ICDS II – Valuation of Inventories

ICDS II - Valuation of Inventories

ICDS II - VALUATION OF INVENTORIES

This resource is for educational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice.

1. INTRODUCTION TO ICDS II

What is ICDS II?

  • Full Name: Income Computation and Disclosure Standards - II (Valuation of Inventories)
  • Notification Date: 31st March 2015
  • Applicable From: Assessment Year 2016-17 onwards
  • Legal Basis: Section 145(2) of the Income Tax Act, 1961
  • Purpose: To bring uniformity in computation of income and to avoid controversies in tax assessments

Why ICDS II was Introduced?

  • Remove Subjectivity: Eliminate subjective treatment in inventory valuation
  • Standardization: Create uniform standards across all taxpayers
  • Prevent Revenue Leakage: Reduce tax avoidance through inventory manipulation
  • Align with International Practices: Bring Indian tax system closer to global standards
  • Reduce Litigation: Minimize disputes between taxpayers and tax authorities

2. SCOPE AND APPLICABILITY

2.1 Who Must Follow ICDS II?

  • All Taxpayers: Computing income under the head "Profits and Gains of Business or Profession" or "Income from Other Sources"
  • Companies: All companies irrespective of turnover
  • Non-Corporate Entities: Following mercantile system of accounting
  • Traders and Manufacturers: Dealing with goods and raw materials

2.2 Exemptions (Who Need NOT Follow)

  • Individual/HUF: Computing income on cash basis
  • Presumptive Taxation: Taxpayers under Section 44AD, 44ADA, 44AE, 44BB, 44BBB
  • Special Income: Income from speculative business treated separately
  • Small Taxpayers: Turnover below threshold opting for cash system

2.3 Types of Inventories Covered

Type Description Examples
Raw Materials Materials held for use in production Cotton, Steel, Chemicals, Wood
Work-in-Progress (WIP) Partially completed goods Semi-finished products in factory
Finished Goods Completed products ready for sale Garments, Furniture, Electronics
Stock-in-Trade Goods purchased for resale Retail inventory, Trading goods
Consumable Stores Items consumed in production Lubricants, Spare parts, Tools
Loose Tools Small tools used in manufacturing Hammers, Spanners, Drills

3. KEY DEFINITIONS

3.1 Net Realizable Value (NRV)

  • Definition: Estimated selling price in the ordinary course of business MINUS estimated costs of completion and estimated costs necessary to make the sale
  • Formula: NRV = Estimated Selling Price - Completion Costs - Selling Costs
  • Key Point: It represents the net amount that entity expects to realize from sale of inventory

Example 1: Calculating NRV

Scenario: ABC Ltd. has raw materials costing ₹1,00,000

  • Estimated selling price of finished goods: ₹1,50,000
  • Cost to complete (processing): ₹30,000
  • Selling and distribution costs: ₹10,000

Calculation:

NRV = ₹1,50,000 - ₹30,000 - ₹10,000 = ₹1,10,000

Valuation: Lower of Cost (₹1,00,000) or NRV (₹1,10,000) = ₹1,00,000

3.2 Fair Value

  • Definition: The amount for which an asset could be exchanged between knowledgeable, willing parties in an arm's length transaction
  • Market-Based: Based on market prices, not entity-specific factors
  • Usage in ICDS: NOT used for inventory valuation (unlike AS/Ind AS)

3.3 Cost of Inventories

  • Purchase Cost: Invoice price minus trade discounts, rebates and subsidies
  • Conversion Costs: Direct labor, direct expenses, and production overheads
  • Other Costs: Costs incurred to bring inventories to present location and condition
  • Exclusions: Abnormal waste, storage costs, administrative overheads, selling costs

4. VALUATION PRINCIPLES

4.1 Basic Valuation Rule

FUNDAMENTAL PRINCIPLE:

Inventories shall be valued at COST or NET REALIZABLE VALUE (NRV), WHICHEVER IS LOWER

4.2 Components of Cost

Component Included Items Excluded Items
Purchase Costs • Invoice price
• Import duties
• Non-refundable taxes
• Transport & handling
• Direct costs
• Trade discounts
• Rebates
• Duty drawbacks
• CENVAT credit
• Subsidies
Conversion Costs • Direct materials
• Direct labor
• Direct expenses
• Variable overheads
• Fixed overheads (allocated)
• Abnormal waste
• Storage costs
• Administrative OH
• Selling & distribution
• Finance costs
Other Costs • Design costs for specific customer
• Costs to bring to present location
• Costs to bring to present condition
• Interest & financing
• Exchange differences
• General design costs

