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Copyright © 2012 Pearson Education
Chapter 6
1
Copyright © 2012 Pearson Education
2
Define accounting principles related to
inventory
Define inventory costing methods
Account for perpetual inventory using the
three most common costing methods
Compare the effects of the three most
common inventory costing methods
Copyright © 2012 Pearson Education
3
Apply the lower-of-cost-or-market rule to
inventory
Measure the effects of inventory errors
Estimate ending inventory by the gross
profit method
Account for periodic inventory using the
three most common costing methods
(Appendix 6A)
Copyright © 2012 Pearson Education
Define accounting principles related to
inventory
4
1
Copyright © 2012 Pearson Education
Accounting principles guide how we record
transactions
Consistency
Same accounting methods from period to period
Disclosure
Report enough information for outsiders to make
decisions
Materiality
Follow accounting rules for significant items
Conservatism
Exercise caution in financial reporting
5
Copyright © 2012 Pearson Education
S6-1: INVENTORY ACCOUNTING PRINCIPLES
Davidson Hardware used the FIFO inventory
method in 2012. Davidson plans to continue using
the FIFO method in future years.
Requirement
1. Which inventory principle is most relevant to
Davidson’s decision?
6
Consistency – using the same
accounting methods from period to
period
Copyright © 2012 Pearson Education
Define inventory costing methods
7
2
Copyright © 2012 Pearson Education
Determining the cost of ending inventory for the
balance sheet
Four Methods:
8
Specific-
unit-cost
First-In,
First-Out
Last-In,
First-Out
Average-
cost
Copyright © 2012 Pearson Education
Each inventory item has a specific cost
For businesses that sell unique, easily identified
items
Examples: Cars, fine jewelry, real estate
9
Copyright © 2012 Pearson Education
10
Assumes oldest items are sold first:
Oldest
Costs
Cost of Goods
Sold
Therefore, newest items are on hand:
Recent
Costs
Ending
Inventory
Copyright © 2012 Pearson Education
11
Recent
Costs
Cost of Goods
Sold
Oldest
Costs
Ending
Inventory
Assumes newest items are sold first:
Therefore, oldest items are on hand:
Copyright © 2012 Pearson Education
The average-cost per unit is assigned to cost of
goods sold and to units remaining in inventory.
A new average must be calculated with each
purchase.
12
Average Cost
Cost of Inventory on
Hand
Number of Units on
Hand
÷ =
Copyright © 2012 Pearson Education
Account for perpetual inventory by the three
most common costing methods
13
3
Copyright © 2012 Pearson Education
The different inventory costing methods produce
different amounts for:
ending inventory
cost of goods sold
14
Copyright © 2012 Pearson Education
15
Beginning Inventory
Purchases Cost of Goods Sold Inventory on Hand
Date
Qty.
Unit
Cost
Total
Cost Qty.
Unit
Cost
Total
Cost Qty.
Unit
Cost
Total
Cost
Jul 1 2 $40 $80
5 6 $45 $270 2 40 80
6 45 270
Purchase 6 more at $45 each
Copyright © 2012 Pearson Education
16
On July 15 sold 4 units
Purchases Cost of Goods Sold Inventory on Hand
Date
Qty.
Unit
Cost
Total
Cost Qty.
Unit
Cost
Total
Cost Qty.
Unit
Cost
Total
Cost
Jul 1 2 $40 $80
5 6 $45 $270 2 40 80
6 45 270
15 2 $40 $80
2 45 90
4 45 180
Copyright © 2012 Pearson Education
17
On July 26 purchased 9 at $47
Purchases Cost of Goods Sold Inventory on Hand
Date
Qty.
Unit
Cost
Total
Cost Qty.
Unit
Cost
Total
Cost Qty.
Unit
Cost
Total
Cost
Jul 1 2 $40 $80
5 6 $45 $270 2 40 80
6 45 270
15 2 $40 $80
2 45 90
4 45 180
26 9 $47 $423 4 45 180
9 47 423
Copyright © 2012 Pearson Education
18
Copyright © 2012 Pearson Education
19
Beginning Inventory
Purchases Cost of Goods Sold Inventory on Hand
Date
Qty.
Unit
Cost
Total
Cost Qty.
Unit
Cost
Total
Cost Qty.
Unit
Cost
Total
Cost
Jul 1 2 $40 $80
5 6 $45 $270 2 40 80
6 45 270
Purchase 6 more at $45 each
Copyright © 2012 Pearson Education
20
On July 15 sold 4 units
Purchases Cost of Goods Sold Inventory on Hand
Date
Qty.
Unit
Cost
Total
Cost Qty.
Unit
Cost
Total
Cost Qty.
