
- ^ Accounting Insights, Effective Inventory Management to Reduce Shortage Costs, published on 14 October 2024, accessed on 5 November 2024
- ^ aspenONE Supply & Distribution for Refining & Marketing, archived from the original on 2010-06-08
- ^ "JIT Manufacturing". Archived from the original on 2010-04-25. Retrieved 2010-03-24.
- ^ Relevance Lost, Johnson and Kaplan, Harvard Business School Press, 1987, p126
- ^ Fathi, M. (2010). "A queueing approach to production-inventory planning for supply chain with uncertain demands: Case study of PAKSHOO Chemicals Company". Journal of Manufacturing Systems. 29 (2–3): 55–62. doi:10.1016/j.jmsy.2010.08.003.
- ^ Holton, J., Measuring and Reducing Inventory Exposure in the Supply Chain, Symphony Consulting, published in 2006, accessed on 8 August 2025
- ^ Bowesox, Donald; Closs, David; Cooper, Bixby (2010). "7". Supply Chain Logistics Management | Inventory Functionality and Definitions. Mc Graw Hill. pp. 156–160. ISBN 978-007-127617-7.
- ^ "Big trends for Inventory Management in 2017 [Infographic] (UPDATED) - Magentone Developers Website". Magentone Developers Website. Archived from the original on 2017-07-18. Retrieved 2017-07-19.
- ^ Internal Revenue Code, § 472: Last-in, first-out inventories Archived 2016-12-23 at the Wayback Machine, accessed 23 December 2016
- ^ R. S. SAXENA (1 December 2009). INVENTORY MANAGEMENT: Controlling in a Fluctuating Demand Environment. Global India Publications. pp. 24–. ISBN 978-93-8022-821-1. Retrieved 7 April 2012.
- ^ Armony, Mor (2005). "The Impact of Duplicate Orders on Demand Estimation and Capacity Investment". Management Science. 51 (10): 1505–1518. doi:10.1287/mnsc.1050.0371. S2CID 10737340.
- ^ Lee, Perlitz (2012). Retail Services. Australia: McGraw HIll. p. 440. ISBN 9781743070741. Archived from the original on 2013-02-21.
- ^ "Inventory Financing". Targray. Retrieved 27 August 2020.
- ^ "Who moved my Parmigiano?". italiannotebook.com. Archived from the original on 2013-01-26.
- ^ Coulter, Jonathan; Shepherd, Andrew W. (1995). "Inventory Credit – An approach to developing agricultural markets". fao.org. Rome. Archived from the original on 2009-03-14.
- ^ CTA and EAGC. "Structured grain trading systems in Africa" (PDF). CTA. Archived (PDF) from the original on 2 October 2014. Retrieved 27 February 2014.
Further reading
[edit]- Kieso, DE; Warfield, TD; Weygandt, JJ (2007). Intermediate Accounting 8th Canadian Edition. Canada: John Wiley & Sons. ISBN 978-0-470-15313-0.
- Cannella S., Ciancimino E. (2010) Up-to-date Supply Chain Management: the Coordinated (S, R). In "Advanced Manufacturing and Sustainable Logistics". Dangelmaier W. et al. (Eds.) 175–185. Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg, Germany.
