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Basic Question 6 of 16

Which of the following is true in periods of rising prices?

A. Working capital under FIFO will appear to be better than under LIFO.
B. Cash flows under FIFO will be better than under LIFO.
C. Cash flows will be the same under FIFO and LIFO.

User Contributed Comments 8

User Comment
stranger Higher inventory under FIFO means lower Cash Flow means Better Working Capital and vice versa
dlo1 Cash flows should also be the same under LIFO and FIFO, excluding tax considerations.
kutta2102 I don't know what is implied by "appear to be better" - I thought that in a scenario of rising prices, the LIFO inventory does not reflect true cost of replacement. Therefore, working capital, measured as current assets - current liabilities would "appear" to be better but in fact will not be.
JHeld Just read it one more time, i think you'll get it.
YOUCANDOIT When prices are rising,
FIFO => inventory is overstated, COGS is understated, Net income is overstated, leading to higher taxes paid and hence, a lower cash flow results.

Working capital (CA-CL) appears better since ending amount of inventory will be higher.
Paulvw I understand the intent of the question, but higher Working Capital is not "better". It's expensive, reduces asset turnover, reduces ROA, requires investment during expansion, can introduce volatility to NI when prices change etc etc. There are parallels in JIT, for example, which has a principle of reducing inventory. Best to stick with saying that Inventory will be higher.
johntan1979 Wow, CA>CL is not better than CA<CL?
Inaganti6 How is CA > CL better ? I thought an excess of CA over CL meant inefficiency in usage of current assets.
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Learning Outcome Statements

calculate and explain how inflation and deflation of inventory costs affect the financial statements and ratios of companies that use different inventory valuation methods

CFA® 2025 Level I Curriculum, Volume 2, Module 6.