http://help.sap.com/saphelp_erp60_sp/helpdata/en/53/5df779aa3011d295a200a0c930328a/content.htm
Use
How materials are valuated in the SAP system essentially depends on
the price control that was set for the material in the material master.
You can choose between a valuation at the standard price (S price) or at
the moving average price (V price).
When
using the Material Ledger, you have the possibility of combining the
advantages of standard price control and moving average price control.
For more information, see
Price Control and Material Price Determination.
Standard Price versus Moving Average Price
With moving average price control, a new material price is calculated
after every goods receipt, invoice receipt, and/or order settlement.
This material price is an average value calculated from the total
inventory value and the total quantity of the material in stock.
With
standard price control, goods movements are valuated with a price that
remains constant for at least one period. The standard price that is
assigned to a material is usually the result of a standard cost
estimate.
The main difference between the two valuation procedures
is that the moving average price represents a current delivered price
while the standard price is based on planned values and not actual
values. Differences between the planned price and the actual prices are
not assigned to the material stock in Financial Accounting, but rather
are assigned to a price difference account. When using the moving
average price, however, the material stock value in Financial Accounting can reflect the prices actually incurred.
The
moving average price has its disadvantages, however, in many
situations. These situations will be discussed in greater detail in the
following text.
Use the component Actual Costing/Material Ledger to
ensure a method of cost management that uses the most current data to
calculate your actual material costs. You can use this component to
calculate an average price at the end of the period using the actual
costs incurred in that period. You can then use this average price to
valuate the material stock in the period in question. The standard price
is used for preliminary material valuation in the Actual Costing/Material Ledger component(see also:
Actual Costing / Material Ledger).
In
the following text, problems that could result from valuating materials
with the moving average price are illustrated in conjunction with a
comparison of advantages and disadvantages of both methods of price
control. You can avoid the problems that arise when using the standard
price for material valuation by using the component Actual Costing/Material Ledger. In addition, there will be some recommendations from SAP as to which price control to use.
Advantages of the Standard Price
When using the standard price, all goods movements of a material are
valuated with the same price over at least one period. Therefore, the
standard price ensures consistent cost management of the production
process and makes variances within production transparent. A periodic
price (standard price) is especially useful when working with cost
management by period.
The standard price can also be used as a
benchmark by which you can measure different methods of production, or
compare the contribution margins of a material in different market
segments in Profitability Analysis.
Disadvantages of the Standard Price
Because the standard price is held constant for an entire period, it
does not reflect the actual costs incurred during the period. This can
lead to inexact valuation prices for materials whose procurement prices
change a great deal over a period, or whose method of production changes
within a period.
This problem increases in multilevel production
with each new production step. This means that the costs for the
finished product may not reflect the most recent data.
The
material stock value does not reflect the current procurement costs, as
variances from the standard price are collected in a price difference
account in Financial Accounting and do not lead to a correction
of the material stock account. The variances collected in the price
difference account can no longer be assigned to the individual material.
If you use split valuation
for materials, please note that you can only release the material price
at the header level of a material (not at the level of the valuation
type) when calculating a material price in Product Cost Planning.
Advantages of the Moving Average Price
The advantage of using the moving average price is that variances
occurring both for materials produced in-house as well as materials
procured externally cause an update in the material price and the
material stock value. Because the material price reflects the average
procurement cost of a material, material issues could, in principle, be
valuated with the current price.
Only in special cases are variances allocated to a price difference account in Financial Accounting rather than to the material stock.
The
advantages of the moving average price are seen only if: you are
looking at the material valuation data at the lowest production level;
all variances occur immediately; the material price is not distorted by
the sequence of postings by the system.
Disadvantages of the Moving Average Price
The main disadvantage of using the moving average price is that the
price used to valuate a material consumption is almost completely
dependent on the time at which the goods issue is posted in the system.
If, for example, an invoice receipt is posted in the system after
a goods issue was entered, that invoice value is not reflected in the
value of the material issued. The material is therefore not valuated
with its actual procurement cost.
The moving average price also does little to guarantee consistent
cost management of your production process. The effect of changes in
the production process, for example, are not recognizable in the
finished product, and comparing results from different areas in Profitability Analysis is not really meaningful due to lack of a benchmark.
The
fact that the moving average price is not dependent on the period can
also lead to incorrect material valuation, as goods movements that are
posted to a previous period are not valuated with the price from that
period, but rather with the current moving average price. Another
problem with the moving average price is that any mistake entering data
can cause immediate and unwanted changes in the material price. Any
goods issues posted following this error will be valuated immediately
with this incorrect material price.In
particular, the moving average price can lead to unrealistic material
prices in cases of multi-level production or when there are variances
that do not appear immediately. Such unrealistic prices occur, for
example, when, in the context of stock coverage, a subsequent adjustment
to the material stock occurs using an incorrect base quantity. For more
information, see
Valuation with the Moving Average Price.
Price Control with the Material Ledger
When using the application component Actual Costing/Material Ledger,
you only use the standard price as a preliminary valuation price in the
current period. At the end of the period, you can use this component to
calculate an average price for the material using the actual costs
incurred in that period. You can then use this average price to valuate
the material stock in the period in question. Actual Costing/Material Ledger, therefore, combines the advantages of price control using the standard price and the moving average price.
If
you use Actual Costing/Material Ledger, you should also use standard
price control of raw materials and trading goods to ensure consistent
cost management of your production process. Only in this way are
variances completely transparent within production!
You can find more information about the goals of Actual Costing/Material Ledger under
Actual Costing / Material Ledger.
Price Control without the Material Ledger
The following example represents postings in Financial Accounting
resulting from a goods receipt or an invoice receipt, whereby the
invoice price varies from the purchase order price for the material. In
the first example, the postings occur for a material valuated with the
standard price; in the second example, the material is valuated with the
moving average price:
Example 1
Example 2
In
these examples, it is clear that material stock value and material
price reflect the procurement costs of a material with a valuation at
moving average price, whereas these actual costs are not reflected in a
valuation at standard price. A valuation at standard price does not
account for price changes or changes in production methods during the
period. Variances between the standard price and the actual
procurement/manufacturing costs are collected in a price difference
account in Financial Accounting and cannot be allocated to the
individual materials any longer.
The moving average price,
therefore, is more useful if you want your material stock values and
material prices to reflect the most up-to-date data.
The moving
average price appears advantageous in the above example primarily,
because the material is externally procured and the example stuck to a
single-level perspective.
When dealing with materials produced
in-house and when looking at valuation data on a multilevel basis, the
moving average price shows its limitations in that it can lead to
unrealistic prices for semifinished and finished goods. In the case of
multilevel production, the finished product cannot be valuated with the
most current actual prices, as the actual price for the semifinished
product is first calculated at period end after settling the
manufacturing order. Thus, any valuation errors grow as the production
process gets longer.
Result
The problems described above show that the moving average price,
despite its advantages can lead to problems. In particular, the moving
average price can cause unrealistic valuations of material inventory
when materials are produced in-house or when variances do not appear
immediately.
On the other hand, the standard price does not take
any actual procurement costs into account, which can be a problem, for
example, with externally procured materials with highly variable prices.
For these reasons, SAP recommends using the moving average price
only for raw materials and trading goods. The standard price should be
used for semifinished and finished products.
See also:
Price Control and Material Price Determination.
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