Working Capital Management

Working Capital Management (WMC)

Inventory Management-2

MOTIVE FOR HOLDING ENVENTORIES 

It is possible to identify three major movies for holding inventories.

  • The transaction motive peoples a business to maintain inventories so that there are no bottlenecks in production and/or sales. It is natural for a business to plan inventory investment commensurate with the level of transactions in the business. The business seeks to ensure that on the shop floor production does not get stalled for want of materials, etc., and sales do not suffer on account of not-availability of finished goods.
  • The precautionary motive is also at work. Inventories are held so that there is a cushion against unpredictable events. For instance, there may be a sudden and unforeseen spurt in demand for finished goods or there may occur a sudden and unforeseen slump or delay of raw materials or other components needed for production. An enterprise would surely like to have some cushion to tide over such situations.
  • Inventories may also be held so that advantage can be taken of price fluctuations. For instance, if the price of a particular raw material in expected to go up rather steeply, an enterprise may decide to hold a larger than necessary stock of this item (acquired prior to escalation).

January 17, 2009 Posted by | Business management, Capital, Current Assets, Finance, holding inventories, inventory management, investment, managment, online business, plan inventory, raw materials, small business, Working Capital, Working Capital Management | , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

INVENTORY MANAGEMENT

NATURE AND IMPORTANCE 

Working capital as net concept, is defined as the difference between current assets and current liabilities. Current assets being those assets that are likely to be converted into liquidity within an year’s time or so and include items like inventories of raw materials, semi-manufactured articles or work-in-process, and finished goods, accounts receivable or dues from customers, hundies or bills receivable, bank balance and cash balance, etc.

 

Current liabilities are in essence short-term liabilities which have to be settles in a year’s time, e.g., accounts payable or amount payable to suppliers of goods and services delivered on credit, bills payable, bank overdraft, etc. Since inventories constitute a major item of current assets, the management of inventories is crucial to successful working capital management. Working capital requirements are influences by inventory holding-the period during which raw materials remain in store, that during which processing takes place and that during which finished goods lie in the warehouse prior to sale. The level of inventory investment affects the total investment in working capital. Thus, operating ratios, such as the ratio of Turnover or sales to Working Capital are affected by it as well.

 

Return on investment can be reviewed as follows:

Return/Investment = (Return/Sales) X (Sales/Investment)

January 8, 2009 Posted by | Assets, Business management, Capital, Credit Analysis, Current Assets, current liabilities, inventory management, investment, liquidity, managment, raw materials, returns, sales working, short-term liabilities, turnover, Working Capital, Working Capital Management | , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment