ShmoopTube
Where Monty Python meets your 10th grade teacher.
Search Thousands of Shmoop Videos
Principles of Finance Videos 156 videos
Okay, so you want to be a company financial manager. It's basically up to you to make money for the shareholders. It would also be swell if you mad...
How is a company... born? Can it be performed via C-section? Is there a midwife present? Do its parents get in a fight over what to name it? In thi...
What is an income statement, and why do we need it in our lives? Well, let's take a look at an income statement for Year 1 of the Sauce Company, an...
Principles of Finance: Unit 4, JIT Inventory, Capital Management and Inventory Turnover 7 Views
Share It!
Description:
JIT management, capital management, and inventory turnover, oh my!
Transcript
- 00:00
principles of finance a la shmoop just-in-time inventory capital
- 00:06
management and inventory turnover well this is old school this is new school [scissors cutting grass then a lawn mower]
- 00:13
and yet new school is usually better now let's think about the just-in-time or
- 00:18
JIT world versus the old-school way of doing things in old school inventory
- 00:24
management you know for a factory a division of the company might have [writing on white board]
Full Transcript
- 00:27
dedicated five thousand units times four hundred bucks each equals and about two
- 00:33
million dollars in tire inventory and yeah those are kind of expensive tires
- 00:37
couldn't that capital be used elsewhere well in the JIT way the capital needed
- 00:41
for inventory was miniscule just a few tires here a few tires there refreshed [tires spinning]
- 00:46
every day what happens if the inventory of tires runs into a mountain pass no
- 00:51
Starman can't be refreshed daily yeah JIT only works when it works really well
- 00:56
you could imagine the enormity of the cost to the manufacturer of cars if the [man driving truck]
- 01:00
production line ran out of tires suddenly cars back up on the line and [production line of car bodies]
- 01:04
there's nowhere to store them or even move them because well they have no
- 01:07
tires then things back up more and more and let's say there's a run on rubber
- 01:11
supplies and the company can't get tires for a month while suddenly sales to the [calendar]
- 01:16
consumer there and the auto dealerships get cancelled and consumers buy another
- 01:20
brand or make of car from another company or a competitor in fact it was a
- 01:25
lot of this fear of supplies being cut mindset that created the quote over
- 01:29
inventory unquote status that US automakers had in the 60s and 70s the [vintage car factory footage]
- 01:35
children of world war ii knew very well that nothing was guaranteed and they [children marching]
- 01:38
slept more soundly at night with 5,000 sets of tires in the garage but you know [garage full of tires]
- 01:44
imagine what you'd do if milk was available only once a week for you as a [girl with a single cookie on the table]
- 01:48
kid but the economies of the world grew up the distribution of commodities grew
- 01:51
more global and liquid and supply lines just stopped getting cut in a world [writing on white board]
- 01:57
generally at peace not at war anyway one key metric commonly used to assess the
- 02:01
efficiency of capital use in companies that particularly in factories or
- 02:06
manufacturing plants is the inventory turnover ratio for most companies this
- 02:11
is a rel and not an absolute number that is one
- 02:15
auto manufacturer can look at the turnover ratio of another and compare [car being compared]
- 02:19
how they're doing relatively auto manufacturer really can't look at a
- 02:24
video game maker or Facebook and glean anything relatively useful from their
- 02:29
accountings for inventory because well they really don't have any like their
- 02:33
inventory is you know kind of phantom that is Facebook's inventory in quotes
- 02:38
is the blank space it serves on its computers when new people come on in [man in empty warehouse]
- 02:42
view and or click on ads it sells in one package or another not the case and car
- 02:48
tires there's actual real inventory there that cost real money so key
- 02:51
concept number one is that the actual index number you get from inventory [writing on white board]
- 02:56
turnover is just a relative thing and it's defined mathematically as cost of
- 03:01
goods sold divided by yes inventory and you generally take an average inventory
- 03:07
number there to come up with that number so let's cogitate on this whole thing a
- 03:11
moment we're gonna use cogs or cost of goods sold is in the numerator here it's
- 03:15
not a bad number it's car tires plus windshield wipers plus cup holder
- 03:19
thingies plus engine blocks plus rich Corinthian leather seating by the mile
- 03:24
plus so a bunch of other stuff as well as assembly labor shipping and a bunch
- 03:29
of other costs that aren't inventory it all adds up to the cost of goods sold
- 03:33
kind of in the gross margin lines there yeah and then we're dividing it all by
- 03:37
inventory but wait what's the difference well aren't things that make up cogs
- 03:42
just inventory no well at some point along the production line dance they [group of people dancing]
- 03:46
will have been inventory but not necessarily at the moment snapshot was [full warehouse]
- 03:50
taken or that time period was mentioned curveball to the head right cogs is an
- 03:56
income statement item it measures the expenses we had in selling the goods we
- 04:01
sold over a given period of time like last quarter or last year but inventory
- 04:05
is a balance sheet item it's a snapshot at any given point in time albeit
- 04:10
admittedly usually taken every quarter or month or year so this ratio links the [inventory in warehouse]
- 04:15
balance sheet and the income statement in kind of a nifty way if you think
- 04:19
about it by relating the volume of stuff sold in a given period with the stuff
- 04:23
that you know our iPhones shotted the day we decided to take
- 04:28
inventory of you know inventory so yeah that's what keeps the cogs of the
- 04:32
machine you know running smoothly we hope
Related Videos
GED Social Studies 1.1 Civics and Government
What is bankruptcy? Deadbeats who can't pay their bills declare bankruptcy. Either they borrowed too much money, or the business fell apart. They t...
What's a dividend? At will, the board of directors can pay a dividend on common stock. Usually, that payout is some percentage less than 100 of ear...
How are risk and reward related? Take more risk, expect more reward. A lottery ticket might be worth a billion dollars, but if the odds are one in...