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  2. Carrying cost - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carrying_cost

    Carrying cost also includes the opportunity cost of reduced responsiveness to customers' changing requirements, slowed introduction of improved items, and the inventory's value and direct expenses, since that money could be used for other purposes. When there are no transaction costs for shipment, carrying costs are minimized when no excess ...

  3. Inventory - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inventory

    Holding excess inventory is sub-optimal because the money spent to obtain and the cost of holding it could have been utilized better elsewhere, i.e. to the product that just ran out. The secondary goal of inventory proportionality is inventory minimization.

  4. Economic batch quantity - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Economic_batch_quantity

    The figure graphs the holding cost and ordering cost per year equations. The third line is the addition of these two equations, which generates the total inventory cost per year. The lowest (minimum) part of the total cost curve will give the economic batch quantity as illustrated in the next section.

  5. Economic production quantity - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Economic_production_quantity

    This figure graphs the holding cost and ordering cost per year equations. The third line is the addition of these two equations, which generates the total inventory cost per year. This graph should give a better understanding of the derivation of the optimal ordering quantity equation, i.e., the EPQ equation

  6. Economic order quantity - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Economic_order_quantity

    There is a fixed cost for each order placed, regardless of the quantity of items ordered; an order is assumed to contain only one type of inventory item. There is also a cost for each unit held in storage, commonly known as holding cost, sometimes expressed as a percentage of the purchase cost of the item. Although the EOQ formulation is ...

  7. Vendor-managed inventory - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vendor-managed_inventory

    2. Inventory Ownership. Inventory ownership refers to the ownership of the inventory and when the invoice is being issued to the retailer. In vendor managed inventory, there is a number of solutions in terms of payment and transfer of ownership. [11] In the first alternative, the vendor is the owner of inventory at the premises of the customer.

  8. Cost of goods sold - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cost_of_goods_sold

    Costs of specific goods acquired or made are added to a pool of costs for the type of goods. Under this system, the business may maintain costs under FIFO but track an offset in the form of a LIFO reserve. Such reserve (an asset or contra-asset) represents the difference in cost of inventory under the FIFO and LIFO assumptions.

  9. (Q,r) model - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/(Q,r)_model

    The total cost is given by the sum of setup costs, purchase order cost, stockout cost and inventory carrying cost: (,) = + [(,)] + (,) What changes with this approach is the computation of the optimal reorder point: