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Overstock

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Overstock, excessive stock, excess2sell, B-stock, or excess inventory, is the result of poor management[dubiousdiscuss] of stock demand or of material flow in process management. Excessive stock is also associated with loss of revenue owing to additional capital bound with the purchase or simply storage space taken. Excessive stock can result from over delivery from a supplier or from poor ordering and management of stock by a buyer for the stock.[1]

Overstock also known as seasonal overstock, consists of first quality overstock that must be sold. At the end of a selling season, all designated merchandise is removed from the selling floor, boxed and sold to liquidation companies (e.g., all winter coats are removed from the selling floor mid-spring to make room in the stores for swimwear).[2]

When referring to overstock merchandise in the form of consumer goods in a retail operation, the term refers to goods that have never been purchased by a customer but that are considered excessive stock from shelves and/or warehouses. Excessive stock is typically discarded of in the following ways: returned to the manufacturer or original distributor, liquidated to companies that then resell it on the secondary wholesale or retail market, sold at an extreme discount to existing customers, sold to salvage companies which then process metals and components of value.

Economic implication

The prior damage caused by excessive stock is an early exhaust of cash flow, and later the loss of free disposable capital for investing.

With perishable supplies, excessive stock can cause the loss of millions of currency units as the product's freshness may deteriorate to such an extent that it cannot be sold, as is the case with dairy products, fresh baked goods, flowers, and produce, or even more sensitive resources like fresh fish.

See also

References

  1. ^ "Reorganisation von Bauprozessen" (PDF). Retrieved 2013-01-22.
  2. ^ "Jobouts". Foxliquidation.com. Retrieved 2013-01-22.

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