4.3 Special Considerations

A. By-Products and Scrap

  • By-Products: Valued at NRV and deducted from cost of main product
  • Scrap: Valued at NRV when measurable
  • Treatment: Reduces cost of production of main product

B. Joint Products

  • Allocation Method: Costs allocated on rational and consistent basis
  • Basis Options: Relative sales value at split-off point or physical quantities
  • Consistency: Same method to be followed year after year

C. Standard Costing

  • Permitted: For convenience if results approximate actual cost
  • Review Required: Standards must be regularly reviewed
  • Revision: Update when conditions change significantly

Example 2: Cost Calculation - Manufacturing Entity

XYZ Manufacturing Ltd. - Product Cost Calculation

Cost Element Amount (₹) Include/Exclude
Raw Materials 50,000 Include
Direct Labor 30,000 Include
Variable Production Overheads 15,000 Include
Fixed Production Overheads (Normal Capacity) 20,000 Include
Abnormal Wastage 5,000 Exclude
Storage Costs 3,000 Exclude
Administrative Overheads 8,000 Exclude
Selling & Distribution 7,000 Exclude
TOTAL INVENTORY COST 1,15,000 Final Cost

5. COST FORMULA / COST FLOW ASSUMPTIONS

5.1 Acceptable Methods under ICDS II

Method 1: First-In-First-Out (FIFO)

  • Assumption: Items purchased first are sold first
  • Valuation: Closing stock valued at most recent purchase prices
  • Impact: In rising prices, higher closing stock value, lower COGS, higher profits
  • Suitability: Suitable for perishable goods, fashion items

Method 2: Weighted Average Cost (WAC)

  • Formula: WAC = Total Cost of Goods Available ÷ Total Units Available
  • Application: Calculate average after each purchase (Moving WAC) or periodically
  • Impact: Smoothens price fluctuations
  • Suitability: Suitable for homogeneous goods, commodities

IMPORTANT EXCLUSION:

LAST-IN-FIRST-OUT (LIFO) method is NOT PERMITTED under ICDS II

5.2 Specific Identification Method

  • When Used: For items not ordinarily interchangeable
  • Application: Goods segregated for specific projects or produced/purchased for specific customers
  • Examples: Customized machinery, special orders, heavy equipment, ships, aircraft
  • Requirement: Each item must be specifically identified and traceable

Example 3: FIFO vs Weighted Average Comparison

Transaction Details:

Date Transaction Units Rate per Unit (₹) Total (₹)
01-Apr Opening Stock 100 50 5,000
10-Apr Purchase 200 55 11,000
20-Apr Purchase 150 60 9,000
30-Apr Sales 300 - -

Closing Stock Calculation:

  • Total Units Available: 450 units
  • Units Sold: 300 units
  • Closing Stock: 150 units
Method Calculation Closing Stock Value
FIFO Method 150 units from latest purchase @ ₹60 ₹9,000
Weighted Average (5,000 + 11,000 + 9,000) ÷ 450 = ₹55.56
150 units × ₹55.56
₹8,334

Impact on Taxable Income:
Higher closing stock under FIFO (₹9,000) means lower COGS and higher taxable profit compared to WAC (₹8,334)

6. COMPARISON: ICDS II vs AS 2 vs IND AS 2

Aspect ICDS II AS 2 Ind AS 2
Purpose Tax computation Financial reporting Financial reporting (converged with IFRS)
LIFO Method NOT Allowed Allowed NOT Allowed
Interest Cost Excluded from inventory cost Included if qualifying conditions met Included as per Ind AS 23
Exchange Differences NOT included in inventory cost May be included in certain cases Generally NOT included
MTM for Commodity Traders NOT allowed Allowed at NRV Allowed at fair value less costs to sell
Agricultural Produce At lower of cost or NRV At NRV at harvest At fair value less costs to sell
Write-down Reversal NOT allowed Allowed Allowed (to extent of original write-down)
Subsidy/Duty Drawback Reduced from purchase cost May be reduced or treated as income Treated as government grant

Key Differences - Detailed Analysis

1. Treatment of Interest Cost

  • ICDS II: Interest cost specifically excluded - reduces inventory cost for tax purposes
  • AS 2/Ind AS 2: Can be capitalized if qualifying asset and conditions met - increases financial reporting inventory
  • Tax Impact: Creates timing difference between book profit and taxable profit

