C8 - 1 Learning Objectives Power Notes 1.Internal Control of Inventories 2.Effect of Inventory...

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C8 - 1 Learning Objectives Power Notes 1. Internal Control of Inventories 2. Effect of Inventory Errors 3. Inventory Cost Flow Assumptions 4. Perpetual Inventory Costing Methods 5. Periodic Inventory Costing Methods 6. Comparing Inventory Costing Methods 7. Inventory Valuation Other Than Cost 8. Balance Sheet Presentation of Merchandise 9. Estimating Inventory Cost 10. Financial Analysis and Interpretation Chapter F8 Inventories Inventories C8

Transcript of C8 - 1 Learning Objectives Power Notes 1.Internal Control of Inventories 2.Effect of Inventory...

Page 1: C8 - 1 Learning Objectives Power Notes 1.Internal Control of Inventories 2.Effect of Inventory Errors 3.Inventory Cost Flow Assumptions 4.Perpetual Inventory.

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Learning Objectives

Power Notes

1. Internal Control of Inventories 2. Effect of Inventory Errors 3. Inventory Cost Flow Assumptions 4. Perpetual Inventory Costing Methods 5. Periodic Inventory Costing Methods 6. Comparing Inventory Costing Methods 7. Inventory Valuation Other Than Cost 8. Balance Sheet Presentation of Merchandise 9. Estimating Inventory Cost10. Financial Analysis and Interpretation

Chapter F8

Inventories Inventories

C8

Page 2: C8 - 1 Learning Objectives Power Notes 1.Internal Control of Inventories 2.Effect of Inventory Errors 3.Inventory Cost Flow Assumptions 4.Perpetual Inventory.

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• Inventory Control and Relationships• Perpetual Inventory Accounting• LIFO and FIFO Cost Flow Assumptions• Inventory at Lower-of-Cost-or-Market• Retail and Gross Profit Methods• Inventory Turnover Ratio

Slide # Power Note Topics

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31

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Power NotesChapter F8

Inventories Inventories

Note: To select a topic, type the slide # and press Enter.

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Why is Inventory Control Important?Why is Inventory Control Important?

Inventory is a significant asset and for many companies the largest asset.

Inventory is central to the main activity of merchandising and manufacturing companies.

Mistakes in determining inventory cost can cause critical errors in financial statements.

Inventory must be protected from external risks ( such as fire and theft) and internal fraud by employees.

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LIABILITIES

OWNER’SEQUITY

REVENUES

ASSETS

COSTS & EXPENSES

Inventory Costs and RelationshipsInventory Costs and Relationships

MerchandiseMerchandiseInventoryInventory

Cost ofCost ofMdse. SoldMdse. Sold

If merchandise inventory is . . . . . . . overstated

Cost of merchandise sold is . . . . . .

Gross profit and net income are . . .

Ending owner’s equity is . . . . . . . . .

If merchandise inventory is . . . . . . . overstated

Cost of merchandise sold is . . . . . .

Gross profit and net income are . . .

Ending owner’s equity is . . . . . . . . .

understated

overstated

overstated

Net Income

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LIABILITIES

OWNER’SEQUITY

REVENUES

ASSETS

COSTS & EXPENSES

Inventory Costs and RelationshipsInventory Costs and Relationships

MerchandiseMerchandiseInventoryInventory

Cost ofCost ofMdse. SoldMdse. Sold

If merchandise inventory is . . . . . . . understated

Cost of merchandise sold is . . . . . .

Gross profit and net income are . . .

Ending owner’s equity is . . . . . . . . .

If merchandise inventory is . . . . . . . understated

Cost of merchandise sold is . . . . . .

Gross profit and net income are . . .

Ending owner’s equity is . . . . . . . . .

overstated

understated

understated

Net Income

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Merchandising and InventoryMerchandising and Inventory

Merchandising involves selling inventory.

Inventory is usually an important asset.

Inventory must be accounted for periodically or perpetually.

Traditional periodic method is often being replaced by perpetual inventory accounting.

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Continuous determination of inventory value

Continuous determination of gross profit

Affordable with computers, scanners, and bar codes on most products

Perpetual inventory accounting provides management controls.

Managers know which items are selling fastest and the profit margin on those items.