Inventory
View on GrokipediaFundamentals of Inventory
Definition and Scope
Inventory encompasses the goods and materials held by a business for purposes of production, sale, or internal use, typically including raw materials awaiting processing, work-in-progress items in various stages of manufacturing, and finished goods ready for distribution or resale.[7][8] This definition highlights inventory's role as a tangible asset essential to operational continuity, distinguishing it from other resources like cash or equipment by its direct tie to the production-sales cycle.[9] The scope of inventory extends across multiple sectors, reflecting its multifaceted importance. In business operations, it represents the physical stock maintained to fulfill customer demand and support manufacturing processes.[10] From an accounting perspective, inventory is classified as a current asset on the balance sheet, valued at cost and convertible to cash within one year through sales.[11][1] In economics, inventory serves as a key component of gross domestic product (GDP) via changes in private inventories, which capture unsold goods and influence short-term economic fluctuations by amplifying or mitigating shifts in final demand.[12][13] Historically, inventory management evolved from rudimentary pre-industrial practices, such as manual stockpiling and tally-based counting by merchants to ensure seasonal availability, to sophisticated modern systems integrated into global supply chains.[14] In the late 19th and early 20th centuries, punch-card systems and early mechanization enabled more accurate tracking in factories, paving the way for 20th-century advancements like barcode technology and enterprise resource planning software that optimize just-in-time delivery.[15] Post-2020, amid pandemic-induced disruptions, inventory has increasingly functioned as a strategic buffer against supply chain shocks, with firms elevating stock levels to mitigate shortages in raw materials and components, shifting from lean models toward resilient "just-in-case" approaches. As of 2025, many businesses have adopted hybrid strategies combining just-in-time efficiency with just-in-case resilience.[16][17][18] A fundamental equation tracking inventory flow is Ending Inventory = Beginning Inventory + Purchases - Cost of Goods Sold (COGS), which illustrates how stock levels change over an accounting period by balancing inflows from initial holdings and acquisitions against outflows from sales or usage.[19] This simple stock balance formula provides a foundational tool for monitoring inventory dynamics, ensuring alignment between physical counts and financial records without delving into complex valuation methods.[20]Classification and Types
Inventory is commonly classified into four primary categories based on its stage in the production and supply chain process: raw materials, work-in-progress (WIP), finished goods, and maintenance, repair, and operating supplies (MRO).[3][21] Raw materials consist of unprocessed inputs, such as steel, lumber, or chemicals, that are purchased for use in manufacturing products.[3] Work-in-progress (WIP) refers to partially assembled or semi-finished items that are in the midst of production, like engine blocks on an automotive assembly line. Finished goods are completed products ready for sale to customers, such as packaged electronics or bottled beverages.[21] MRO supplies include items essential for maintaining operations, such as tools, spare parts, lubricants, and cleaning materials, which support machinery and facilities without directly entering the final product.[3] Beyond these primary classifications, inventory can be categorized by its functional role, including cycle stock, buffer stock (also known as safety stock), and anticipation stock. Cycle stock represents the portion of inventory that is regularly replenished to meet ongoing demand, fluctuating with order quantities and lead times in standard procurement cycles. Buffer stock, or safety stock, serves as a reserve to handle uncertainties in demand or supply, ensuring availability during unexpected fluctuations.[22] Anticipation stock is built up in advance to accommodate predictable surges, particularly seasonal variations, such as holiday merchandise stocked before peak shopping periods. These classifications manifest differently across sectors, with examples illustrating their application. In manufacturing, inventory progresses from raw inputs like fabric and dyes to WIP assemblies such as half-sewn garments, culminating in finished apparel ready for distribution.[3] Retail operations primarily involve finished goods, such as shelves stocked with consumer electronics or clothing, where the focus is on end-products for direct sale.[3] Service industries maintain minimal inventory, often limited to MRO-like supplies such as office stationery, medical tools, or maintenance kits, as their core offerings rely more on labor and expertise than physical stock. In contemporary contexts, particularly since 2020, digital and virtual inventory has emerged as a specialized type, enabled by cloud-based tracking systems in e-commerce to represent stock without physical holding. Virtual inventory allows platforms to manage "pooled" stock across multiple suppliers or locations in real-time, supporting just-in-time models where goods are allocated virtually upon order without traditional warehousing. This approach saw accelerated adoption post-2020 amid e-commerce growth, with digital tools enhancing visibility and reducing physical storage needs.[23] Different inventory types incur varying costs, such as holding expenses for raw materials versus obsolescence risks for finished goods.[21]Inventory in Business