2. Mark-to-Market for Commodity Brokers

  • ICDS II: Commodity brokers CANNOT use MTM - must value at cost or NRV
  • AS 2: Allows MTM at NRV for commodity brokers-traders
  • Practical Issue: Creates significant book-tax difference for commodity traders

3. Write-down and Reversal

  • ICDS II: Once written down, NO reversal allowed even if circumstances change
  • AS/Ind AS: Reversal permitted when conditions improve (not exceeding original cost)
  • Conservative Approach: ICDS follows more conservative approach for tax purposes

Example 4: Book-Tax Differences

PQR Ltd. - Manufacturing Company

Item As per Books (AS 2) As per Tax (ICDS II) Difference
Raw Material Cost ₹10,00,000 ₹10,00,000 -
Conversion Cost ₹5,00,000 ₹5,00,000 -
Interest Capitalized ₹50,000 ₹0 ₹50,000
Exchange Difference ₹30,000 ₹0 ₹30,000
Total Inventory Value ₹15,80,000 ₹15,00,000 ₹80,000

Tax Implication: Lower inventory value under ICDS II leads to higher COGS and lower taxable income in current year

7. PRACTICAL EXAMPLES

Example 5: Trading Business - Inventory Valuation

ABC Traders Ltd.

Purchases during the year:

Date Quantity Rate per Unit Total
Jan 2024 1,000 units ₹100 ₹1,00,000
Mar 2024 1,500 units ₹110 ₹1,65,000
Jun 2024 2,000 units ₹120 ₹2,40,000

Sales: 3,500 units

Closing Stock: 1,000 units

Current Market Price: ₹125 per unit

Estimated Selling Expenses: ₹5 per unit

Solution:

NRV Calculation: ₹125 - ₹5 = ₹120 per unit

Under FIFO Method:
Closing stock valued at latest purchase = 1,000 units @ ₹120 = ₹1,20,000

Valuation: Lower of Cost (₹1,20,000) or NRV (₹1,20,000) = ₹1,20,000

Example 6: Manufacturing - WIP Valuation

DEF Manufacturing Ltd.

Work-in-Progress as on 31st March:

Cost Element Amount (₹)
Direct Materials 2,50,000
Direct Labor 1,50,000
Variable Production OH (allocated) 75,000
Fixed Production OH (allocated at normal capacity) 1,00,000
Administrative Overheads 50,000
Interest on Working Capital 25,000

Solution - WIP Valuation under ICDS II:

Cost Element Amount (₹) Status
Direct Materials 2,50,000 ✓ Include
Direct Labor 1,50,000 ✓ Include
Variable Production OH 75,000 ✓ Include
Fixed Production OH 1,00,000 ✓ Include
Administrative OH - ✗ Exclude
Interest Cost - ✗ Exclude
WIP Value 5,75,000 Final Value

Example 7: By-Products and Joint Products

GHI Industries - Chemical Manufacturing

Scenario: Joint process produces two products

  • Total Joint Cost up to split-off point: ₹5,00,000
  • Product A: 600 units, Selling price ₹500 per unit = ₹3,00,000
  • Product B: 400 units, Selling price ₹500 per unit = ₹2,00,000
  • By-product: Scrap valued at ₹20,000

Solution - Cost Allocation:

Step 1: Deduct by-product value from joint cost
Net Joint Cost = ₹5,00,000 - ₹20,000 = ₹4,80,000

Step 2: Allocate based on relative sales value

Product Sales Value Ratio Allocated Cost Cost per Unit
Product A ₹3,00,000 60% ₹2,88,000 ₹480
Product B ₹2,00,000 40% ₹1,92,000 ₹480
Total ₹5,00,000 100% ₹4,80,000 -

Example 8: NRV Less Than Cost - Write Down

JKL Ltd. - Electronics Trading

Situation: Technological obsolescence

Particulars Amount (₹)
Historical Cost of Inventory 8,00,000
Current Market Price (per unit) 80% of cost
Estimated Selling Price 6,40,000
Estimated Selling Expenses 40,000

Solution:

NRV Calculation:
NRV = Estimated Selling Price - Selling Expenses
NRV = ₹6,40,000 - ₹40,000 = ₹6,00,000

Valuation:
Lower of Cost (₹8,00,000) or NRV (₹6,00,000) = ₹6,00,000

Write-down Required: ₹8,00,000 - ₹6,00,000 = ₹2,00,000

Important: Under ICDS II, if next year circumstances improve and NRV increases, NO reversal of this write-down is permitted!