Advantages of Using Perpetual InventoryAdvantages of Using Perpetual Inventory

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Perpetual Inventory CostsPerpetual Inventory Costs

Inventory cost data to demonstrate Inventory cost data to demonstrate FIFO and LIFO Perpetual SystemsFIFO and LIFO Perpetual Systems

Inventory cost data to demonstrate Inventory cost data to demonstrate FIFO and LIFO Perpetual SystemsFIFO and LIFO Perpetual Systems

Cost ofCost ofMdse. SoldMdse. Sold

Item 127B Units Cost Price

Jan. 1 Inventory 10 $204 Sale 7 $30

10 Purchase 8 2122 Sale 4 3128 Sale 2 3230 Purchase 10 22

Item 127B Units Cost Price

Jan. 1 Inventory 10 $204 Sale 7 $30

10 Purchase 8 2122 Sale 4 3128 Sale 2 3230 Purchase 10 22

Sale price assumptions are added to demonstrate journal entries and ease of calculating gross profit.

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Jan. 1 10 20 200 4 7 20 140 3 20 60

Item 127B

FIFO Perpetual Inventory AccountFIFO Perpetual Inventory Account

Purchases Cost of Mdse. Sold Inventory Balance

Unit Total Unit Total Unit Total Date Qty. Cost Cost Qty. Cost Cost Qty. Cost Cost

The sale of 7 units leaves a balance of 3 units.

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Jan. 1 10 20 200 4 7 20 140 3 20 60 10 8 21 168 3 20 60

8 21 168

Item 127B

FIFO Perpetual Inventory AccountFIFO Perpetual Inventory Account

Purchases Cost of Mdse. Sold Inventory Balance

Unit Total Unit Total Unit Total Date Qty. Cost Cost Qty. Cost Cost Qty. Cost Cost

Because the purchase price of $21 is different than the cost of the previous 3 units on hand, the inventory balance of 11 units is accounted for separately.

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Item 127B

FIFO Perpetual Inventory AccountFIFO Perpetual Inventory Account

Purchases Cost of Mdse. Sold Inventory Balance

Unit Total Unit Total Unit TotalDate Qty. Cost Cost Qty. Cost Cost Qty. Cost Cost

Of the 4 units sold, 3 come from the first units in (FIFO) at a cost of $20.

Jan. 1 10 20 200 4 7 20 140 3 20 60 10 8 21 168 3 20 60

8 21 168 22 3 20 60

1 21 21 7 21 147

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Item 127B

FIFO Perpetual Inventory AccountFIFO Perpetual Inventory Account

Purchases Cost of Mdse. Sold Inventory Balance

Unit Total Unit Total Unit TotalDate Qty. Cost Cost Qty. Cost Cost Qty. Cost Cost

Jan. 1 10 20 200 4 7 20 140 3 20 60 10 8 21 168 3 20 60

8 21 168 22 3 20 60

1 21 21 7 21 147 28 2 21 42 5 21 105

Sold 2 units from the 7 units on hand. No allocation is necessary.

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Jan. 1 10 20 200 4 7 20 140 3 20 60 10 8 21 168 3 20 60

8 21 168 22 3 20 60

1 21 21 7 21 147 28 2 21 42 5 21 105 30 10 22 220 5 21 105

10 22 220

Item 127B

FIFO Perpetual Inventory AccountFIFO Perpetual Inventory Account

Purchases Cost of Mdse. Sold Inventory Balance

Unit Total Unit Total Unit TotalDate Qty. Cost Cost Qty. Cost Cost Qty. Cost Cost

Totals 18 $388 13 $263 15 $325

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Totals 18 $388 13 $263 15 $325

Jan. 1 10 20 200 4 7 20 140 3 20 60 10 8 21 168 3 20 60

8 21 168 22 3 20 60

1 21 21 7 21 147 28 2 21 42 5 21 105 30 10 22 220 5 21 105

10 22 220

Item 127B

FIFO Perpetual Inventory AccountFIFO Perpetual Inventory Account

Purchases Cost of Mdse. Sold Inventory Balance

Unit Total Unit Total Unit Total Date Qty. Cost Cost Qty. Cost Cost Qty. Cost Cost

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DateDate DescriptionDescription DebitDebit CreditCredit

FIFO Perpetual Inventory AccountingFIFO Perpetual Inventory Accounting

Accounts Receivable 390Sales 390

Cost of Merchandise Sold 263Merchandise Inventory 263

Gross Profit = Sales ($390) minus Cost of Merchandise Sold ($263) = $127

Jan. 31

To record January sales of item 127B.(7 units@$30, 4 units@$30, 2 units@$30)

To record cost of January sales of item 127B.

