BIM33015 - Stock: meaning of: what is stock
Meaning of stock
The stock of a trade can be anything acquired with a view
to reselling at a profit.
Stock includes work-in-progress and long-term
contracts.
The stock of a trade will consist of any asset, whether
tangible or intangible, which is acquired with the intention of
resale at a profit. It is important, from the viewpoint of
determining the amount of a businesses profits, to distinguish
between stock, sometimes described as ’circulating
capital’, and the ’fixed capital’ of the
business.
Viscount Haldane in John Smith and Son v Moore [1921]
12TC266, said
“fixed capital is what the owner turns
to profit by keeping it in his own possession, circulating capital
is what he makes profit of by parting with it and letting it change
masters”.
Millet LJ referred to the distinction between fixed and
circulating capital in the case of Vodafone Cellular Ltd &
Others v Shaw [1997] 69TC376. He described
“a commodity which is turned over or
exploited in the course of a trade at a comparatively early
date” as having the characteristics of circulating
rather than fixed capital.
The vital point here is that the intention must be to sell
the asset to make the profit. For example zoo animals are not
stock, because the trade is to exhibit those animals and not to
sell them. Zoo animals are fixed capital assets (and the majority
qualify for capital allowances as plant). A different example would
be a business that makes and installs fitted kitchens and has a
display area at its premises. From time to time it sells the
kitchen units which have been on display. They are sold below
normal retail price but well above cost. Here the intention is to
make a profit from the kitchen units and the fact that a unit has
been used for display purposes for a while does not mean that it is
not trading stock. For a discussion of the treatment of stock where
the trade includes hiring assets see
BIM33040.
Guidance on the scope of a trade and how that influences what
is stock is at
BIM21000 onwards.
Whether an asset is on trading account depends on the
trader’s intention. What does the trader intend to do with
the asset? This will initially determine whether the asset is
trading stock or a fixed capital asset. But intentions can change,
and if they do then the asset will change its status from trading
stock to fixed capital or vice versa. There is a clear discussion
of these principles in Lionel Simmons Properties Ltd (in
liquidation) and Others v CIR [1980] 53TC461.
Stock includes work-in-progress and long-term
contracts. In accounts prepared in accordance with UK GAAP
(
BIM33130) it should be classified
as:
- raw materials and consumables,
- work in progress,
- finished goods and goods for resale,
- payments on account.
The accounting standard that deals with stock is SSAP9.
