Example of Accounting of Lot Merge Transactions
This example illustrates the accounting entries for a lot merge transaction.
Scenario
Let's consider two lots, Lot11 and Lot12, of Item-A with 4 and 6 units each. The items are costed using the actual cost method. Lot12 of 6 units has two receipts of 2 and 4 units with a unit cost of $15 and $7.50 respectively. These two lots are merged into a lot in another subinventory as listed in this table.
| Item | Subinventory | Lot Number | Depletion Receipt Number | Transaction Type | Quantity | Unit Cost | Amount | 
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Item-A | Subinventory1 | Lot11 | 1 | Inventory Lot Merge | - 4 | $10 | ($40) | 
| Item-A | Subinventory1 | Lot12 | 2 | Inventory Lot Merge | - 2 | $15 | ($60) | 
| Item-A | Subinventory1 | Lot12 | 3 | Inventory Lot Merge | - 4 | $7.50 | ($60) | 
| Item-A | Subinventory2 | Lot13 | Inventory Lot Merge | 10 | $10 | $100 | 
Analysis
Cost accounting creates these distributions for the transactions corresponding to the source lots, Lot11 and Lot12.
| Accounting Event | Valuation Unit | Accounting Line Type | Cost Element | Amount in USD (+Dr/-Cr) | 
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Lot Merge | Subinventory1-Lot11 | Offset | Material | + 40.00 | 
| Lot Merge | Subinventory1-Lot11 | Inventory Valuation | Material | - 40.00 | 
| Lot Merge | Subinventory1-Lot12 | Offset | Material | + 60.00 | 
| Lot Merge | Subinventory1-Lot12 | Inventory Valuation | Material | - 60.00 | 
For the resultant transaction of the lot merge, these distributions are created.
| Accounting Event | Valuation Unit | Accounting Line Type | Cost Element | Amount in USD (+Dr/-Cr) | 
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Lot Merge | Subinventory2-Lot13 | Inventory Valuation | Material | + 100.00 | 
| Lot Merge | Subinventory2-Lot13 | Offset | Material | - 100.00 |