Jan. 31

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Purchases Cost of Mdse. Sold Inventory Balance

Unit Total Unit Total Unit TotalDate Qty. Cost Cost Qty. Cost Cost Qty. Cost Cost

Item 127B

LIFO Perpetual Inventory AccountLIFO Perpetual Inventory Account

Jan. 1 10 20 200 4 7 20 140 3 20 60

The sale of 7 units leaves a balance of 3 units.

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Purchases Cost of Mdse. Sold Inventory Balance

Unit Total Unit Total Unit TotalDate Qty. Cost Cost Qty. Cost Cost Qty. Cost Cost

Jan. 1 10 20 200 4 7 20 140 3 20 60 10 8 21 168 3 20 60

8 21 168

Item 127B

LIFO Perpetual Inventory AccountLIFO Perpetual Inventory Account

The purchase price of $21 is different than the cost of the previous 3 units on hand; therefore, the inventory balance of 11 units is accounted for separately.

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Purchases Cost of Mdse. Sold Inventory Balance

Unit Total Unit Total Unit TotalDate Qty. Cost Cost Qty. Cost Cost Qty. Cost Cost

Jan. 1 10 20 200 4 7 20 140 3 20 60 10 8 21 168 3 20 60

8 21 168 22 4 21 84 3 20 60

4 21 84

Item 127B

LIFO Perpetual Inventory AccountLIFO Perpetual Inventory Account

Of the 4 units sold, all come from the last units in (LIFO) at a cost of $21.

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Purchases Cost of Mdse. Sold Inventory Balance

Unit Total Unit Total Unit TotalDate Qty. Cost Cost Qty. Cost Cost Qty. Cost Cost

Jan. 1 10 20 200 4 7 20 140 3 20 60 10 8 21 168 3 20 60

8 21 168 22 4 21 84 3 20 60

4 21 84 28 2 21 42 3 20 60

2 21 42

Item 127B

LIFO Perpetual Inventory AccountLIFO Perpetual Inventory Account

Of the 2 units sold, all come from the last units in (LIFO) at a cost of $21, leaving 2 units from that group.

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Purchases Cost of Mdse. Sold Inventory Balance

Unit Total Unit Total Unit TotalDate Qty. Cost Cost Qty. Cost Cost Qty. Cost Cost

Jan. 1 10 20 200 4 7 20 140 3 20 60 10 8 21 168 3 20 60

8 21 168 22 4 21 84 3 20 60

4 21 84 28 2 21 42 3 20 60

2 21 42 30 10 22 220 3 20 60

2 21 4210 22 220

Item 127B

LIFO Perpetual Inventory AccountLIFO Perpetual Inventory Account

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Purchases Cost of Mdse. Sold Inventory Balance

Unit Total Unit Total Unit TotalDate Qty. Cost Cost Qty. Cost Cost Qty. Cost Cost

Jan. 1 10 20 200 4 7 20 140 3 20 60 10 8 21 168 3 20 60

8 21 168 22 4 21 84 3 20 60

4 21 84 28 2 21 42 3 20 60

2 21 42 30 10 22 220 3 20 60

2 21 4210 22 220

Item 127B

Totals 18 $388 13 $266 15 $322

LIFO Perpetual Inventory AccountLIFO Perpetual Inventory Account

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DateDate DescriptionDescription DebitDebit CreditCredit

LIFO Perpetual Inventory AccountingLIFO Perpetual Inventory Accounting

Accounts Receivable 390Sales 390

Cost of Merchandise Sold 266Merchandise Inventory 266

Gross Profit = Sales ($390) minus Cost of Merchandise Sold ($266) = $124

Jan. 31

To record January sales of item 127B.(7 units@$30, 4 units@$30, 2 units@$30)

To record cost of January sales of item 127B.