Unit
Cost
Total
Cost
Jul 1 2 $40 $80
5 6 $45 $270 2 40 80
6 45 270
15 4 $45 $180 2 40 80
2 45 90
Copyright © 2012 Pearson Education
21
On July 26 purchased 9 at $47
Purchases Cost of Goods Sold Inventory on Hand
Date
Qty.
Unit
Cost
Total
Cost Qty.
Unit
Cost
Total
Cost Qty.
Unit
Cost
Total
Cost
Jul 1 2 $40 $80
5 6 $45 $270 2 40 80
6 45 270
15 4 $45 $180 2 40 80
2 45 90
26 9 $47 $423 2 40 80
2 45 90
9 47 423
Copyright © 2012 Pearson Education
22
Copyright © 2012 Pearson Education
23
Beginning Inventory
Purchases Cost of Goods Sold Inventory on Hand
Date
Qty.
Unit
Cost
Total
Cost Qty.
Unit
Cost
Total
Cost Qty.
Unit
Cost
Total
Cost
Jul 1 2 $40 $80
5 6 $45 $270 8 43.75 350
Purchase 6 more at $45 each
Copyright © 2012 Pearson Education
24
On July 15 sold 4 units
Purchases Cost of Goods Sold Inventory on Hand
Date
Qty.
Unit
Cost
Total
Cost Qty.
Unit
Cost
Total
Cost Qty.
Unit
Cost
Total
Cost
Jul 1 2 $40 $80
5 6 $45 $270 8 43.75 350
15 4 $43.75 $175 4 43.75 175
Copyright © 2012 Pearson Education
25
On July 26 purchased 9 at $47
Purchases Cost of Goods Sold Inventory on Hand
Date
Qty.
Unit
Cost
Total
Cost Qty.
Unit
Cost
Total
Cost Qty.
Unit
Cost
Total
Cost
Jul 1 2 $40 $80
5 6 $45 $270 8 43.75 350
15 4 $43.75 $175 4 43.75 175
26 9 $47 $423 13 46.00 598
Copyright © 2012 Pearson Education
26
Copyright © 2012 Pearson Education
Express Lane, Inc., a regional convenience store chain,
maintains milk inventory by the gallon. The first month’s
milk purchases and sales at its Freeport, FL, location
follows:
27
Nov 2 1 gallon @ $2.00 each
6 2 gallons @ $2.10 each
13 2 gallons @ $2.20 each
14 The store sold 4 gallons of milk to a customer.
Describe which costs would be sold and which costs
would remain in inventory. Then, identify the amount
that would be reported in inventory on November 15
using a. FIFO. b. LIFO. c. average cost.
Copyright © 2012 Pearson Education
Describe which costs would be sold and which
costs would remain in inventory.
28
FIFO LIFO
Average
Cost
Units sold
include the:
Ending
inventory
includes the:
Oldest costs
Oldest costs
Average
costs of units
Newest costs
Newest costs
Average
costs of units
Copyright © 2012 Pearson Education
Inventory Record: FIFO
Express Lane, Inc.
Purchases (Sold)
Date Quantity Unit Cost Total Cost
Nov 2 1 $2.00 $2.00
6 2 $2.10 $4.20
Bal 1
2
$2.00
2.10
$2.00
$4.20
13 2 $2.20 $4.40
Bal. 1
2
2
$2.00
2.10
2.20
$2.00
$4.20
$4.40
14Sold (4)
1
2
1
2.00
2.10
2.20
$2.00
4.20
2.20
Bal. 1 $2.20 $2.20
29
Copyright © 2012 Pearson Education
Inventory Record : LIFO
Express Lane, Inc.
Purchases (Sold)
Date Quantity Unit Cost Total Cost
Nov 2 1 $2.00 $2.00
6 2 $2.10 $4.20
Bal 1
2
$2.00
2.10
$2.00
$4.20
13 2 $2.20 $4.40
Bal. 1
2
2
$2.00
2.10
2.20
$2.00
$4.20
$4.40
14Sold (4)
2
2
2.10
2.20
$4.20
$2.20
Bal. 1 $2.00 $2.00
End 1 $2.00 $2.00
30
Copyright © 2012 Pearson Education
Inventory Record : Average-Cost
Express Lane, Inc.
Purchases (Sold)
Date Quantity Unit Cost Total Cost
Nov 2 1 $2.00 $2.00
6 2 $2.10 $4.20
Bal
3
{2.00+4.20} / 3
$2.0667 $6.20
13 2 $2.20 $4.40
Bal.
