inventory of goods

  • 71Cost Of Goods Sold - COGS — The direct costs attributable to the production of the goods sold by a company. This amount includes the cost of the materials used in creating the good along with the direct labor costs used to produce the good. It excludes indirect expenses… …

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  • 72Cost of goods available for sale — is the maximum amount of goods, or inventory, that a company can possibly sell during this fiscal year. It has the formula: Beginning Inventory (at the start of this year)+ purchases (within this year)+ Production (within this year)= cost of… …

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  • 73Cost of Goods Available for Sale — is the maximum amount of goods, or inventory, that a company can possibly sell during this fiscal year. It have the formula:Beginning Inventory (at the start of this year)+ Purchases (within this year)+ Production (within this year)= Cost of… …

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  • 74Excess inventory — Overstock redirects here. For the online retailer, see Overstock.com. Overstock, Excessive stock, or excess inventory, is the result of poor management[dubious – discuss] of stock demand or of material flow in process management. Excessive stock… …

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  • 75Phantom inventory — is a common expression for goods that an inventory accounting system considers to be on hand at a storage location, but are not actually available. This could be due to the items being moved without recording the change in the inventory… …

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  • 76Average Inventory — A calculation comparing the value or number of a particular good or set of goods during two or more specified time periods. Average inventory is the median value of an inventory throughout a certain time period. A basic calculation for average… …

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  • 77National Sporting Goods Association — History The National Sporting Goods Association (NSGA) has worked on behalf of retailers and dealers since the association’s founders fought an unjust tax on sporting goods in 1927. South Carolina’s General Assembly had approved a 10 percent tax… …

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  • 78Vendor-managed inventory — (VMI) is a family of business models in which the buyer of a product provides certain information to a supplier of that product and the supplier takes full responsibility for maintaining an agreed inventory of the material, usually at the buyer s …

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  • 79Retail Inventory Method — An accounting procedure for estimating the value of a store s merchandise. This method calculates a store s total inventory value by taking the total retail value of the items that were originally in inventory, subtracting the total sales, then… …

    Investment dictionary

  • 80Oshman's Sporting Goods — Inc. was a sporting goods retailer in the United States. Its headquarters was in East End, Houston, Texas.[1][2] It operated traditional sporting goods stores and Oshman s Supersports USA megastores. Contents 1 History …

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