Accounting 1 for IBA
Lecture 7
Chapter 7: reporting and interpreting cost of goods sold and inventory
Topics discussed in this lecture:
- Nature of inventory
- Invento…
Example
Apple retailer sold 12 Iphones for $700 per Iphone. The retailer paid $620 per iphone to apple inc.
inventory
inventory is tangible property that is:
(1) Held for sale in the normal course of a business o
(2) Used to produce goods and services for sale
Inventory of merchandisers (retailers/wholesales): goods usually acquired in finished condition and
are ready to sale
Merchandisers can be seen as shops that just resell a product from a manufacturer at a price higher
than the price they acquired the products for.
Inventory of manufacturing business:
- Raw material inventory
- Work in process inventory
- Finished products
Inventory management
Having sufficient quantities of high quality inventory available to serve customers’ needs while
minimizing the cost of carrying inventory
Inventory costing method
1. Specific identification
The method does not depend on physical flow of goods!
Specific identification
- specific cost of each inventory item is known
- used with low volume, high dollar cost inventory items
Example:
- Beginning inventory: 20 * 5000
- Purchases: 20 * 10000
Costs of goods available for sale:
20 * 5000 + 20 * 10000 = 300.000
Example: 10 units sold from beginning inventory and 20 from purchased items. Sales price 15.000
Sales revenue: (30 * 15000) = 450000
cost of goods sold (10 * 5000 + 20 * 10000) = - 250000
net income = 200000
ending inventory: 10 * 5000
1. Specific identification
In most companies = difficult or impossible to match the flows of physical inventory with
sales to determine the exact cost of goods sold
How to assign amount of goods available for sale between ending inventory and cogs?
Several methods are used in practice:
2. FIFO (first in first out) the oldest product is the first to go
3. LIFO (last in first out
4. Average costs
2. LIFO
First you sell the newest products
Net income differs from net income according to FIFO because flow of goods is not equal to flow of
costs
4) weighted average (average-cost) methid
Mix all the types of inventory
Average cost per unit:
cost of goods available for sale (beginning inventory + purchases)
number of units available for sale
- Ending inventory: Units in ending inventory X average cost per unit
- Cost of goods sold: unit sold X average cost per unit
Slide average cost per unit = 608,3
slide ending inventory = 2433,33
slide cogs = 3041,7