Purposes of Holding Inventory
Businesses hold inventory to decouple production and sales processes, allowing operations to continue smoothly even if upstream supply or downstream demand varies. This separation prevents bottlenecks, such as when manufacturing halts due to equipment failure while sales continue from stock, thereby maintaining workflow efficiency.[24] Inventory also serves as a hedge against supply chain risks, providing a buffer during disruptions. For instance, during the 2021-2023 global shortages exacerbated by the COVID-19 pandemic, firms increased holdings of key inputs like semiconductors to mitigate production declines, with U.S. input inventories surging beyond pre-pandemic levels to prioritize resilience over lean efficiency.[25] To address demand fluctuations, companies maintain stock to meet unexpected surges without delaying fulfillment, building reserves during low-demand periods to cover peaks. This approach ensures availability despite variability in customer orders.[24] A core method for balancing these purposes is the economic order quantity (EOQ) model, which determines the optimal order size to minimize total costs associated with ordering and holding inventory. Introduced by Ford W. Harris in 1913, the EOQ balances setup (ordering) costs against holding costs.[26] The EOQ formula is derived as follows. The total annual cost (TC) consists of ordering cost, given by the number of orders (D/Q) times the cost per order (S), and holding cost, approximated as the average inventory (Q/2) times the holding cost per unit (H): To find the minimum cost, take the derivative of TC with respect to Q and set it to zero: Solving for Q yields: where D is the annual demand rate, S is the ordering cost per order, and H is the annual holding cost per unit.[27] The model assumes constant and known demand, instantaneous replenishment, no quantity discounts, constant ordering and holding costs, and no stockouts allowed. These assumptions hold in stable environments but limit applicability in volatile markets, where fluctuating demand or lead times can lead to suboptimal orders; extensions like safety stock are often needed to address such uncertainties.[27] Holding inventory yields benefits such as reduced stockouts, which prevent lost sales and production halts, and improved customer service levels. Many firms target a 95% service level, meaning demand is met without stockout in 95 out of 100 cycles, enhancing fill rates and satisfaction while minimizing disruptions.[28] While these purposes support operational efficiency, they involve holding costs that must be weighed against potential drawbacks.[24]Inventory Across Industries
In manufacturing, inventory management emphasizes minimizing work-in-progress (WIP) through just-in-time (JIT) systems, where raw materials and components arrive precisely when needed for production, reducing holding costs and storage requirements. This approach is particularly prominent in automotive assembly lines, such as those used by major manufacturers like Toyota and Ford, where JIT synchronizes supplier deliveries with assembly schedules to limit WIP to only essential levels, thereby streamlining workflows and enhancing efficiency. As of 2025, AI-driven predictive analytics are increasingly integrated into JIT systems, improving demand forecasting accuracy by 20-30%.[29][30][31] Retail and e-commerce sectors focus on high-turnover finished goods inventory to meet fluctuating consumer demand, often leveraging virtual inventory models like dropshipping, in which retailers do not hold physical stock but fulfill orders directly from third-party suppliers. Dropshipping has seen substantial growth since 2015, evolving from a niche strategy to a core component of online retail, with the global market reaching approximately USD 231 billion in 2024, projected to grow at a CAGR of 28.8% from 2025 to 2030. As of 2025, dropshipping accounts for approximately 30% of all online sales, enabling retailers to offer vast product assortments without traditional warehousing overhead.[32][33] In capital-intensive projects, such as construction and oil and gas operations, inventory involves long-lead items that require extended procurement timelines, often spanning several months for specialized materials like steel beams or drilling equipment. Construction firms manage these by early forecasting and phased ordering to align deliveries with project milestones, preventing delays in site assembly. Similarly, in the oil and gas industry, pipeline inventory—comprising materials in transit through supply chains or actual pipelines—ensures continuous flow of refined products, with integrated systems optimizing transportation modes like ships and pipelines to balance stock levels and distribution costs.