8. IMPORTANT CASE LAWS AND JUDICIAL PRECEDENTS

8.1 Landmark Cases Related to Inventory Valuation

Case 1: CIT vs. British Paints India Ltd. [1991] 188 ITR 44 (SC)

  • Issue: Whether inventory should be valued at cost or market price, whichever is lower
  • Held by Supreme Court: For income tax purposes, inventory must be valued at cost or market price, whichever is lower
  • Principle Established: The "cost or market value, whichever is lower" rule is fundamental for tax computation
  • Relevance to ICDS II: ICDS II codifies this principle by mandating lower of cost or NRV
  • Key Quote: "The valuation of stock-in-trade at cost or market value whichever is lower has to be followed as a general rule"

Case 2: CIT vs. Shahzada Nand & Sons [1966] 60 ITR 392 (SC)

  • Issue: Method of valuation - FIFO vs LIFO vs Average
  • Held by Supreme Court: Any recognized accounting method consistently followed should be accepted
  • Principle Established: Consistency in valuation method is crucial
  • Relevance to ICDS II: ICDS II restricts methods to FIFO or Weighted Average only (excludes LIFO)
  • Important Note: Post-ICDS, this flexibility is reduced - LIFO no longer acceptable

Case 3: CIT vs. Ciba of India Ltd. [1968] 69 ITR 692 (SC)

  • Issue: Valuation of obsolete and slow-moving inventory
  • Held by Supreme Court: If inventory has become obsolete or unsaleable, it should be valued at NRV
  • Principle Established: Prudent business practice requires recognizing diminution in value
  • Relevance to ICDS II: Supports the "lower of cost or NRV" principle
  • Tax Implication: Write-down for obsolescence is allowable if genuine

Case 4: CIT vs. Woodward Governor India (P) Ltd. [2009] 312 ITR 254 (SC)

  • Issue: Consistency in accounting method for inventory valuation
  • Held by Supreme Court: Method of accounting consistently followed cannot be rejected unless not in accordance with accepted accounting principles
  • Principle Established: Stability and consistency in accounting methods for tax purposes
  • Relevance to ICDS II: ICDS II provides statutory backing to accepted accounting principles
  • Post-ICDS Impact: Taxpayer must follow ICDS II irrespective of book method

Case 5: Chainrup Sampatram vs. CIT [1953] 24 ITR 481 (SC)

  • Issue: When can market value be taken instead of cost?
  • Held by Supreme Court: If market value on valuation date is lower than cost, the lower value must be taken
  • Principle Established: Prudent business practice mandates recognizing loss when value declines
  • Relevance to ICDS II: Foundation for mandatory "lower of cost or NRV" rule
  • Accounting Principle: Conservatism - anticipate losses but not profits

Case 6: Sakthi Trading Co. vs. CIT [2001] 250 ITR 871 (Mad)

  • Issue: LIFO method and its acceptability
  • Held by Madras High Court: LIFO, though recognized internationally, was accepted when consistently followed
  • Principle Established: Pre-ICDS flexibility in choosing methods
  • Current Status: ICDS II specifically prohibits LIFO - case now has limited relevance
  • Transition Issue: Taxpayers using LIFO had to switch to FIFO/WAC from AY 2016-17

Case 7: CIT vs. A. Raman & Co. [1968] 67 ITR 11 (SC)

  • Issue: Treatment of interest on borrowed capital for purchase of inventory
  • Held by Supreme Court: Interest could be treated as revenue expenditure
  • Accounting Treatment: Pre-ICDS, interest could sometimes be capitalized
  • ICDS II Position: Interest specifically EXCLUDED from inventory cost
  • Current Law: Interest is deductible expense, cannot be added to inventory cost

Case 8: Sutlej Cotton Mills Ltd. vs. CIT [1979] 116 ITR 1 (SC)

  • Issue: Subsidy received and its effect on inventory valuation
  • Held by Supreme Court: Subsidy related to cost of acquisition should reduce cost
  • Principle Established: Direct subsidies on purchase reduce inventory cost
  • ICDS II Alignment: Subsidies, rebates, duty drawback reduce purchase cost
  • Tax Effect: Lower inventory cost → Higher COGS → Lower taxable income

