Here are the steps to solve this problem:
D = Annual demand = 250,000 footballs
P = Production rate = 2000 footballs/day
U = Usage rate = 250,000 footballs / 250 days = 1000 footballs/day
S = Setup cost = Rs. 2500
H = Carrying cost = Rs. 100 per football
A) Optimal run size (Q*) = √(2DU/H) = √(2 * 250,000 * 2500/100) = 5000 footballs
B) Minimum total annual cost
Imax = (Q*/P) * (P - U) = (5000/2000) * (2000 - 1000) = 2500
2. Inventory-A physical resource that a firm holds in stock
with the intent of selling it or transforming it into a more
valuable state
Inventory Systems-A set of policies and controls that
monitors levels of inventory and determines what levels
should be maintained and how large orders should be
placed
3. INVENTORY PLANNING FOR
INDEPENDENT DEMAND ITEMS
In a manufacturing organization, finished goods and spare parts
typically belong to the category of independent demand items.
Planning for a dependent demand item is done to meet
manufacturing requirements but incase of independent demand
item,it is done to meet customer requirements.
4. CONTINUOUS DEMAND
Independent demand items are always in continuous demand
Consider the sale of consumer appliances of manufactures such as
Videocon and LG. The demand for 32”LCD color television panel in a
particular city will be continuous. When there is a continuous demand
for an item, constant availability of items and periodic replacement of
stock are important elements of the planning process.
5. UNCERTAINITY OF DEMAND
There is an element of considerable uncertainty of demand in the
case of independent demand items. On the other hand, in the case of
dependent demand items, the demand is always derived and hence
known with certainty.
8. SEASONAL INVENTORY
Organisations carry out to meet the fluctuations in demand arising
out of seasonality.
During the festivals the demand for consumer durable may be high
due to increase in disposable income from consumers
To meet such this inventory is prepared
Example
During lunch hours hotels and fast food chains to handle increase
and decrease demand inventory helps them for short term capacity.
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9. DECOUPLING INVENTORY
Manufacturing normally involves many steps and many workstations, raw
materials pass through many process to meet the finished goods so the
planning so such process is important and it becomes complex as well
To solve this decoupling inventory can be used
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Decoupling
inventory
Stage
1
Stage
2
Stage
3
10. CYCLIC INVENTORY
Its customary for organisations to order inventory in repeated cycles and
consume them over time.
Example
Hospital uses disposable syringes of 10k, if average consumption is 500
then it takes 20 days delicate the order, and another day for 10k and so on
it will continue.
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time
q
u
a
n
t
i
t
y
The average cyclic inventory=
Q+0 = q
2 2
11. PIPE LINE INVENTORY
Organisations carry in long run due to no zero lead time for order.
Due to distance between the supplier and the host so the time
between the order placement and the order delivery is known as
pipeline inventory
Example
Suppose it takes 3 days for supply of disposable sriynges, then
hospital must place order at end of 7th day to replenish the order of
10000 that means the order will be placed when inventory reaches
1500(3days at the rate 500 per day)
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12. SAFETY STOCK
Safety Stock:
If the actual usage increases or the delivery of the inventory is
delayed, firm can face a problem of stock-out. So firm may maintain
the safety stock.
In this case Reorder point is calculated as
Reorder point=Lead*Average usage + safety stock.
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13. CARYING COSTSl.no Items of expenditure{annual} Amount
1 Stationary 75000
2 Insurance premium 375000
3 Establishment expenses and
overheads
275000
4 Salary of stores personnel 1,100,000
Total expenditure 1,750,000
Average value of the
inventory in stores
5.00%
A Cost of warehousing 5.00%
B Cost of capital 15.00%
C Obsolescence(estimated
historically)
2.00%
D Damages,spoliers,etc 1.00%
CARYING COST?4/23/2016 13
14. COST OF ORDERING
SL.NO ITEMS OF EXPENDITURE AMOUNT
1 Stationary 80,000
2 Telephone 40,000
3 Other communication
expenses
60,000
4 Salary of purchase
department personnel
1,100,000
5 Inwards goods inspection
section expenses
350,000
6 Other expenses and
overheads
200,000
TOTAL EXPENDITURE 1,830,000
no of purchase orders
generated
600.004/23/2016 14
15. WHAT IS ABC ANALYSIS?
ABC analysis is an inventory categorization method which
consists in dividing items into three categories (A, B, C):
A being the most valuable items,
C being the least valuable ones.
This method aims to draw managers’ attention on the critical
few (A-items) not on the trivial many (C-items).
ABC analysis also called as :
HML (High Moderate Low) Analysis
Pareto Analysis
Selective Stock Control
16. STEPS
Find out the unit cost and and the usage of each material over a given
period.
Multiply the unit cost by the estimated annual usage to obtain the net
value
(Annual demand) x (item cost per unit)
Find % of each material/item in total inventory .
All items are then ranked according to their % rupee value as either A,
B, or C as per rule.
17. A-B-C APPROACH
A item
B item
C item
High
Moderate
Low
Low HighModerate
Annualrupeevalueofitems
Percentage of items
18. PROBLEM 1
From the following information classify the inventory items into A,B
and C categories-Item Quantity Price per
unit
Items Quantity Price per
unit
A 200 201 G 400 25
B 600 83 H 280 400
C 250 250 I 400 55
D 470 50 J 300 40
E 250 64 K 250 30
F 300 85 L 1000 15
19. Material Quantity Price per
unit
Inventory
Value
(Qty*rate)
% in value Category
A 200 201 100200 21.97% A
B 600 83 49800 10.92% A
C 250 250 62500 13.71% A
D 470 50 23500 5.15% B
E 250 64 16000 3.51% C
F 300 85 25500 5.59% B
G 400 25 10000 2.19% C
H 280 400 112000 24.56% A
I 400 55 22000 4.82% B
J 300 40 12000 2.63% C
K 250 30 7500 1.64% C
L 1000 15 15000 3.29% C
TOTAL 456000 100%
SOLUTION:
21. Items Annual
demand
(qty)
Price per
unit
(rate)
Inventory
Value
(qty * rate)
% in value Classificatio
n
1 250 330 82500 8.25% B
2 100 70 7000 0.7% C
3 190 500 95000 9.5% B
4 150 100 15000 1.5% C
5 390 700 273000 27.3% A
6 100 915 91500 9.15% B
7 20 210 4200 0.42% C
8 100 4000 400000 40% A
9 800 10 8000 0.8% C
10 900 2 1800 0.18% C
11 50 200 10000 1% C
12 40 300 12000 1.2% C
TOTAL 1000000 100%
Solution:
23. Items Unit Cost Annual
Demand
Inventory
Value
(qty*rate)
% in
Value
Classificatio
n
1 5 48000 240,000 32.5% A
2 11 2000 22,000 3% B
3 15 300 4,500 0.6% C
4 8 800 6,400 0.9% C
5 7 4800 33,600 4.6% B
6 16 1200 19,200 2.6% B
7 20 18000 360,000 48.8% A
8 4 300 1,200 0.2% C
9 9 5000 45,000 6.1% B
10 12 500 6,000 0.8% C
TOTAL 737,900 100%
Solution :
24. ECONOMIC ORDER QUANTITY
It is the order size that minimizes the total annual cost.
The Question to how much to order is determind by Economic order
quantity.
It identifies the optimal order quantity by minimizing the sum of
certain annual costs that vary with order size.
Three order size models are:
1.The basic economic order quantity model
2.The economic production quantity model
3.The quantity discount model
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25. ASSUMPTIONS OF EOQ MODEL
Only one product is involved
Annual demand requirements known
Demand is even throughout the year
Lead time does not vary
Each order is received in a single delivery
There are no quantity discounts
27. THE BASIC ECONOMIC ORDER QUANTITY
MODEL
Annual Carrying cost=(Q/2)H
Q =order quantity per unit
H=Holding (carrying)cost per unit.
Annual Ordering cost=(D/Q)S
D=Annual demand
S=Ordering cost
28. D = Annual demand (units)
C = Cost per unit ($)
Q = Order quantity (units)
S = Cost per order ($)
I = Holding cost (%)
H = Holding cost ($) = I x C
Number of Orders = D / Q
Ordering costs = S x (D / Q)
Average inventory
units = Q / 2
$ = (Q / 2) x C
Cost to carry
average inventory = (Q / 2) x I x C
= (Q /2) x H
Total cost = (Q/2) x I x C + S x
(D/Q)
inv carry cost order
cost
Take the 1st derivative:
d(TC)/d(Q) = (I x C) / 2 - (D x
S) / Q²
To optimize: set d(TC)/d(Q) = 0
DS/ Q² = IC / 2
Q²/DS = 2 / IC
Q²= (DS x 2 )/ IC
Q = sqrt (2DS / IC)
Deriving the
EOQ
30. Total Cost=(Q/2)H+(D/Q)S
Economic Order Quantity(Q0)= √(2DS/H)
Length of the order cycle=Q/D;
Number of orders=(D/Q)
Example 1:. Piddling Manufacturing assembles security monitors .It purchases
3600 black and white cathode ray tubes a year at $65 each.Ordering costs are $31,
and annual carrying costs are 20% of the purchase price.Compute the optimal
quantity and the total annual cost of ordering and carrying the inventory?
31. Here D=3600 cathode ray tubes per year
S=$31
H= 0.20*65=$13
A)Qo=√(2DS/H)
√(2(3600)(31)/13=131 cathode ray tubes
B)TC=carrying cost+ ordering cost
(Qo/2)H+(D/Qo)S
=(131/2)13+(3600/131)31
=$1704
32. Example:2
A local distributor for a national tire company expects to sell approximately
9,600 steel-belted radial tires of a certain size and tread design next year
.Annual carrying cost is $16 per tier,and ordering cost is $75.The
distributor operates 288 days a year.
A)What is EOQ?
B)How many times per year does the store order?
C)What is length of an order cycle?
D)What is total annual cost if the EOQ quantity is ordered?
33. D=9600 tires per year
H= $16 per unit per year
S= $75
A)Q0= √(2DS/H)=√(2(9600)75)/16=300
B)Number of orders pre year: (D/Q)
=9600/300=32
c)Length of order cycle=(Q/D)=300tires/9600 tires/yr
1/32 of a year
1/32*288=9 days
D)TC=CC+OC
=(Q/2)H+(D/Q)S
=(300/2)16+(9600/300)75
=2400+2400
= $ 4800
34. ECONOMIC PRODUCTION
QUANTITY (EPQ)
Production done in batches or lots
Capacity to produce a part exceeds the part’s usage or demand rate
Assumptions of EPQ are similar to EOQ except orders are received
incrementally during production
Economic run size:
P=Production or delivary rate
u=Usage Rate
S=Setup cost
Q
DS
H
p
p u
0
2
35. ECONOMIC PRODUCTION
QUANTITY ASSUMPTIONS
Only one item is involved
Annual demand is known
Usage rate is constant
Usage occurs continually
Production rate is constant
Lead time does not vary
No quantity discounts
37. Cycle time is time between orders or between the beginnings of the run)
Cycle time= (Qo/u)
Run time is a function of run(lot size) and the production rate:
Run time=(Qo/p)
Max inventory levels (Imax)=(Qo/p)(p-u)
Avg inventory level(Iavg)=Imax/2
38. Example:
A toy manufacturer uses 48000 rubber wheels per year for its popular dump
truck series.The firm makes its own wheels,which it can produce at a rate of
800 per day .The toy trucks are assembled uniformly over the entire
year.Carrying cost is $1 per wheel a year.Setup cost for a production run of
wheels is $45.The firm operates 240 days per year.Determine the
A)optimal run size
B)Minimum total annual cost for carrying and setup
C)Cycle time for carrying and setup
D)run time
39. D=48000 wheels per year
S=$45
H=$1 per wheel per year
P=800 wheels per day
U=48000 per 240 days
A)
√(2*48000*45)/1* √(800/(800-200)
=2400 wheels
Q
DS
H
p
p u
0
2
41. Example2:
A firm in Sialkot produces 250,000 each world class footballs for both dome
stic and international markets . It can make footballs at a rate
of 2000 per day. The footballs are manufactured uniformly
over the whole year. Carrying cost is Rs. 100 per football and Setup cost for
a production run is Rs.2500. The manufacturing unit operates for 250 days
per year
Determine the
1. Optimal Run Size.
2. Minimum total annual cost for carrying and setup cost.
3. Cycle time for the Optimal Run Size.
4. Run time by using the formula
42. A)Optimal Run Size.(Qo)=
= √ (2 X 250,000 X 2500/100 )* √(2 000 /2000-1000 ))
= 2500( sq.root2X2)=5000 footballs.
B) Minimum total annual cost for carrying and setup cost.
= Carrying Cost + Set up Cost
=( I max/2)H+ ( D/Q0)S
Where I max= (Q0/p )(p-u)=5000/2000(1000)
=2500 footballs
Now TC= 2500/2 X 100 + (250,000/5000 )(2500)
=1250 X 100 + 125,000
=125,000+ 125,000
= Rs. 250,000.
43. C)
Cycle time for the Optimal Run Size.
Q0/U=5000/1000= 5 days
D)
Run time
Q0/p=5000/2000= 2.5 days