[34][35] Services and healthcare industries maintain low-volume, high-value inventory that prioritizes criticality over quantity, with pharmaceuticals exemplifying the need for precise tracking to manage expiration dates and prevent shortages. Post-COVID-19, enhanced inventory systems in hospitals and pharmacies have incorporated real-time monitoring and automated alerts for perishable drugs like vaccines and antibiotics, reducing waste from expirations through better demand forecasting and just-in-time replenishment, with some systems reporting improvements of 15-25%. This shift addresses vulnerabilities exposed by the pandemic, such as supply disruptions, ensuring availability of essential items without excess stockpiling.[36][37][38]Costs of Inventory Management
Inventory management involves various financial and operational expenses that arise from acquiring, storing, and maintaining stock levels to meet demand. These costs are broadly categorized into holding costs, ordering costs, and shortage costs, each contributing to the overall economic impact of inventory decisions. Balancing these costs is essential for optimizing profitability, as excessive inventory ties up capital while insufficient stock leads to disruptions. Holding costs, also known as carrying costs, represent the expenses incurred for storing inventory over time. These include storage-related charges such as warehousing space, maintenance, and deterioration; financial elements like the opportunity cost of capital tied up in stock, taxes, and insurance; and risk-based factors including obsolescence, spoilage, and depreciation. For instance, perishable goods like food products amplify obsolescence risks due to expiration, potentially increasing these costs by up to 20-30% of inventory value annually in high-turnover sectors.[39][40] Ordering costs encompass the administrative and logistical expenses associated with procuring inventory. These involve procurement activities like reviewing requirements, negotiating contracts, processing requisitions, and handling documentation; as well as transportation and receiving costs, including shipping fees and quality inspections. Such costs are typically fixed per order and independent of quantity, making frequent small orders more expensive overall. For example, in manufacturing, setup and transport for each batch can add 5-10% to procurement expenses.[39][40] Shortage costs, or stockout costs, arise when demand exceeds available inventory, leading to unmet orders. These include direct financial losses such as forgone sales revenue and expedited shipping fees for emergency replenishments; operational impacts like overtime labor or production downtime; and intangible damages to customer goodwill and brand reputation, which can result in long-term revenue erosion. In retail, a single stockout event may cost 10-15% of potential sales plus reputational harm equivalent to multiple future transactions.[39][40] The total cost of inventory (TC) integrates these elements into a framework for analysis, typically expressed as: where is annual demand, is order quantity, is ordering cost per order, is holding cost per unit per year, and is unit purchase cost. This formula captures annual ordering costs (), average holding costs (), and purchase costs (), with the latter often treated as constant but included for comprehensive evaluation. It is integrated with the Economic Order Quantity (EOQ) model to minimize variable costs by setting such that marginal holding and ordering costs balance, yielding .[41] In contemporary contexts, inventory costs increasingly incorporate sustainability factors, such as the carbon footprint from energy-intensive warehousing operations, which account for 10-20% of logistics emissions globally. Environmental regulations are intensifying, with frameworks like the EU's Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism and U.S. EPA guidelines imposing compliance costs that have risen approximately 10% as of 2025 through carbon pricing and reporting mandates. Additionally, investments in tracking technologies like RFID and IoT are essential for real-time visibility, though they entail upfront costs of 500,000 per facility for implementation, offset by 15-25% reductions in holding and shortage expenses via optimized stock levels. These modern elements underscore the evolving nature of inventory economics beyond traditional categories. As of 2025, AI and machine learning integrations in these technologies further enhance optimization, potentially reducing overall costs by an additional 20%.[42][43]Core Inventory Management
Key Concepts and Terminology