8.2 Summary of Judicial Principles

Principle Judicial Basis ICDS II Codification
Cost or NRV - Lower British Paints, Chainrup Sampatram Mandatory under ICDS II
Consistency Shahzada Nand, Woodward Governor Same method year-on-year required
Obsolescence Write-down Ciba of India Permitted, no reversal allowed
LIFO Method Sakthi Trading (pre-ICDS) Specifically prohibited
Interest Exclusion A. Raman & Co. Excluded from inventory cost
Subsidy Treatment Sutlej Cotton Mills Reduces purchase cost

9. INVENTORY VALUATION FLOWCHART

START: INVENTORY VALUATION
Is item specifically identifiable?
(e.g., customized goods, special projects)
YES →
Use SPECIFIC IDENTIFICATION METHOD
Actual cost of each item
NO ↓
Choose Cost Formula
FIFO Method
First-In, First-Out
Weighted Average Cost
Average of all purchases
Calculate COST of Inventory
Include: Purchase cost + Conversion costs + Other costs
Exclude: Interest, storage, admin OH, abnormal waste
Calculate NET REALIZABLE VALUE (NRV)
NRV = Estimated Selling Price - Completion Costs - Selling Costs
Compare Cost vs NRV
Which is lower?
COST is lower →
Value at COST
No write-down required
NRV is lower →
Value at NRV
Write-down = Cost - NRV
(No reversal allowed in future)
Adjust for By-products/Scrap
Deduct NRV of by-products from main product cost
FINAL INVENTORY VALUE
Report in Tax Computation

Important Reminders:

  • ✗ LIFO method is NOT permitted
  • ✗ Interest cost CANNOT be included
  • ✗ Exchange differences NOT included
  • ✗ Write-down reversal NOT allowed
  • ✓ Consistency in method is mandatory
  • ✓ By-products reduce main product cost

10. QUESTIONS & ANSWERS

Q1. Is ICDS II applicable to all taxpayers?

Answer:

No, ICDS II is applicable only to:

  • Taxpayers computing income under "Profits and Gains of Business or Profession" or "Income from Other Sources"
  • Following mercantile system of accounting

Exemptions:

  • Individual/HUF following cash system
  • Taxpayers under presumptive taxation (Section 44AD, 44ADA, 44AE)
Q2. Can we use LIFO method under ICDS II?

Answer:

NO. LIFO (Last-In-First-Out) method is specifically prohibited under ICDS II.

Permitted Methods:

  • FIFO (First-In-First-Out)
  • Weighted Average Cost
  • Specific Identification (for non-interchangeable items)

Impact: Taxpayers who were using LIFO had to mandatorily switch to FIFO or WAC from Assessment Year 2016-17.

Q3. Should interest cost be included in inventory valuation under ICDS II?

Answer:

NO. Interest cost is specifically excluded from inventory cost under ICDS II.

Difference from AS 2:

  • AS 2 allows capitalization of interest if inventory qualifies as qualifying asset
  • ICDS II prohibits inclusion of any interest cost

Tax Impact: Creates book-tax difference requiring adjustments in tax computation.

Treatment: Interest is claimed as revenue expenditure, not added to inventory cost.

Q4. What is Net Realizable Value (NRV)?

Answer:

Definition: NRV = Estimated Selling Price - Estimated Costs of Completion - Estimated Costs Necessary to Make the Sale

Components:

  • Estimated Selling Price: Expected price in ordinary course of business
  • Completion Costs: Further costs to complete the goods (for WIP/Raw materials)
  • Selling Costs: Commission, freight, packaging, marketing costs

Example:

  • Selling Price: ₹1,00,000
  • Completion Cost: ₹20,000
  • Selling Cost: ₹10,000
  • NRV = ₹1,00,000 - ₹20,000 - ₹10,000 = ₹70,000
Q5. Can we reverse inventory write-down under ICDS II?

Answer:

NO. Once inventory is written down to NRV, reversal is NOT permitted under ICDS II, even if circumstances improve.

Comparison:

Aspect ICDS II AS 2 / Ind AS 2
Write-down Allowed Allowed
Reversal NOT Allowed Allowed

Rationale: Conservative approach for tax purposes - once value declines, new lower value becomes the base cost.

Q6. How to value by-products under ICDS II?

Answer:

Treatment: By-products are valued at Net Realizable Value (NRV) and the value is DEDUCTED from the cost of the main product.

Example:

  • Total Production Cost of Main Product: ₹5,00,000
  • By-product generated: Scrap with NRV of ₹30,000
  • Net Cost of Main Product = ₹5,00,000 - ₹30,000 = ₹4,70,000

Accounting Entry:

  • Debit: By-product Stock A/c - ₹30,000
  • Credit: Main Product/Production A/c - ₹30,000
Q7. How to allocate joint costs between joint products?

Answer:

Principle: Joint costs should be allocated on a rational and consistent basis.

Common Methods:

  • Sales Value Method: Allocate based on relative sales value at split-off point
  • Physical Quantity Method: Allocate based on weight, volume, or units produced
  • Net Realizable Value Method: Allocate based on NRV if products require further processing

Key Requirement: The method chosen must be:

  • Rational and justifiable
  • Consistently applied from year to year
  • Documented with proper supporting
Q8. Can commodity brokers/traders use mark-to-market valuation?

Answer:

NO. Under ICDS II, commodity brokers and traders CANNOT use mark-to-market (MTM) valuation.

Required Method: Must value at lower of cost or NRV

Difference from AS 2:

  • AS 2 permits commodity brokers-traders to value at NRV (essentially MTM)
  • ICDS II does not allow this exemption

Impact:

  • Creates significant book-tax differences for commodity traders
  • Taxable income differs from book profit
  • Requires detailed reconciliation in tax computation
Q9. How to treat subsidies and duty drawbacks?

Answer:

Treatment: Subsidies, rebates, duty drawbacks, and CENVAT credit REDUCE the purchase cost of inventory.

Formula:

Net Purchase Cost = Invoice Price - Trade Discounts - Rebates - Subsidies - Duty Drawback + Non-refundable Taxes + Transport

Example:

  • Invoice Price: ₹1,00,000
  • Trade Discount: ₹5,000
  • Government Subsidy: ₹10,000
  • Transport: ₹3,000
  • Net Cost = ₹1,00,000 - ₹5,000 - ₹10,000 + ₹3,000 = ₹88,000

Tax Impact: Lower inventory cost leads to higher COGS and lower taxable profit in the year of sale.

Q10. What costs should NOT be included in inventory valuation?

Answer:

Excluded Costs (NEVER include):

Cost Type Examples Treatment
Abnormal Waste Abnormal spoilage, fire loss Charge to P&L directly
Storage Costs Warehouse rent, insurance Period cost - P&L
Administrative OH Office expenses, salaries Period cost - P&L
Selling Costs Marketing, commission, freight out Period cost - P&L
Interest Cost Borrowing costs, finance charges Finance cost - P&L
Exchange Differences Foreign exchange fluctuation Separate line item - P&L

Remember: Only costs incurred to bring inventory to PRESENT LOCATION and PRESENT CONDITION can be included.

Q11. How does ICDS II differ from AS 2 and Ind AS 2?

Answer:

Major Differences:

Parameter ICDS II AS 2 / Ind AS 2
Purpose Tax computation Financial reporting
LIFO Method Prohibited AS 2: Allowed; Ind AS 2: Prohibited
Interest Cost Not includible Can be capitalized if qualifying
MTM for Commodity Not allowed Allowed
Write-down Reversal Not allowed Allowed
Exchange Differences Not includible May be included in some cases

Implication: Companies need to maintain separate records for book and tax purposes, requiring careful reconciliation.

Q12. Is consistency in valuation method mandatory?

Answer:

YES. Consistency is absolutely mandatory under ICDS II.

Requirements:

  • Same cost formula (FIFO or WAC) must be used consistently from year to year
  • Cannot change method arbitrarily
  • Change only if required by law or results in more appropriate presentation

If Change Required:

  • Obtain approval from tax authorities
  • Provide valid business justification
  • Make proper disclosures
  • Adjust opening inventory as per new method

Judicial Support: Shahzada Nand & Sons case, Woodward Governor case emphasize consistency.

KEY TAKEAWAYS

  • Fundamental Rule: Value inventories at LOWER of Cost or Net Realizable Value
  • Cost Formula: Use FIFO or Weighted Average (LIFO prohibited)
  • Exclusions: Interest, storage costs, administrative overheads, abnormal waste - NOT included
  • No Reversals: Write-downs cannot be reversed in future years
  • Consistency: Same method must be followed year after year
  • By-products: Valued at NRV and deducted from main product cost
  • Book-Tax Differences: ICDS differs from AS/Ind AS requiring reconciliation
  • Subsidies: Reduce purchase cost of inventory
  • No MTM: Commodity traders cannot use mark-to-market under ICDS II
  • Applicability: From Assessment Year 2016-17 for eligible taxpayers

Disclaimer: This resource is for educational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Please consult a qualified tax professional for specific situations.

Last Updated: November 2025

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