Jan. 31

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Jan. 1200 units at $9

First-In, First-Out Flow of CostsFirst-In, First-Out Flow of Costs

Mar. 10300 units at $10

Sep. 21400 units at $11

Nov. 18100 units at $12

$1,800

$3,000

$4,400

$1,200

Purchases

MerchandiseAvailablefor Sale

$10,400$10,400

Using FIFO costing, which units are assumed

to be sold first?

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Jan. 1200 units at $9

First-In, First-Out Flow of CostsFirst-In, First-Out Flow of Costs

Mar. 10300 units at $10

Sep. 21400 units at $11

Nov. 18100 units at $12

$1,800

$3,000

$4,400

$1,200

Purchases

MerchandiseAvailablefor Sale

$1,800

$3,000

$2,200

Cost ofMerchandise

Sold

200 units at $9

$10,400$10,400

$7,000$7,000

300 units at $10

200 units at $11

FIFO cost flow assumes merchandise acquired

first is sold first.

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Jan. 1200 units at $9

First-In, First-Out Flow of CostsFirst-In, First-Out Flow of Costs

Mar. 10300 units at $10

Sep. 21400 units at $11

Nov. 18100 units at $12

$1,800

$3,000

$4,400

$1,200

Purchases

MerchandiseAvailablefor Sale

$1,800

$3,000

$2,200

Cost ofMerchandise

Sold

200 units at $9

$10,400$10,400 $2,200

$1,200

$7,000$7,000

MerchandiseInventory

$3,400$3,400

300 units at $10

200 units at $11

200 units at $11

100 units at $12

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Jan. 1200 units at $9

First-In, First-Out Flow of CostsFirst-In, First-Out Flow of Costs

Mar. 10300 units at $10

Sep. 21400 units at $11

Nov. 18100 units at $12

$1,800

$3,000

$4,400

$1,200

Purchases

MerchandiseAvailablefor Sale

$1,800

$3,000

$2,200

Cost ofMerchandise

Sold

200 units at $9

$10,400$10,400 $2,200

$1,200

$7,000$7,000

MerchandiseInventory

$3,400$3,400

300 units at $10

200 units at $11

200 units at $11

100 units at $12

700 units

1,000 units

300 units

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Jan. 1200 units at $9

Last-In, First-Out Flow of CostsLast-In, First-Out Flow of Costs

Mar. 10300 units at $10

Sep. 21400 units at $11

Nov. 18100 units at $12

$1,800

$3,000

$4,400

$1,200

Purchases

MerchandiseAvailablefor Sale

$10,400$10,4001,000 units total

Using LIFO costing, which units are assumed

to be sold first?

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Jan. 1200 units at $9

Last-In, First-Out Flow of CostsLast-In, First-Out Flow of Costs

Mar. 10300 units at $10

Sep. 21400 units at $11

Nov. 18100 units at $12

$1,800

$3,000

$4,400

$1,200

Purchases

MerchandiseAvailablefor Sale

Cost ofMerchandise

Sold

$10,400$10,400

$4,400

$1,200

$7,600$7,600

200 units at $10

400 units at $11

100 units at $12

$2,000

LIFO cost flow assumes merchandise acquired

last is sold first.

1,000 units total

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Jan. 1200 units at $9

Last-In, First-Out Flow of CostsLast-In, First-Out Flow of Costs

Mar. 10300 units at $10

Sep. 21400 units at $11

Nov. 18100 units at $12

$1,800

$3,000

$4,400

$1,200

Purchases

MerchandiseAvailablefor Sale $1,800

$1,000

Cost ofMerchandise

Sold

200 units at $9

$10,400$10,400

$4,400

$1,200

$2,800$2,800

MerchandiseInventory

$7,600$7,600

100 units at $10

200 units at $10

400 units at $11

100 units at $12

$2,000

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Jan. 1200 units at $9

Last-In, First-Out Flow of CostsLast-In, First-Out Flow of Costs

Mar. 10300 units at $10

Sep. 21400 units at $11

Nov. 18100 units at $12

$1,800

$3,000

$4,400

$1,200

Purchases

MerchandiseAvailablefor Sale $1,800

$1,000

Cost ofMerchandise

Sold

200 units at $9

$10,400$10,400

$4,400

$1,200

$2,800$2,800

MerchandiseInventory

$7,600$7,600

100 units at $10

200 units at $10

400 units at $11

100 units at $12

$2,000

700 units

1,000 units

300 units

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$ 3,800

2,700

4,650

3,920

Total $15,520 $15,472 $15,070 The market decline is either: 1. Based on total inventory ($15,520 – $15,472) = $48 2. Based on individual items ($15,520 – $15,070) = $450 The decline is reported on the income statement as a separate item or included in the cost of merchandise sold.