In inventory management, lead time refers to the duration between placing an order with a supplier and receiving the goods, encompassing processing, production, and delivery delays that can impact stock availability.[44] This delay is critical for planning, as longer lead times increase the risk of stockouts if demand exceeds expectations during that period.[45] Safety stock serves as a buffer inventory to protect against uncertainties in demand or supply, such as fluctuations in customer orders or supplier delays, ensuring service levels are maintained without excessive overstocking.[46] It is calculated to account for variability, typically using the formula: where is the service level factor (e.g., 1.65 for 95% service level, derived from standard normal distribution tables), is the standard deviation of daily demand, and is the lead time in days.[47] To arrive at this, first compute from historical demand data (e.g., using sample standard deviation: , where are daily demands, is the mean daily demand, and is the number of observations). Then, multiply by (selected based on desired fill rate) and the square root of lead time to scale for the period's variability, assuming lead time variability is negligible or incorporated separately if significant.[48] The reorder point (ROP) determines the inventory level at which a new order should be placed to avoid stockouts, calculated as: where is the average daily demand, is the lead time, and is the safety stock.[49] To compute ROP, start by estimating from historical sales averages, multiply by to get demand during lead time, then add (calculated as above) to buffer against variability; for example, if units/day, days, and units, ROP = (50 × 5) + 20 = 270 units. This ensures replenishment arrives just as inventory depletes to the buffer level.[50] ABC analysis applies the Pareto principle—where approximately 80% of effects arise from 20% of causes—to categorize inventory items into three groups based on their value or usage: A items (high-value, low-quantity, requiring tight control), B items (moderate value and volume), and C items (low-value, high-quantity, managed with minimal oversight).[51] This prioritization technique, rooted in the 80/20 rule observed by Vilfredo Pareto, enables efficient resource allocation by focusing efforts on the most impactful stock.[52] The bullwhip effect describes the amplification of demand variability as orders move upstream in the supply chain, where minor fluctuations at the retail level lead to progressively larger swings in procurement quantities among suppliers and manufacturers.[53] Identified through analysis of information distortion causes like forecast errors and order batching, it results in excess inventory, poor customer service, and increased costs across the chain.[54] These concepts form the foundational terminology applied in broader inventory strategies to optimize stock levels and responsiveness.High-Level Strategies
High-level strategies in inventory management focus on optimizing order quantities, minimizing stock levels, and leveraging supplier partnerships to balance costs, efficiency, and responsiveness. One foundational approach is the economic order quantity (EOQ) model, which calculates the ideal batch size for ordering inventory to minimize the combined costs of ordering and holding stock. Developed by Ford W. Harris in 1913, EOQ assumes constant demand and lead times, providing a mathematical basis for batch sizing decisions in stable environments.[55] Another prominent strategy is just-in-time (JIT), which aims to reduce holding costs by producing or receiving goods only as they are needed in the production process. Originating in the 1970s as part of the Toyota Production System under leaders like Taiichi Ohno and Eiji Toyoda, JIT emphasizes waste elimination and synchronized flows to achieve minimal inventory levels.[56] Benefits include significant reductions in storage requirements, with implementations often achieving up to 50% less space usage through lower stock accumulation.[57] However, JIT's reliance on reliable suppliers exposes it to risks during disruptions, as seen in the early 2020s when global events like the COVID-19 pandemic and chip shortages amplified lead time variability, leading to production halts in industries like automotive.[58] Vendor-managed inventory (VMI) shifts control to suppliers, who monitor customer stock levels and handle replenishment to ensure availability without overstocking. In this model, vendors use shared data to decide order quantities and timings, reducing the buyer's administrative burden and improving forecast accuracy through collaborative planning.[59] VMI enhances supply chain efficiency by aligning incentives and minimizing stockouts, particularly in retail and manufacturing where demand fluctuates. Modern strategies increasingly integrate technology, such as AI-driven forecasting, to enhance these approaches. Machine learning models analyze historical data, market trends, and external factors to predict demand more accurately than traditional methods, enabling dynamic adjustments to reorder points (ROP) and order quantities. A 2025 survey found that 85% of supply chain leaders expressed an inclination to use AI for inventory management within the next two years, reflecting its growing role in mitigating uncertainties and optimizing flows. As of November 2025, 71% of global businesses have accelerated AI adoption amid economic uncertainties like tariffs and inflation, with supply chain applications yielding 15% logistics cost reductions and 35% inventory improvements for early adopters.[60][61][62]Stock Rotation Systems
