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Chapter 16 Inventory Management IDS 605 Busing
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Purposes of Inventory l Meet expected demand l Absorb demand fluctuations l Protect against unexpected increases in demand l Decouple stages in the production process l Take advantage of quantity discounts l Hedge against possible price increases l Protect against disruption in delivery from suppliers Transparency 16.1
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Types of Inventory l Raw materials l Work-in-process (WIP) l Finished goods l Replacement parts l Supplies l Transportation Transparency 16.2
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Dependent and Independent Demand l Dependent Demand = usually generated by a company’s own production process l Independent Demand = usually from outside sources such as customers Transparency 16.3
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Types of Inventory Systems l Perpetual (Continuous Review) »Inventory level continuously monitored »Transactions recorded as they occur »Maintain specific level of inventory l Periodic »Inventory counted only at regular intervals »Inventory depends upon demand Transparency 16.4
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ABC Classification of Inventory Items Transparency 16.5(Exhibit 16.2) 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 5,000 200 2,000 800 1,000 1,200 1,300 2,500 3,500 500 $ 30 450 10 20 10 5 4 2 1 20 $ 150,000 90,000 20,000 16,000 10,000 6,000 5,200 5,000 3,500 1,000 306,700 48.91 29.34 6.52 5.22 3.26 1.96 1.69 1.63 1.14.33 AABBBCCCCCAABBBCCCCC Cumulative Annual Unit Annual Dollar % Annual % Annual Item Demand Cost Usage Dollar Usage Dollar Usage Classification 48.91 78.25 84.77 89.99 93.25 95.21 96.90 98.53 99.67 100.00
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Aggregate Performance Measures -Average inventory investment -Turnover ratio - Days of inventory Annual cost of goods sold Average inventory investment Days per year Turnover ratio Transparency 16.6
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Costs of Inventory l Inventory Ordering Costs »Fixed –Staffing –Office and equipment »Variable –Shipping –Order placing –Setup cost –Lost materials –Receiving and inspection l Inventory Holding Costs »Fixed –Warehouse-capital –Property taxes –Warehouse-operating –Personnel »Variable –Cost of capital –Insurance –Losses –Inventory taxes –Rental costs Transparency 16.7
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EOQ Model Assumptions 1. Constant known demand rate 2. Cost per unit fixed 3. Instantaneous replenishment 4. Ordering and carrying cost known and independent Transparency 16.8
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Basic EOQ Inventory Pattern Transparency 16.10(Exhibit 16.4)
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Total Annual Variable Costs Transparency 16.9(Exhibit 16.3)
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EOQ Model D = Annual Demand rate C o = Variable ordering cost C h = Variable holding cost Transparency 16.11
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EOQ Model D = Annual Demand rate C o = Variable ordering cost C h = Variable holding cost D = 1,000 units/year C o = $50 per order C h = $5 per unit per year Transparency 16.11
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Total Annual Variable Cost (Slide 1 of 2) Annual variable ordering cost = C o Annual variable holding cost = C h Total annual variable cost = C h + C o D Q Q Q Q D 2 2 Transparency 16.12a
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Total Annual Variable Cost (Slide 2 of 2) D = 1,000 C o = $50 C h = $5 EOQ = 141.42 Total annual variable costs 141.42 1,000 2 141.42 140 1,000 2 140 145 1,000 2 145 200 1,000 2 200 EOQ: 140: 145: 200: (5) + + + + (50) = $707.11 (50) = $707.14 (50) = $707.33 (50) = $750.00 Transparency 16.12b
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Quantity Produced During Replenishment Period vs. Maximum Inventory Transparency 16.13(Exhibit 16.7)
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Finite Replenishment Rate Model D = annual demand rate C o = Variable ordering cost C h = variable holding cost d = dally demand rate p = daily production rate Total annual variable costs D = 1,000; C o = $50; C h = $5; d = 4; p = 10 Transparency 16.14
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