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I run a farm and a small manufacturing and sales company. Inventory is OK for the manufaturing and reseller parts of the business. My problem is with the farm products. I rent the land and equipment. I expense all the expenses of farming. How do I handle the inventory when the products are harvested? The products can be held in inventory for up to two years. In my thought, the farm product has market value, and the market value should be how the inventory is reported as a current asset. But what is the process to do this?
I tried simply adjusting inventory quantities and values, but this was a bad idea. It took me two weeks to correct these mistakes! I can set up a dummy vender and buy the products at $0. The problem still is getting the right market value without showing a negative value on a liability account in the balance sheet. Please help and thanks in advance. BTW a previous post on this helped sovle the inventory adjustment problem. Rick
Good afternoon, @Rick7.
Thank you for reaching out to the Community. I'd be glad to lend a hand and provide you with information on adding inventory after its harvested.
I'd first reach out to your accountant to be sure that your books are accurate.
In QuickBooks Desktop, there are two ways of accounting method, and that's Accrual and Cash. That data on your reports are based on the preferences you've set in the system and the information you've recorded.
Cash basis is:
Accrual basis is:
To set your preferences in QuickBooks Desktop:
That's all for it. For additional information about Accounts Receivable workflows, refer back to this article: Accounts Receivable workflows in QuickBooks Desktop
Let me know if the information provided does the trick. If you have any more questions or concerns, I'm only a few clicks away. Happy Tuesday!
Hi Kendra_H,
Thank you for your reply.
I run my business on a cash basis, and I understand how to set the preference. I also understand the A/R workflows. I run a farm and a manufacturing business. The books are all on one set in QB. I use the "class" tag to differentiate for business decisions but file a single tax return for my Sub S Corporation. I want the inventory for both sections of the business to be accurate. The manufacturing side is working well.
Here is my question for the farm inventory: How do I value the inventory to market value?
Example: I create a Purchase Order for a dummy account called "Farm" at $0.00 price and 250 pounds quantity. I pay for the PO with a check for $0.00. I now have 250 pounds of product on the shelf at zero value. I want to change the value to market value using the "change inventory" drop down: new value is $1,000 for 250 pounds of product. Since this transaction increasing the current asset value must have a corresponding transaction on the liability side to balance the Balance Sheet, I want to know which account gets the credit. I know that showing "inventory shrinkage" through the same mechanism can either credit the assinged COGS account or credit an expense account specifically for inventory adjustment. I do not want to use either account as this is specifically 'marking to market'. All of the expenses of producing the farm product are accounted for in general expense accounts. We do not keep a COGS account for farm products.
Maybe the answer is simply don't worry about this. Take the inventory in at zero value and only show a value through the revenue from a sale. This is the essence of cash accounting, but it seems that it is grossly undervaluing the business by carrying inventory at zero value.
If you use QuickBooks for single-entry cash basis accounting you can set up an Equity account for "throwing away" the parts of double-entry transactions you don't want. (I have one called Adjustments & Offsets.) You can use it as the offsetting account for Inventory Part Item value adjustments, etc. Assigning market values to farm inventories and fixed assets using that approach is discussed in a couple different books in the QuickBooks Farm Accounting Cookbook series.
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