PART D: RECORDING TRANSACTIONS AND EVENTS
122
QUESTION
FIFO
A firm has the following transactions with its product R.
Year 1
Opening inventory: nil
Buys 10 units at $300 per unit
Buys 12 units at $250 per unit
Sells 8 units at $400 per unit
Buys 6 units at $200 per unit
Sells 12 units at $400 per unit
Year 2
Buys 10 units at $200 per unit
Sells 5 units at $400 per unit
Buys 12 units at $150 per unit
Sells 25 units at $400 per unit
Required
Using FIFO, calculate the following on an item by item basis for both Year 1 and Year 2.
(a)
The closing inventory
(b) The
sales
(c)
The cost of sales
(d)
The gross profit
ANSWER
Year 1
Inventory
Unit
Cost
of
Purchases
Sales
Balance
value cost sales Sales
Units Units Units $
$
$
$
10
10
3,000
300
12
3,000
250
22
6,000
8
(2,400)
2,400
3,200
14
3,600
6
1,200
200
20
4,800
12
(3,100)*
3,100
4,800
8
1,700
5,500
8,000
* 2 @ $300 + 10 @ $250 = $3,100
Year 2
Inventory
Unit
Cost
of
Purchases
Sales
Balance
value cost sales Sales
Units Units Units $
$
$
$
B/f
8
1,700
10
2,000
200
18
3,700
5
(1,100)*
1,100
2,000
13
2,600
12
25
1,800
150
4,400
25
(4,400)**
4,400
10,000
0
0
5,500
12,000
* 2 @ $250 + 3 @ $200 = $1,100
** 13 @ $200 + 12 @ $150 = $4,400
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INVENTORY
123
PROFIT OR LOSS ACCOUNT
FIFO
$
$
Year 1
Sales
8,000
Opening inventory
Purchases (3,000 + 3,000 + 1,200)
7,200
7,200
Closing inventory
1,700
Cost of sales
5,500
Gross profit
2,500
Year 2
Sales
12,000
Opening inventory
1,700
Purchases (2,000 + 1,800)
3,800
5,500
Closing inventory
0
Cost of sales
5,500
Gross profit
6,500
5
IAS 2 Inventories
IAS 2 Inventories lays out the required accounting treatment for inventories under International Financial
Reporting Standards.
5.1 Scope
The following items are excluded from the scope of the standard.
Work in progress under construction contracts (covered by IAS 11 Construction Contracts, which
you will study in later financial accounting exams)
Financial instruments (ie shares, bonds)
Livestock, agricultural and forest products, and mineral ores
(IAS 2, para. 2)
5.2 Definitions
The standard gives the following important definitions.
'
Inventories
are assets:
–
held for sale in the ordinary course of business
–
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.'
'
Net realisable value
is the estimated selling price in the ordinary course of business less the
estimated costs of completion and the estimated costs necessary to make the sale.'
(IAS 2, para. 6)
Inventories can include any of the following.
Goods purchased and held for resale, eg goods held for sale by a retailer, or land and buildings
held for resale
Finished goods produced
Work in progress (WIP) being produced
Materials and supplies awaiting use in the production process (raw materials)
(IAS 2, para. 8)
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5.3 Measurement of inventories
The standard states that 'Inventories shall be measured at the lower of cost and net realisable value'
(IAS 2, para. 9).
5.4 Cost of inventories
The cost of inventories will consist of all the following costs.
(a)
Purchase
(b)
Costs of conversion
(c)
Other costs incurred in bringing the inventories to their present location and condition
(IAS 2, para. 10)
5.4.1 Costs of purchase
The standard lists the following as comprising the costs of purchase of inventories.
(a)
Purchase price
(b)
Import duties and other taxes
(c)
Transport, handling and any other cost directly attributable to the acquisition of finished goods,
services and materials
(d)
Less any trade discounts, rebates and other similar amounts
(IAS 2, para. 11)
5.4.2 Costs of conversion
Costs of conversion of inventories consist of two main parts.
