Dr. Richard M. Crowley
Starting part 2 of the course
Inventory (Chapter 6)
Inventories are assets, held for sale in the ordinary course of business, or in the process of production for such sale, or in the form of materials or supplies to be consumed in the production process or in the rendering of services. (FRS2-6)
Unsold inventory is an asset
Sold inventory is converted to COGS (expense)
The above works for individual items, but we’ll need a way to track items purchased and used.
Perpetual | Periodic | |
---|---|---|
Inventory cost | Any | Low cost only |
How? | Maintain a running total of all goods bought, sold, and available | Primarily through counts |
Counting frequency | At least once per year | At least once per year, usually more often |
Used by | Large businesses | Small businesses |
Best for | Keeping an accurate account of inventory and COGS | Keeping tracking costs low |
Not practical for businesses needing close tracking of inventory
Situation: Purchase inventory on account for $100 with 2/10 n/30 terms
Practice question (3 entries):
Situation: Sold inventory of $50 for $100 on account with 2/10 n/30 terms
Practice question (3 entries):
NRV is the estimated selling price in the ordinary course of business, less the estimated cost of completion and the estimated costs necessary to make the sale. [IAS 2.6]
Situation: Inventory is valued at $1,500, but NRV is $1,000
Wrong in some parts of the book. Use the slides here!
When in doubt, use Inventory writedown.
Problem in Year 1 | Effect in Year 1 | Effect in Year 2 | Effect in Year 3 |
---|---|---|---|
Overstated inventory (understated COGS) | I/S: Gross profit and net income overstated. B/S: Assets and equity overstated. | I/S: Gross profit and net income understated. B/S: Assets and equity back to normal. | I/S: Back to normal. B/S: No change. |
Understated inventory (overstated COGS) | I/S: Gross profit and net income understated. B/S: Assets and equity understated. | I/S: Gross profit and net income overstated. B/S: Assets and equity back to normal. | I/S: Back to normal. B/S: No change. |
Situation: Coffee Corp sells all of their products using fixed margins. Determine the COGS for each product below, using the given revenues.
LIFO is not allowed under IFRS – but you need to know it
First three only require minimal tracking, and are used when you have multiple orders of the same thing
Record COGS with revenue
\[ \begin{equation*} Price = \frac{P_1 \times N_1 + P_2\times N_2 + \cdots}{N_1 + N_2 + \cdots} \end{equation*} \]
Perpetual
Periodic
Same as if we bought all inventory before making any sales.
Started with 10 bags of coffee beans at $10 each. Then: 1) purchased 5 bags at $12 each; 2) Sold 7 bags; 3) Bought 10 bags at $8 each; 4) Sold 4 bags; 5) Sold 4 bags. Determine COGS.
Started with 10 bags of coffee beans at $10 each. Then: 1) purchased 5 bags at $12 each; 2) Sold 7 bags; 3) Bought 10 bags at $8 each; 4) Sold 4 bags; 5) Sold 4 bags. Determine COGS.
Started with 10 bags of coffee beans at $10 each. Then: 1) purchased 5 bags at $12 each; 2) Sold 7 bags; 3) Bought 10 bags at $8 each; 4) Sold 4 bags; 5) Sold 4 bags. Determine COGS.
Started with 10 bags of coffee beans at $10 each. Then: 1) purchased 5 bags at $12 each; 2) Sold 7 bags; 3) Bought 10 bags at $8 each; 4) Sold 4 bags; 5) Sold 4 bags. Determine COGS.
Started with 10 bags of coffee beans at $10 each. Then: 1) purchased 5 bags at $12 each; 2) Sold 7 bags; 3) Bought 10 bags at $8 each; 4) Sold 4 bags; 5) Sold 4 bags. Determine COGS.
Started with 10 bags of coffee beans at $10 each. Then: 1) purchased 5 bags at $12 each; 2) Sold 7 bags; 3) Bought 10 bags at $8 each; 4) Sold 4 bags; 5) Sold 4 bags. Determine COGS.
Situation: Coffee Corp started the year with 100 coffee cups for sale, each originally purchased at $8. Determine the cost of goods sold under each inventory system given the transactions on the right.