5
{6.20+4.40} / 3
$2.12 $10.60
14Sold (4)
(4) 2.12 ($8.48)
Bal. 1 $2.12 $2.12
End 1 $2.12 $2.12
31
Copyright © 2012 Pearson Education
Compare the effects of the three most common
costing methods
32
4
Copyright © 2012 Pearson Education
33
LIFO
31%
FIFO
46%
Other
3%
Average
20%
Copyright © 2012 Pearson Education
FIFO LIFO Average
Sales $320 $320 $320
Cost of goods sold $170 $180 $175
Gross profit $150 $140 $145
Highest
gross
profit;
highest
net
income
Lowest
gross
profit;
lowest
net
income
If inventory
prices are
increasing
Copyright © 2012 Pearson Education
35
High income
attracts investors
“Middle ground”
Lower income =
Less taxes
Last-In,
First-Out
First-In,
First-Out
Average-
Cost
Copyright © 2012 Pearson Education
Apply the lower-of-cost-or market rule to
inventory
36
5
Copyright © 2012 Pearson Education
Example of conservatism
Inventory is reported at lower of:
Historical cost or
Market value (current replacement cost)
If market is lower than cost, write down
inventory value
37
Date Accounts
Post
Ref Debit Credit
Cost of goods sold
Inventory
GENERAL JOURNAL
Copyright © 2012 Pearson Education
P6-30A: ACCOUNTING PRINCIPLES FOR INVENTORY AND
APPLYING THE LOWER-OF-COST-ORMARKET RULE
38
Copyright © 2012 Pearson Education
P6-30A: ACCOUNTING PRINCIPLES FOR INVENTORY AND
APPLYING THE LOWER-OF-COST-ORMARKET RULE
39
Dec 12 Cost of goods sold 20,000
Inventory 20,000
M and T should report inventory on the balance sheet at $80,000.
M and T should report Cost of goods sold on the Income Statement
at $430,000.
Conservatism. The goal of conservatism is to report realistic figures.
Copyright © 2012 Pearson Education
Measure the effects of inventory errors
40
6
Copyright © 2012 Pearson Education
41
Copyright © 2012 Pearson Education
42
Copyright © 2012 Pearson Education
43
Copyright © 2012 Pearson Education
Grandma Kate Bakery reported Sales revenue of $52,000 and Cost of goods
sold of $22,000.
Compute Grandma Kate’s correct Gross profit if the company made either of
the following independent accounting errors. Show your work.
a. Ending inventory is overstated by $6,000.
b. Ending inventory is understated by $6,000.
44
Inventory
As reported,
incorrect
a. overstated by
$6,000
b. understated
by $6,000
Sales Revenue $ 52,000 $ 52,000 $ 52,000
Cost of goods sold (22,000) (28,000) (16,000)
Gross Profit $ 30,000 $ 24,000 $ 36,000
Copyright © 2012 Pearson Education
Estimate ending inventory by the gross profit
method
45
7
Copyright © 2012 Pearson Education
Method to estimate ending inventory using the
gross profit percent
46
Beginning inventory $14,000
Net purchases 66,000
Cost of goods available 80,000
Estimated cost of goods sold:
Sales revenue $100,000
Less: Estimated gross profit of 40% (40,000)
Estimated cost of goods sold (60,000)
Estimated cost of ending inventory $20,000
Copyright © 2012 Pearson Education
47
Copyright © 2012 Pearson Education
Beginning inventory………………………. $42,450
Purchases…………………………………... 263,000
Cost of goods available………………….. 305,450
Cost of goods sold:
Sales revenue……………………………. $501,000
Less: Estimated gross profit of 55%… (275,550)
Estimated cost of goods sold…………. (225,450)
Estimated cost of ending inventory…….. $ 80,000
To compute the estimated cost of ending inventory by the gross
profit method:
48
Copyright © 2012 Pearson Education
Financial downturn; profits down
Temptation to make financials look better
“Cook the books”
Methods:
Overstate ending inventory
Lowers cost of goods sold
Increasing profits
Create fictitious sales
Cost of goods sold remains the same
Increasing profits
49
Copyright © 2012 Pearson Education
Account for periodic inventory using the three
most common costing methods (Appendix 6A)
50
8
Copyright © 2012 Pearson Education
Simpler
No running record of inventory
Inventory counted at end of a period.
Better for small businesses with smaller
inventory amounts
Adds four new accounts:
Purchases
Purchase discounts
Purchase returns and allowances
Freight in
51
Copyright © 2012 Pearson Education
Purchases—Holds the cost of inventory as it is
purchased (Debit balance)
Purchase discounts—Discounts for early
payment of purchases (Credit balance)
Purchase returns and allowances—Items
purchased, but returned to the vendor or
allowances granted (Credit balance)
Freight in—holds the transportation cost paid on
inventory purchases (Debit balance)
52
Copyright © 2012 Pearson Education
Beginning inventory
+ Net purchases
Cost of goods available
– Ending inventory
Cost of goods sold
53
Purchases
- Purchase Discounts
- Purchase returns and
allowances
+ Freight In
= Net Purchases
Copyright © 2012 Pearson Education
Same pattern as perpetual
54
Copyright © 2012 Pearson Education
55
Copyright © 2012 Pearson Education
56
Copyright © 2012 Pearson Education
The four new
accounts
would be
closed out at
period end.
