Operating, investment, financing
Investment activity
Finished goods, work in progress, raw materials
1. Held for sale
2. In the process of production
3. Raw materials or supplies to be consumed in the production
IAS 2
1. There are no specific recognition criteria for inventory in IAS 2
2. General recognition criteria from the conceptual framework are important
1. probable future economic benefits
2. reliable measurement of costs
1. cost of purchase
2. cost of conversion
1. Purchase price
2. Dirrectly attributable costs (import duties, taxes, transport costs, handling costs)
3. - trade discount
4. Borrowing costs
1. Direct costs of material and labor
2. Indirect costs of production (variable and fixed costs)
3. Other costs
4. Borrowing costs
Wasted materials, storage costs, administrative overheads, selling costs
1. abonormal amount of waste materials
2. storage costs, unless necessary in the production process before a furthur production stage
3. administrative overheads that do not contribute to bringing inventoris to their present location and condition
4. selling costs
1. Estimated selling price
- costs of completion (production costs)
- selling costs
Materials held for use in the production are not written down below cost if the finished products are expected to be sold at or above costs
lower of cost and net realizable value
1. Purchase costs
2. Construction costs
3. Costs of dismantling and remvoing the asset and restoring the site
4. Borrowing costs as part of an asset costs
1. Purchase price (less discounts or rebates)
2. Import duties / other taxes
3. Directly attributable costs
1. Costs directly related to the units of production
2. Systematically allocatable fixed and variable production overheads
1. Transaction has no commercial substance; or
2. The fair values are not reliably measurable
1. Financial instruments
2. Biological assets
1. Asset is realised in the entity's normal operating cycle
2. Asset is being traded
3. Realise the asset within 12 months
4. Cash or cash equivalent
the time between the acquisition of assets for processing and their realisation in cash or cash equivalents
1. Initial recognition of inventory
2. Recording of inventory transactions (periodic or perpetual inventory methods)
3. Assignment of costs to inventory (FIFO or weighted average)
4. Measurement subsequent to initial recognition
costs
the difference must be recognised as interest expense over the period
they are ‘incurred in bringing the inventories to their present location and condition’
where such inventories are a qualifying asset; that is, one which ‘takes a substantial period of time to get ready for its intended use or sale’
prohibited
cannot be included into the cost of inventories.
a ‘standard’ cost of materials, direct and indirect labour and overheads for each product based on normal levels of efficiency and capacity utilisation.
used to measure inventories of large numbers of rapidly changing items with similar margins for which it is impractical to use other costing methods.
reducing the sales value of the inventory by an appropriate percentage gross margin or an average percentage margin
the periodic method and the perpetual method
the amount of inventory is determined periodically (normally annually) by conducting a physical count and multiplying the number of units by a cost per unit to value the inventory on hand
Under the perpetual method, inventory records are updated each time a transaction involving inventory takes place
Free On Board
Goods belong to the purchaser from the time they are shipped
Goods belong to the entity until they arrive at the customer's premises
An agent (the consignee) agrees to sell goods on behalf of the consignor on a commission basis. Legal ownership remains with the consignor until the agent sells the goods to a third party.
1. If the inventory held consists of items that can be individually identified then the exact cost of the item sold must be recorded as cost of sales expense
2. If not, FIFO or weighted average cost formula will be used
The weighted average method is easy to apply and is particularly suited to inventory where homogeneous products are mixed together, like iron ore or spring water.
The FIFO method may be a better reflection of the actual physical movement of goods, such as those with use-by dates to avoid obsolescence, spoilage or legislative restrictions.
1. required by an accounting standard, or
2. where the change results in reporting more relevant and reliable financial information.
the net amount that an entity expects to realise from the sale of inventory in the ordinary course of business
1. Expected selling price
2. Estimated costs of completion
3. Estimated selling costs
then materials are to be written down to net realisable value
item-by-item basis
the amount of a previous write-down can be reversed
1. Carrying amount of inventories in the period in which the related revenue is recognised, in other words, cost of sales
2. Write down of inventories to net realisable value and all lossses
3. Reversals of write downs to net realisable value
inventories on hand will need to be classified into categories