The Cost of Not Turning Inventory

by dpollak on 08/04/2010 · 4 comments

I recently received the following question; below is my response.rentorbuycar The Cost of Not Turning Inventory

Dale, is there a way to figure out what it costs per day to hold a unit?  I have been told there is not.  Karonel

Karonel,

I think there is actually a way to do it and I believe there are essentially two components.  The first being the investment opportunity cost for the dollars. For example, if you put $10,000 (i.e. the cost of a vehicle) into a 10 year government treasury, you could earn about 3%.  That amount is about $300 a year, divide that by 365 and it’s roughly a dollar a day.  Multiply the dollar times 30 (days in the month) and you come up to about $30. On top of that, you would need to add the depreciation on a per-month basis.  Let’s assume that a $10,000 car depreciates $300 per month. Add together the $300 depreciation and the $30 investment cost ($330) and divide that by 30 days in the month, at the end you have roughly $11 per day.  It doesn’t seem like a lot per-day, until you multiply it by 30 days in the month, times the number of units you have in inventory then it starts to look like some real money.

The real question, however, is how much gross profit you’re missing on the sale of that vehicle every day that you don’t sell it, and the opportunity to reinvest those dollars into another gross profit generating unit.  When you do that analysis, you could easily come up with a very big cost of keeping a vehicle another day.

Hope this helps.

 The Cost of Not Turning Inventory
  • http://www.WhatDidEricSay.com Eric Miltsch

    Dale,

    Nicely explained – you always break things down so well.

    Another element I’ve always included into that “daily cost” figure is the advertising cost per vehicle as well. If someone is being careful enough to consider their cost per day, why stop there?

  • http://twitter.com/dealerrefresh Jeff Kershner

    Love it! Love to see a spread sheet that would allow you to import your inventory and costs while calculating this for you on the fly. :)

  • Mbarrett5k

    I do believe if you keep your eye on the age you will maximize your profits. Having a 72 hour turn around in service is esential to the following thoughts. Ultimately It will come down to merchandising your vehicle, pricing and selling it within 15 days of getting the car in trade. Make sure when you price you use a price point on your spider. Anything over or under priced, customers doubt the vehicle. There is so much more to learn and talk about. Just my two cents.

  • Mbarrett5k

    Mr. Kreshner, there is a way through ADP to track your used car costs then transfer to excel. In Excel you can then do the spreadsheet you are talking about. I can see if I can make it happen and send you a copy. Michael Barrett

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