57
Copyright © 2012 Pearson Education
E6A-1 COMPUTING PERIODIC INVENTORY AMOUNTS
The periodic inventory records of Synergy Prosthetics
indicate the following at July 31:
At July 31, Synergy counts two units of inventory on hand.
1. Compute ending inventory and cost of goods sold, using each of
the following methods:
a. Average-cost (round average unit cost to nearest cent)
b. First-In, First-Out
c. Last-In, First-Out
58
Jul 1 Beginning inventory 6 units @ $60
8 Purchase 5 units @ $67
15 Purchase 10 units @ $70
26 Purchase 5 units @ $85
Copyright © 2012 Pearson Education
Ending inventory Cost of goods sold
1. Average $1,820÷ 26 units =average
unit cost of $70 × 2 = $140 $1,820 − $140 = $1,680
2. FIFO 2 @ $85= $170 $1,820 − $170 = $1,650
3. LIFO 2 @ $60= $120 $1,820 − $120 = $1,700
E6A-1 COMPUTING PERIODIC INVENTORY AMOUNTS
59
Jul 1 Beginning inventory 6 units @ $60 = $ 360
8 Purchase 5 units @ $67 335
15 Purchase 10 units @ $70 700
26 Purchase 5 units @ $85 425
Goods available 26 units $1,820
Copyright © 2012 Pearson Education
The accounting principles are the foundations
that guide how we record transactions.
Inventory costing methods include specific-
unit-cost, FIFO, LIFO, and average cost.
Specific unit identifies the specific cost of
each unit of inventory that is in ending
inventory and each item that is in cost of
goods sold.
Under FIFO, the cost of goods sold is based
on the oldest purchases.
60
Copyright © 2012 Pearson Education
Under LIFO, the cost of goods sold is based
on the newest purchases.
Under the average-cost method, the business
computes a new average cost per unit after
each purchase. Keep in mind the cost paid to
purchase goods is the same under all
inventory costing methods. The difference is
where we divide up the dollars between the
asset, Inventory, and the expense, COGS, on
the income statement.
61
Copyright © 2012 Pearson Education
The inventory costing method dictates which
purchases are deemed sold (COGS). The sales
price to the customer (Sales revenue) is the same
regardless of which costing method is used to
record COGS. Only the amounts in the COGS
journal entries differ among the three costing
methods.
If the cost of inventory is declining, an
adjustment must be made to lower the Inventory
account to the lower value (market). If market is
greater than cost, no adjustment is made to the
Inventory account.
62
Copyright © 2012 Pearson Education
Because the total spent to acquire goods
available for sale is allocated to only the
Inventory or the COGS account, if Inventory is
incorrectly stated due to an error, COGS is also
incorrectly stated. When discovered, errors
must be disclosed and corrected in the affected
financial statements.
63
Copyright © 2012 Pearson Education
Account for periodic inventory using the
three most common costing methods
(Appendix 6A)
Accounting is simpler in a periodic system
because the company keeps no daily running
record of inventory on hand. The only way to
determine the ending inventory and cost of
goods sold in a periodic system is to count
the goods—usually at the end of the year.
64
Copyright © 2012 Pearson Education
The periodic system uses four additional
accounts:
Purchases—this account holds the cost of
inventory as it is purchased. Purchases carries a
debit balance and is an expense account.
Purchase discounts—this contra account carries
a credit balance. Discounts for early payment of
purchases are recorded here.
Purchase returns and allowances—this contra
account carries a credit balance. Items purchased
but returned to the vendor are recorded in this
account. Allowances granted by a vendor are
also recorded in this account.
65
Copyright © 2012 Pearson Education
Freight in—this account holds the transportation
cost paid on inventory purchases. It carries a
debit balance and is an expense account.
The end-of-period entries are more extensive in
the periodic system because we must close out
the beginning inventory balance and set up the
cost of the ending inventory. This appendix
illustrates the closing process for the periodic
system.
66
Copyright © 2012 Pearson Education
Cost of goods sold in a periodic system is
computed by the following formula (using
assumed amounts for this illustration):
Beginning inventory
+ Net purchases
= Cost of goods available
- Ending inventory
= Cost of goods sold
Net purchases is determined as follows:
Purchases
- Purchase discounts
- Purchase returns and allowances
+ Freight in
= Net purchases
67
Copyright © 2012 Pearson Education
68
Copyright © 2012 Pearson Education
Copyright
All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced,
stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any
means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or
otherwise, without the prior written permission of the publisher.