Stock rotation systems are operational methods used in inventory management to organize the physical flow of goods, ensuring that older stock is prioritized for use or sale to maintain freshness, minimize waste, and optimize turnover. These systems focus on the sequence in which items are removed from storage, distinct from financial valuation approaches, though parallels exist in how they influence cost tracking as discussed in inventory valuation methods. By implementing structured rotation, businesses can reduce spoilage in time-sensitive products and prevent accumulation of outdated items. The first-in-first-out (FIFO) system is the most widely adopted rotation method for physical inventory, particularly suited to perishable goods, where the oldest items entering storage are the first to be dispatched or used. This approach mimics natural consumption patterns, such as rotating dairy products on shelves to avoid expiration, and is recommended for industries handling food or pharmaceuticals to comply with quality standards. In contrast, last-in-first-out (LIFO) rotation occurs in specific storage configurations for certain perishables, such as gravity-fed bins or stacked containers where the most recently added items are accessed first, though it is less common due to risks of waste and is typically avoided for highly time-sensitive items. For mixed or non-perishable inventories with varying acquisition costs, the weighted average method calculates an average cost and rotation priority based on batch ages, facilitating smoother handling of diverse stock without strict chronological adherence. A key metric for evaluating the effectiveness of stock rotation systems is the inventory turnover ratio, which measures how frequently inventory is sold and replenished over a period. The ratio is calculated as the cost of goods sold (COGS) divided by the average inventory value, where average inventory is the mean of beginning and ending inventory balances. In the retail industry, healthy benchmarks typically range from 5 to 10 turnovers annually, indicating efficient rotation and low holding risks, though this varies by subsector such as grocery (higher) versus apparel (lower). In applications involving perishable goods like food and pharmaceuticals, stock rotation systems integrated with technologies such as radio-frequency identification (RFID) tracking enhance compliance and freshness by enabling real-time monitoring of expiration dates and automated alerts for oldest stock. Recent implementations in 2025 have demonstrated substantial reductions in spoilage, with RFID systems minimizing waste through precise location and condition tracking in cold chains. For electronics inventory, rotation systems prioritize the outflow of obsolete technology components to prevent value depreciation, using FIFO to clear legacy stock before introducing newer models and maintaining high turnover to align with rapid innovation cycles.Inventory Proportionality
Principles and Purpose
The inventory proportionality principle in supply chain management is the goal of demand-driven inventory control to balance stock levels across multiple items or SKUs such that each has the same coverage period—typically measured in days or weeks of supply—ensuring all items are projected to run out simultaneously.[63] This approach prevents inefficient overstocking in low-demand items while maintaining availability, particularly useful for portfolios with varying sales velocities, by setting inventory quantities proportional to each item's forecasted demand rate multiplied by a uniform coverage factor.[64] The primary purpose is to minimize total excess inventory and optimize capital utilization in systems where items cannot be easily substituted, fostering efficient replenishment without uniform policies that lead to imbalances.[63] By achieving equal runout times, it reduces holding costs and waste, integrates with just-in-time strategies, and supports high service levels in diverse demand environments, such as multi-grade products or assemblies. At its core, inventory for each item is calculated as where is the forecasted demand rate for item (e.g., units per day), and is the constant coverage period (e.g., days) applied uniformly across all items.[64] This derives from the need to align depletion rates, assuming accurate forecasting, which scales total inventory proportionally to overall demand without excess buffers for slow movers. To implement this, follow these steps:- Forecast demand rates for each item using historical sales data.
- Select a target coverage based on lead times, service goals, and costs (e.g., 14 days).
- Compute for each item.
- Monitor and adjust periodically to account for seasonality or disruptions, ensuring balance.