(a) Costs
directly related to the units of production, eg direct materials, direct labour
(b)
Fixed and variable production overheads that are incurred in converting materials into finished
goods, allocated on a systematic basis (IAS 2, para. 12). You may have come across the terms
'fixed production overheads' or 'variable production overheads' elsewhere in your studies. The
standard refers to them as follows.
Fixed production overheads
are those indirect costs of production that remain relatively
constant regardless of the volume of production, eg the cost of factory management and
administration.
Variable production overheads
are those indirect costs of production that vary directly, or nearly
directly, with the volume of production, eg indirect materials and labour.
(IAS 2, para. 12)
The standard emphasises that fixed production overheads must be allocated to items of inventory on the
basis of the normal capacity of the production facilities. This is an important point.
(a)
Normal capacity is the expected achievable production based on the average over several
periods/seasons, under normal circumstances.
(b)
The above figure should take account of the capacity lost through planned maintenance.
(c)
If it approximates to the normal level of activity then the actual level of production can be used.
(d)
Low production or idle plant will not result in a higher fixed overhead allocation to each unit.
(e)
Unallocated overheads must be recognised as an expense in the period in which they
were incurred.
EXAM FOCUS POINT
This is a very important rule and you will be expected to apply it in the exam.
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INVENTORY
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(f)
When production is abnormally high, the fixed production overhead allocated to each unit will be
reduced, so avoiding inventories being stated at more than cost.
(g)
The allocation of variable production overheads to each unit is based on the actual use of
production facilities.
(IAS 2, para. 13)
5.4.3 Other costs
Any other costs should only be recognised if they are incurred in bringing the inventories to their present
location and condition (IAS 2, para. 15).
The standard lists types of cost which would not be included in cost of inventories. Instead, they should
be recognised as an expense in the period they are incurred.
'abnormal amounts of wasted materials, labour or other production costs;
storage costs, unless those costs are necessary in the production process before a further
production stage;
administrative overheads that do not contribute to bringing inventories to their present location
and condition; and
selling costs.'
(IAS 2, para. 16)
5.5 Determining cost
Cost of inventories should be assigned by specific identification of their individual costs for items that
are not ordinarily interchangeable (ie identical or very similar) and for goods or services produced and
segregated for specific projects. Specific identification of cost means that specific costs are attributed to
identified items of inventory. However, calculating costs on an individual item basis could be onerous.
For convenience, IAS 2 allows the use of cost estimation techniques, such as the standard cost method
or the retail method, provided that the results approximate cost
(IAS 2, para. 21).
(a)
Standard costs take into account normal levels of materials and supplies, labour, efficiency and
capacity utilisation. They are regularly reviewed and revised if necessary to ensure that they
appropriately resemble actual costs.
(IAS 2, para. 21)
(b) The
retail method is often used in the retail industry for measuring inventories of large numbers
of rapidly changing items with similar margins for which it is impracticable to use other costing
methods. The cost of the inventory is determined by reducing the sales value of the inventory by
the percentage gross margin.
(IAS 2, para. 22)
5.5.1 Interchangeable items
Where inventories consist of a large number of interchangeable (ie identical or very similar) items, it will
be virtually impossible to determine costs on an individual item basis. Therefore IAS 2 allows the
following cost estimation techniques.
(a)
FIFO. Using this technique, we assume that components are used in the order in which they are
received from suppliers. The components issued are deemed to have formed part of the oldest
consignment still unused and are costed accordingly.
(b)
Weighted average cost (AVCO). As purchase prices change with each new consignment, the
average cost of components in inventory is constantly changed. Each component in inventory at
any moment is assumed to have been purchased at the average price of all components in
inventory at that moment. Under the AVCO method, a recalculation can be made after each
purchase, or alternatively only at the period end.
The same technique should be used by the entity for all inventories that have a similar nature and use.
(IAS 2, paras. 25 and 27)
Note that the LIFO formula is not permitted by IAS 2.
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