13. Inventory Year-End Close — Count, Valuation, Shrinkage

Inventory is often the largest and most judgment-based asset on an SME’s balance sheet.Errors in inventory closing directly distort profit, GST ITC, and tax liability.

1. Introduction — Why Inventory Closing Is High-Risk

Inventory impacts:
  • Cost of goods sold
  • Gross profit
  • Working capital
  • GST ITC eligibility
Even small inventory errors can materially distort profitability.

2. Objective

To ensure that at year-end:
  • Physical stock matches book records
  • Valuation is correct and compliant
  • Shrinkage, damage, and obsolescence are identified
  • Inventory balances are defensible

3. What Constitutes Proper Inventory Closing?

Proper inventory closing requires:
  • Physical verification
  • Accurate valuation
  • Identification of shrinkage and obsolete stock
Inventory must satisfy existence, valuation, and completeness.

4. CABTA Framework — “The 7-Step Inventory Year-End Close Process”

Step 1 — Freeze Inventory Movements

  • Stop inward/outward movement
  • Fix cut-off timing
  • Separate pre- and post-year-end transactions

Step 2 — Physical Stock Count

Conduct:
  • Item-wise physical count
  • Location-wise verification
  • Independent supervision
Prepare signed stock sheets.
Impact: No physical count = inventory balance loses credibility.

Step 3 — Reconcile Physical Stock With Books

Identify:
  • Shortages
  • Excess stock
  • Wrong postings
Investigate differences before adjustment.

Step 4 — Identify Shrinkage, Damage & Obsolescence

Segregate:
  • Damaged stock
  • Slow-moving items
  • Obsolete inventory
Determine:
  • Write-down or write-off requirement
Impact: Ignoring shrinkage overstates profit and assets.

Step 5 — Inventory Valuation

Apply consistent valuation method:
  • FIFO
  • Weighted Average
Valuation must be:
  • At cost or NRV, whichever is lower
  • GST excluded where ITC available

Step 6 — GST Implications Review

Check:
  • ITC reversal on lost/damaged stock
  • GST treatment of obsolete stock disposal
GST errors in inventory often go unnoticed.

Step 7 — Final Approval & Documentation

Maintain:
  • Stock count sheets
  • Valuation workings
  • Adjustment approvals
These are core audit documents.

5. Audit Focus Areas

Auditors verify:
  • Physical verification evidence
  • Valuation method consistency
  • Shrinkage treatment
Inventory is a mandatory audit emphasis area.

6. Income-Tax Risk Areas

Tax authorities scrutinise:
  • Gross profit fluctuations
  • Stock shortages
  • Obsolete inventory write-offs
Unexplained stock differences may lead to additions.

7. Common Inventory Closing Mistakes

  • No physical count
  • Inflated closing stock
  • Ignoring shrinkage
  • Inconsistent valuation methods
  • No GST ITC reversals
These mistakes distort profit and invite scrutiny.

8. Case Example — Correcting Inflated Inventory

Issue:Client overstated closing stock by ₹68 lakh.
CABTA Action:
  • Conducted physical verification
  • Identified slow-moving stock
  • Adjusted valuation
Outcome:
  • Correct profit reporting
  • Clean audit

9. Tools & Templates (Application Layer)

  • Stock Count Sheet
  • Inventory Reconciliation Format
  • Shrinkage Register
  • Valuation Working Template

10. CABTA Insight

“Inventory is profit in waiting — until it disappears.”

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