Printed in the United States of America.
69

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hho_acctg09GE_inppt06_ppt.ppt

  • 1. Copyright © 2012 Pearson Education Chapter 6 1
  • 2. Copyright © 2012 Pearson Education 2 Define accounting principles related to inventory Define inventory costing methods Account for perpetual inventory using the three most common costing methods Compare the effects of the three most common inventory costing methods
  • 3. Copyright © 2012 Pearson Education 3 Apply the lower-of-cost-or-market rule to inventory Measure the effects of inventory errors Estimate ending inventory by the gross profit method Account for periodic inventory using the three most common costing methods (Appendix 6A)
  • 4. Copyright © 2012 Pearson Education Define accounting principles related to inventory 4 1
  • 5. Copyright © 2012 Pearson Education Accounting principles guide how we record transactions Consistency Same accounting methods from period to period Disclosure Report enough information for outsiders to make decisions Materiality Follow accounting rules for significant items Conservatism Exercise caution in financial reporting 5
  • 6. Copyright © 2012 Pearson Education S6-1: INVENTORY ACCOUNTING PRINCIPLES Davidson Hardware used the FIFO inventory method in 2012. Davidson plans to continue using the FIFO method in future years. Requirement 1. Which inventory principle is most relevant to Davidson’s decision? 6 Consistency – using the same accounting methods from period to period
  • 7. Copyright © 2012 Pearson Education Define inventory costing methods 7 2
  • 8. Copyright © 2012 Pearson Education Determining the cost of ending inventory for the balance sheet Four Methods: 8 Specific- unit-cost First-In, First-Out Last-In, First-Out Average- cost
  • 9. Copyright © 2012 Pearson Education Each inventory item has a specific cost For businesses that sell unique, easily identified items Examples: Cars, fine jewelry, real estate 9
  • 10. Copyright © 2012 Pearson Education 10 Assumes oldest items are sold first: Oldest Costs Cost of Goods Sold Therefore, newest items are on hand: Recent Costs Ending Inventory
  • 11. Copyright © 2012 Pearson Education 11 Recent Costs Cost of Goods Sold Oldest Costs Ending Inventory Assumes newest items are sold first: Therefore, oldest items are on hand:
  • 12. Copyright © 2012 Pearson Education The average-cost per unit is assigned to cost of goods sold and to units remaining in inventory. A new average must be calculated with each purchase. 12 Average Cost Cost of Inventory on Hand Number of Units on Hand ÷ =
  • 13. Copyright © 2012 Pearson Education Account for perpetual inventory by the three most common costing methods 13 3
  • 14. Copyright © 2012 Pearson Education The different inventory costing methods produce different amounts for: ending inventory cost of goods sold 14
  • 15. Copyright © 2012 Pearson Education 15 Beginning Inventory Purchases Cost of Goods Sold Inventory on Hand Date Qty. Unit Cost Total Cost Qty. Unit Cost Total Cost Qty. Unit Cost Total Cost Jul 1 2 $40 $80 5 6 $45 $270 2 40 80 6 45 270 Purchase 6 more at $45 each
  • 16. Copyright © 2012 Pearson Education 16 On July 15 sold 4 units Purchases Cost of Goods Sold Inventory on Hand Date Qty. Unit Cost Total Cost Qty. Unit Cost Total Cost Qty. Unit Cost Total Cost Jul 1 2 $40 $80 5 6 $45 $270 2 40 80 6 45 270 15 2 $40 $80 2 45 90 4 45 180
  • 17. Copyright © 2012 Pearson Education 17 On July 26 purchased 9 at $47 Purchases Cost of Goods Sold Inventory on Hand Date Qty. Unit Cost Total Cost Qty. Unit Cost Total Cost Qty. Unit Cost Total Cost Jul 1 2 $40 $80 5 6 $45 $270 2 40 80 6 45 270 15 2 $40 $80 2 45 90 4 45 180 26 9 $47 $423 4 45 180 9 47 423
  • 18. Copyright © 2012 Pearson Education 18
  • 19. Copyright © 2012 Pearson Education 19 Beginning Inventory Purchases Cost of Goods Sold Inventory on Hand Date Qty. Unit Cost Total Cost Qty. Unit Cost Total Cost Qty. Unit Cost Total Cost Jul 1 2 $40 $80 5 6 $45 $270 2 40 80 6 45 270 Purchase 6 more at $45 each
  • 20. Copyright © 2012 Pearson Education 20 On July 15 sold 4 units Purchases Cost of Goods Sold Inventory on Hand Date Qty. Unit Cost Total Cost Qty. Unit Cost Total Cost Qty. Unit Cost Total Cost Jul 1 2 $40 $80 5 6 $45 $270 2 40 80 6 45 270 15 4 $45 $180 2 40 80 2 45 90
  • 21. Copyright © 2012 Pearson Education 21 On July 26 purchased 9 at $47 Purchases Cost of Goods Sold Inventory on Hand Date Qty. Unit Cost Total Cost Qty. Unit Cost Total Cost Qty. Unit Cost Total Cost Jul 1 2 $40 $80 5 6 $45 $270 2 40 80 6 45 270 15 4 $45 $180 2 40 80 2 45 90 26 9 $47 $423 2 40 80 2 45 90 9 47 423
  • 22. Copyright © 2012 Pearson Education 22
  • 23. Copyright © 2012 Pearson Education 23 Beginning Inventory Purchases Cost of Goods Sold Inventory on Hand Date Qty. Unit Cost Total Cost Qty. Unit Cost Total Cost Qty. Unit Cost Total Cost Jul 1 2 $40 $80 5 6 $45 $270 8 43.75 350 Purchase 6 more at $45 each
  • 24. Copyright © 2012 Pearson Education 24 On July 15 sold 4 units Purchases Cost of Goods Sold Inventory on Hand Date Qty. Unit Cost Total Cost Qty. Unit Cost Total Cost Qty. Unit Cost Total Cost Jul 1 2 $40 $80 5 6 $45 $270 8 43.75 350 15 4 $43.75 $175 4 43.75 175
  • 25. Copyright © 2012 Pearson Education 25 On July 26 purchased 9 at $47 Purchases Cost of Goods Sold Inventory on Hand Date Qty. Unit Cost Total Cost Qty. Unit Cost Total Cost Qty. Unit Cost Total Cost Jul 1 2 $40 $80 5 6 $45 $270 8 43.75 350 15 4 $43.75 $175 4 43.75 175 26 9 $47 $423 13 46.00 598
  • 26. Copyright © 2012 Pearson Education 26
  • 27. Copyright © 2012 Pearson Education Express Lane, Inc., a regional convenience store chain, maintains milk inventory by the gallon. The first month’s milk purchases and sales at its Freeport, FL, location follows: 27 Nov 2 1 gallon @ $2.00 each 6 2 gallons @ $2.10 each 13 2 gallons @ $2.20 each 14 The store sold 4 gallons of milk to a customer. Describe which costs would be sold and which costs would remain in inventory. Then, identify the amount that would be reported in inventory on November 15 using a. FIFO. b. LIFO. c. average cost.
  • 28. Copyright © 2012 Pearson Education Describe which costs would be sold and which costs would remain in inventory. 28 FIFO LIFO Average Cost Units sold include the: Ending inventory includes the: Oldest costs Oldest costs Average costs of units Newest costs Newest costs Average costs of units
  • 29. Copyright © 2012 Pearson Education Inventory Record: FIFO Express Lane, Inc. Purchases (Sold) Date Quantity Unit Cost Total Cost Nov 2 1 $2.00 $2.00 6 2 $2.10 $4.20 Bal 1 2 $2.00 2.10 $2.00 $4.20 13 2 $2.20 $4.40 Bal. 1 2 2 $2.00 2.10 2.20 $2.00 $4.20 $4.40 14Sold (4) 1 2 1 2.00 2.10 2.20 $2.00 4.20 2.20 Bal. 1 $2.20 $2.20 29
  • 30. Copyright © 2012 Pearson Education Inventory Record : LIFO Express Lane, Inc. Purchases (Sold) Date Quantity Unit Cost Total Cost Nov 2 1 $2.00 $2.00 6 2 $2.10 $4.20 Bal 1 2 $2.00 2.10 $2.00 $4.20 13 2 $2.20 $4.40 Bal. 1 2 2 $2.00 2.10 2.20 $2.00 $4.20 $4.40 14Sold (4) 2 2 2.10 2.20 $4.20 $2.20 Bal. 1 $2.00 $2.00 End 1 $2.00 $2.00 30
  • 31. Copyright © 2012 Pearson Education Inventory Record : Average-Cost Express Lane, Inc. Purchases (Sold) Date Quantity Unit Cost Total Cost Nov 2 1 $2.00 $2.00 6 2 $2.10 $4.20 Bal 3 {2.00+4.20} / 3 $2.0667 $6.20 13 2 $2.20 $4.40 Bal. 5 {6.20+4.40} / 3 $2.12 $10.60 14Sold (4) (4) 2.12 ($8.48) Bal. 1 $2.12 $2.12 End 1 $2.12 $2.12 31
  • 32. Copyright © 2012 Pearson Education Compare the effects of the three most common costing methods 32 4
  • 33. Copyright © 2012 Pearson Education 33 LIFO 31% FIFO 46% Other 3% Average 20%
  • 34. Copyright © 2012 Pearson Education FIFO LIFO Average Sales $320 $320 $320 Cost of goods sold $170 $180 $175 Gross profit $150 $140 $145 Highest gross profit; highest net income Lowest gross profit; lowest net income If inventory prices are increasing
  • 35. Copyright © 2012 Pearson Education 35 High income attracts investors “Middle ground” Lower income = Less taxes Last-In, First-Out First-In, First-Out Average- Cost
  • 36. Copyright © 2012 Pearson Education Apply the lower-of-cost-or market rule to inventory 36 5
  • 37. Copyright © 2012 Pearson Education Example of conservatism Inventory is reported at lower of: Historical cost or Market value (current replacement cost) If market is lower than cost, write down inventory value 37 Date Accounts Post Ref Debit Credit Cost of goods sold Inventory GENERAL JOURNAL
  • 38. Copyright © 2012 Pearson Education P6-30A: ACCOUNTING PRINCIPLES FOR INVENTORY AND APPLYING THE LOWER-OF-COST-ORMARKET RULE 38
