Dr.inventory
cr.payable
Because inventory adds nothing to the numerator of the ratio and the increased liability adds to the denominator, a purchase of inventory on credit will decrease the quick ratio.
Purchase of inventory can either be on cash or credit. In the first case, while the value of your inventory would increase, your bank balance would decrease, leading to no change in the current assets and, therefore, no change in the current ratio as well. If goods are bought on credit, while your current assets will increase, so will your current liabilities (as you now owe creditors more), leading to no change in the current ratio, again. Due to the same reasons, whether the purchase was on cash or credit, the working capital also remains the same. If bought on cash, the value of inventory increase while cash decreases, leading to no change in the total current assets and, thus, no change in working capital. If goods are bought on credit, current assets increase and also current liabilities, leading to no change in the working capital, again.
inventory
ending inventory
An inventory turn over ratio is the "cost of goods sold" is divided by the "average value" of inventories. This measure shows how hard an investment in inventory is working; the higher the ratio the better. For example, Office Depot increased its inventory turnover ratio from 6.9 in one year to 7.5 the next year which leading to improved annual profits.(Business Week,2004)
Because inventory adds nothing to the numerator of the ratio and the increased liability adds to the denominator, a purchase of inventory on credit will decrease the quick ratio.
Purchase of inventory can either be on cash or credit. In the first case, while the value of your inventory would increase, your bank balance would decrease, leading to no change in the current assets and, therefore, no change in the current ratio as well. If goods are bought on credit, while your current assets will increase, so will your current liabilities (as you now owe creditors more), leading to no change in the current ratio, again. Due to the same reasons, whether the purchase was on cash or credit, the working capital also remains the same. If bought on cash, the value of inventory increase while cash decreases, leading to no change in the total current assets and, thus, no change in working capital. If goods are bought on credit, current assets increase and also current liabilities, leading to no change in the working capital, again.
Inventory Turnover Ratio = Cost of Goods Sold / Average Inventory and Average Inventory = ( Beginning Inventory + Ending Inventory ) / 2
five
Inventory turnover ratio tells that how many time is inventory is converted into finished goods during one fiscal year.
To calculate the inventory turnover ratio, you need to divide the cost of goods sold by the average inventory. To find the average inventory, add the beginning and ending inventory levels and divide by 2. In this case, the average inventory is (4500 + 5500) / 2 = 5000. The inventory turnover ratio would be 20000 / 5000 = 4.
amount of your assets that are ties up in inventory, Inventory/Assets x 100
inventory
ending inventory
A finished goods inventory turnover ratio is the rate that the inventory is used over a period of time. This measurement shows a company how it is doing in general. If there is too much inventory, then a company isn't doing that well.
The inventory to assets ratio is found by dividing inventory by total assets. This figure shows how much of a business' net worth is tied up in inventory. A lower ratio reflects more positively on the business.
Stock holding ratio is the same as inventory turnover ratio. To find this ratio one must find the cost of goods sold to a business and its average inventory over a certain time period.