Valuation of Inventory at Lower-of-Cost-or-MarketValuation of Inventory at Lower-of-Cost-or-Market

A 400 $10.25 $ 9.50 $ 4,100 $ 3,800

B 120 22.50 24.10 2,700 2,892

C 600 8.00 7.75 4,800 4,650

D 280 14.00 14.75 3,920 4,130

Unit UnitInventory Cost Market Total Total Lower

Item Quantity Price Price Cost Market C or M

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Assets

Current assets:

Cash $ 19,400

Accounts receivable $80,000

Less allowance 3,000 77,000

Merchandise inventory

at lower of cost (first-in,

first-out method) or market 216,300

Afro-ArtsBalance Sheet

December 31, 2004

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Retail Method of Estimating Inventory CostRetail Method of Estimating Inventory Cost

Retail method is based on relationship between cost of merchandise available for sale and the retail price.

Retail prices of all merchandise must be accumulated.

Inventory at retail is calculated as retail price of merchandise available for sale less sales.

Ratio is calculated as cost divided by retail price.

Inventory at retail price times cost ratio equals estimated cost of inventory.

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$62,000 $100,000

($62,000 / $100,000 = 62%)

$30,000

($30,000 x 62%) $18,600

Retail Inventory Method CalculationRetail Inventory Method Calculation

Cost Retail

Merchandise inventory, January 1 $19,400 $36,000

Purchases in January (net) 42,600 64,000

Merchandise available for sale

Ratio of cost to retail price:

Sales for January (net) 70,000

Merchandise inventory, January 31, at retail

Merchandise inventory, January 31, at est. cost

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Gross Profit Method of Estimating Inventory CostGross Profit Method of Estimating Inventory Cost

1. A gross profit percentage rate is estimated based on previous experience adjusted for known changes.

2. Estimated gross profit is calculated by multiplying the estimated gross profit rate times the actual net sales.

3. Estimated cost of merchandise sold is calculated by subtracting the gross profit from actual sales.

4. The cost of merchandise sold estimate is deducted from actual merchandise available for sale to determine the estimated cost of merchandise inventory.

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Merchandise inventory, January 1 $ 57,000

Purchases in January (net) 180,000

Merchandise available for sale

Sales in January (net) $250,000Less: Estimated gross profit

Estimated cost of merchandise sold

Estimated merchandise inventory, January 31

Gross Profit Method CalculationGross Profit Method Calculation

$237,000

($250,000 x 30%) 75,000

175,000$ 62,000

Many firms generate a surprisingly stable and predictable gross profit as a percentage of sales.

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Inventory Turnover RatiosInventory Turnover Ratios

SUPERVALU ZaleCost of goods sold $15,620,127,000 $ 737,188,000Inventories:

Beginning of year $1,115,529,000 $478,467,000End of year 1,067,837,000 571,669,000Average $1,091,683,000 $525,068,000

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Inventory Turnover RatiosInventory Turnover Ratios

SUPERVALU ZaleCost of goods sold $15,620,127,000 $ 737,188,000Inventories:

Beginning of year $1,115,529,000 $478,467,000End of year 1,067,837,000 571,669,000Average $1,091,683,000 $525,068,000

Inventory turnoverInventory turnover 14.3 times14.3 times 1.4 times1.4 times

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Inventory Turnover RatiosInventory Turnover Ratios

SUPERVALU La-Z-BoyCost of goods sold $15,620,127,000 $ 737,188,000Inventories:

Beginning of year $1,115,529,000 $478,467,000End of year 1,067,837,000 571,669,000Average $1,091,683,000 $525,068,000

Inventory turnoverInventory turnover 14.3 times14.3 times 1.4 times1.4 times

Average selling periodAverage selling period 25 days25 days 283 days283 days

Use: To assess the efficiency in the management of inventory

Use: To assess the efficiency in the management of inventory

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Note: To see the topic slide, type 2 and press Enter.

This is the last slide in Chapter F8. This is the last slide in Chapter F8.

Power Notes Inventories Inventories

Chapter F8