  • 39. Copyright © 2012 Pearson Education P6-30A: ACCOUNTING PRINCIPLES FOR INVENTORY AND APPLYING THE LOWER-OF-COST-ORMARKET RULE 39 Dec 12 Cost of goods sold 20,000 Inventory 20,000 M and T should report inventory on the balance sheet at $80,000. M and T should report Cost of goods sold on the Income Statement at $430,000. Conservatism. The goal of conservatism is to report realistic figures.
  • 40. Copyright © 2012 Pearson Education Measure the effects of inventory errors 40 6
  • 41. Copyright © 2012 Pearson Education 41
  • 42. Copyright © 2012 Pearson Education 42
  • 43. Copyright © 2012 Pearson Education 43
  • 44. Copyright © 2012 Pearson Education Grandma Kate Bakery reported Sales revenue of $52,000 and Cost of goods sold of $22,000. Compute Grandma Kate’s correct Gross profit if the company made either of the following independent accounting errors. Show your work. a. Ending inventory is overstated by $6,000. b. Ending inventory is understated by $6,000. 44 Inventory As reported, incorrect a. overstated by $6,000 b. understated by $6,000 Sales Revenue $ 52,000 $ 52,000 $ 52,000 Cost of goods sold (22,000) (28,000) (16,000) Gross Profit $ 30,000 $ 24,000 $ 36,000
  • 45. Copyright © 2012 Pearson Education Estimate ending inventory by the gross profit method 45 7
  • 46. Copyright © 2012 Pearson Education Method to estimate ending inventory using the gross profit percent 46 Beginning inventory $14,000 Net purchases 66,000 Cost of goods available 80,000 Estimated cost of goods sold: Sales revenue $100,000 Less: Estimated gross profit of 40% (40,000) Estimated cost of goods sold (60,000) Estimated cost of ending inventory $20,000
  • 47. Copyright © 2012 Pearson Education 47
  • 48. Copyright © 2012 Pearson Education Beginning inventory………………………. $42,450 Purchases…………………………………... 263,000 Cost of goods available………………….. 305,450 Cost of goods sold: Sales revenue……………………………. $501,000 Less: Estimated gross profit of 55%… (275,550) Estimated cost of goods sold…………. (225,450) Estimated cost of ending inventory…….. $ 80,000 To compute the estimated cost of ending inventory by the gross profit method: 48
  • 49. Copyright © 2012 Pearson Education Financial downturn; profits down Temptation to make financials look better “Cook the books” Methods: Overstate ending inventory Lowers cost of goods sold Increasing profits Create fictitious sales Cost of goods sold remains the same Increasing profits 49
  • 50. Copyright © 2012 Pearson Education Account for periodic inventory using the three most common costing methods (Appendix 6A) 50 8
  • 51. Copyright © 2012 Pearson Education Simpler No running record of inventory Inventory counted at end of a period. Better for small businesses with smaller inventory amounts Adds four new accounts: Purchases Purchase discounts Purchase returns and allowances Freight in 51
  • 52. Copyright © 2012 Pearson Education Purchases—Holds the cost of inventory as it is purchased (Debit balance) Purchase discounts—Discounts for early payment of purchases (Credit balance) Purchase returns and allowances—Items purchased, but returned to the vendor or allowances granted (Credit balance) Freight in—holds the transportation cost paid on inventory purchases (Debit balance) 52
  • 53. Copyright © 2012 Pearson Education Beginning inventory + Net purchases Cost of goods available – Ending inventory Cost of goods sold 53 Purchases - Purchase Discounts - Purchase returns and allowances + Freight In = Net Purchases
  • 54. Copyright © 2012 Pearson Education Same pattern as perpetual 54
  • 55. Copyright © 2012 Pearson Education 55
  • 56. Copyright © 2012 Pearson Education 56
  • 57. Copyright © 2012 Pearson Education The four new accounts would be closed out at period end. 57
  • 58. Copyright © 2012 Pearson Education E6A-1 COMPUTING PERIODIC INVENTORY AMOUNTS The periodic inventory records of Synergy Prosthetics indicate the following at July 31: At July 31, Synergy counts two units of inventory on hand. 1. Compute ending inventory and cost of goods sold, using each of the following methods: a. Average-cost (round average unit cost to nearest cent) b. First-In, First-Out c. Last-In, First-Out 58 Jul 1 Beginning inventory 6 units @ $60 8 Purchase 5 units @ $67 15 Purchase 10 units @ $70 26 Purchase 5 units @ $85
