C H A P T E R 8 VALUATION OF INVENTORIES: A COST-BASIS APPROACH Inventories are: items held for sale, or goods to be used in the production of goods to be sold. Businesses with : Intermediate Accounting 13th Edition Kieso, Weygandt, and Warfield Merchandiser or Manufacturer 8-1 8-2 8-3 Illustration 8-18 Illustration 8-18 Illustration 8-28 One inventory account Three accounts Raw materials Purchase goods ready for sale Work in process Finished goods 8-4 8-5 8-6 Illustration 8-38 Companies use one of two types of systems for maintaining inventory records perpetual system or periodic system. Perpetual System 1. Purchases of merchandise are debited to. 2. Freight-in is debited to. Purchase returns and allowances and purchase discounts are credited to. 3. Cost of goods sold is debited and is credited for each sale. The perpetual inventory system provides a continuous record of and Cost of Goods Sold. Periodic System 1. Purchases of merchandise are debited to Purchases. 2. Ending determined by physical count. 3. Calculation of Cost of Goods Sold: Beginning inventory $ 100,000 Purchases, net 800,000 Goods available for sale 900,000 Ending inventory 125,000 Cost of goods sold $ 775,000 8-7 8-8 8-9
Illustration: Fesmire Company had the following transactions during the current year. Illustration: Illustration 8-48 Control Companies should take the physical inventory near the end of their fiscal year, to properly report inventory quantities in their annual accounting reports. Record these transactions using the Perpetual and Periodic systems. 8-10 8-11 8-12 Basic Issues in in Valuation Physical Goods Included in in Costs Included in in Valuation Companies must allocate the cost of all the goods available for sale (or use) between the goods that were sold or used and those that are still on hand. Illustration 8-58 A company should record purchases when it obtains legal title to the goods. Illustration 8-68 Product Costs - costs directly connected with bringing the goods to the buyer s place of business and converting such goods to a salable condition. Period Costs generally selling, general, and administrative expenses. Purchase Discounts Gross vs. Net Method 8-13 8-14 8-15 LO 4 Understand the items to include as inventory cost. Costs Included in in Which Cost Flow Assumption to to Adopt? 8-16 Treatment of Purchase Discounts * $4,000 x 2% = $80 ** $10,000 x 98% = $9,800 * Illustration 8-118 LO 4 Understand the items to include as inventory cost. ** 8-17 FIFO Cost Flow Assumption Adopted does not need to to equal Physical Movement of of Goods LIFO Specific Identification Answer: Method adopted should be one that most clearly reflects periodic income. 8-18 Example makes the following purchases: 1. One item on 2/2/11 for $10 2. One item on 2/15/11 for $15 3. One item on 2/25/11 for $20 sells one item on 2/28/11 for $90. What would be the balance of ending inventory and cost of goods sold for the month ended Feb. 2011, assuming the company used the FIFO, LIFO, Average Cost, and Specific Identification cost flow assumptions? Assume a tax rate of 30%.
First-In-First-Out (FIFO) Last-In-First-Out (LIFO) 8-19 8-21 8-23 8-25 Specific Identification 8-27 Financial Statement Summary FIFO LIFO Average $ 90 $ 90 Cost of goods sold 10 20 15 Gross profit 80 70 75 Operating expenses: 14 14 12 12 7 7 33 33 Income before taxes 47 37 42 Income tax expense 14 11 12 Net income $ 33 $ 26 $ 30 Balance 35 25 30 8-28 Illustration: Call-Mart Inc. had the following transactions in its first month of operations. Calculate Goods Available for Sale LO 5 Specific Identification Illustration: Assume that Call-Mart Inc. s 6,000 units of inventory consists of 1,000 units from the March 2 purchase, 3,000 from the March 15 purchase, and 2,000 from the March 30 purchase. Compute the amount of ending inventory and cost of goods sold. Illustration 8-128 Weighted-Average Illustration 8-138 Moving-Average Illustration 8-148 In this method, Call-Mart computes a new average unit cost each time it makes a purchase. 8-29 8-30 8-31
First-In, First-Out (FIFO) First-In, First-Out (FIFO) Last-In, First-Out (LIFO) Periodic Method Illustration 8-158 Perpetual Method Illustration 8-168 Periodic Method Illustration 8-178 Determine cost of ending inventory by taking the cost of the most recent purchase and working back until it accounts for all units in the inventory. In all cases where FIFO is used, the inventory and cost of goods sold would be the same at the end of the month whether a perpetual or periodic system is used. The cost of the total quantity sold or issued during the month comes from the most recent purchases. 8-32 8-33 8-34 8-35 Last-In, First-Out (LIFO) Perpetual Method Illustration 8-188 The LIFO method results in different ending inventory and cost of goods sold amounts than the amounts calculated under the periodic method. 8-36 LIFO Reserve Many companies use LIFO for tax and external financial reporting purposes FIFO, average cost, or standard cost system for internal reporting purposes. Reasons: 1. Pricing decisions 2. Record keeping easier 3. Profit-sharing or bonus arrangements 4. LIFO troublesome for interim periods LO 6 Explain the significance and use of a LIFO reserve. 8-37 LIFO Reserve is the difference between the inventory method used for internal reporting purposes and LIFO. FIFO value per books $160,000 Example: LIFO value 145,000 LIFO Reserve $ 15,000 Journal entry to reduce inventory to LIFO: Cost of goods sold 15,000 Allowance to reduce inventory to LIFO 15,000 Companies should disclose either the LIFO reserve or the replacement cost of the inventory. LO 6 Explain the significance and use of a LIFO reserve. LIFO Liquidation Older, low cost inventory is sold resulting in a lower cost of goods sold, higher net income, and higher taxes. LIFO Liquidation Illustration: At the end of 2011, only 6,000 pounds of steel remained in inventory. Illustration 8-218 Basis for Selection of of Method LIFO is generally preferred: 1. if selling prices are increasing faster than costs and 2. if a company has a fairly constant base stock. Illustration: Basler Co. has 30,000 pounds of steel in its inventory on December 31, 2010, with cost determined on a specific goods LIFO approach. LIFO is not appropriate: 1. if prices tend to lag behind costs, 2. if specific identification traditionally used, and 3. when unit costs tend to decrease as production increases. 8-38 LO 7 Understand the effect of LIFO liquidations. 8-39 LO 7 Understand the effect of LIFO liquidations. 8-40 LO 10 Understand why companies select given inventory methods.
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