Average Inventory
Average inventory measures the typical amount or value of inventory a company holds over a specified period. It smooths fluctuations between inventory counts and is useful for performance analysis, planning, and financial ratios.
Why it matters
- Helps assess how efficiently a business manages stock relative to sales (e.g., inventory turnover).
- Reveals potential inventory losses from theft, shrinkage, damage, or spoilage.
- Supports purchasing and working-capital decisions by showing typical inventory levels over time.
Definition and formula
Average inventory is the arithmetic mean of inventory values taken at two or more points in time.
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Basic formula:
Average inventory = (Sum of inventory values at each observation) / (Number of observations)
For example, if you use beginning and ending inventory for a period:
Average inventory = (Beginning inventory + Ending inventory) / 2
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You can increase accuracy by using monthly, weekly, or daily counts as observations.
How to calculate (step-by-step)
- Choose observation points (e.g., beginning and end of period, monthly counts).
- Record inventory value at each chosen point.
- Add the inventory values together.
- Divide the total by the number of observations.
Moving average inventory
A moving average approach is typically used with a perpetual inventory system. After each purchase, the unit cost of inventory is recalculated by averaging the previous inventory cost and the new purchase cost. This:
* Updates inventory values to reflect recent purchase prices.
* Smooths price volatility and simplifies comparison across periods.
* Is different from periodic averaging, which uses timed snapshots rather than continuous updates.
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Example
A shoe company has inventory values for four monthly observations: $9,000; $8,500; $12,000; and current month $10,000.
Average inventory = ($9,000 + $8,500 + $12,000 + $10,000) / 4 = $39,500 / 4 = $9,875
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So the company’s average inventory over the period is $9,875.
Common uses and tips
- Inventory turnover ratio: Average inventory is often used in the denominator of turnover calculations to measure how many times inventory is sold and replaced.
- Choose observation frequency based on sales volatility—faster-moving businesses benefit from more frequent counts.
- Use moving average costing when continuous updates and price smoothing are needed; use periodic averaging when only periodic counts are available.
- Monitor differences between average inventory and actual inventory to detect shrinkage or recordkeeping errors.
Conclusion
Average inventory provides a simple, flexible way to represent typical stock levels over time. Selecting an appropriate observation frequency and, when available, using a moving average method will improve accuracy and the usefulness of the metric for operational and financial decision-making.