  • 59. Copyright © 2012 Pearson Education Ending inventory Cost of goods sold 1. Average $1,820÷ 26 units =average unit cost of $70 × 2 = $140 $1,820 − $140 = $1,680 2. FIFO 2 @ $85= $170 $1,820 − $170 = $1,650 3. LIFO 2 @ $60= $120 $1,820 − $120 = $1,700 E6A-1 COMPUTING PERIODIC INVENTORY AMOUNTS 59 Jul 1 Beginning inventory 6 units @ $60 = $ 360 8 Purchase 5 units @ $67 335 15 Purchase 10 units @ $70 700 26 Purchase 5 units @ $85 425 Goods available 26 units $1,820
  • 60. Copyright © 2012 Pearson Education The accounting principles are the foundations that guide how we record transactions. Inventory costing methods include specific- unit-cost, FIFO, LIFO, and average cost. Specific unit identifies the specific cost of each unit of inventory that is in ending inventory and each item that is in cost of goods sold. Under FIFO, the cost of goods sold is based on the oldest purchases. 60
  • 61. Copyright © 2012 Pearson Education Under LIFO, the cost of goods sold is based on the newest purchases. Under the average-cost method, the business computes a new average cost per unit after each purchase. Keep in mind the cost paid to purchase goods is the same under all inventory costing methods. The difference is where we divide up the dollars between the asset, Inventory, and the expense, COGS, on the income statement. 61
  • 62. Copyright © 2012 Pearson Education The inventory costing method dictates which purchases are deemed sold (COGS). The sales price to the customer (Sales revenue) is the same regardless of which costing method is used to record COGS. Only the amounts in the COGS journal entries differ among the three costing methods. If the cost of inventory is declining, an adjustment must be made to lower the Inventory account to the lower value (market). If market is greater than cost, no adjustment is made to the Inventory account. 62
  • 63. Copyright © 2012 Pearson Education Because the total spent to acquire goods available for sale is allocated to only the Inventory or the COGS account, if Inventory is incorrectly stated due to an error, COGS is also incorrectly stated. When discovered, errors must be disclosed and corrected in the affected financial statements. 63
  • 64. Copyright © 2012 Pearson Education Account for periodic inventory using the three most common costing methods (Appendix 6A) Accounting is simpler in a periodic system because the company keeps no daily running record of inventory on hand. The only way to determine the ending inventory and cost of goods sold in a periodic system is to count the goods—usually at the end of the year. 64
  • 65. Copyright © 2012 Pearson Education The periodic system uses four additional accounts: Purchases—this account holds the cost of inventory as it is purchased. Purchases carries a debit balance and is an expense account. Purchase discounts—this contra account carries a credit balance. Discounts for early payment of purchases are recorded here. Purchase returns and allowances—this contra account carries a credit balance. Items purchased but returned to the vendor are recorded in this account. Allowances granted by a vendor are also recorded in this account. 65
  • 66. Copyright © 2012 Pearson Education Freight in—this account holds the transportation cost paid on inventory purchases. It carries a debit balance and is an expense account. The end-of-period entries are more extensive in the periodic system because we must close out the beginning inventory balance and set up the cost of the ending inventory. This appendix illustrates the closing process for the periodic system. 66
  • 67. Copyright © 2012 Pearson Education Cost of goods sold in a periodic system is computed by the following formula (using assumed amounts for this illustration): Beginning inventory + Net purchases = Cost of goods available - Ending inventory = Cost of goods sold Net purchases is determined as follows: Purchases - Purchase discounts - Purchase returns and allowances + Freight in = Net purchases 67
  • 68. Copyright © 2012 Pearson Education 68
  • 69. Copyright © 2012 Pearson Education Copyright All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise, without the prior written permission of the publisher. Printed in the United States of America. 69