Accounting, Payroll, CFO & E-Invoicing · Virtual CFO & Finance Function
Inventory & Business Management Advisory
Inventory & Business Management Advisory turns stock sitting in a warehouse, a bonded facility, or in transit through customs into a number management can actually plan around — how much cash it is tying up, how fast it is turning, where it is at risk of obsolescence or shrinkage, and how the inventory cycle interacts with VAT, Corporate Tax, and the broader cash flow of the business.
Chartered Accountants · Dubai · Since 1986
Inventory & Business Management Advisory is the discipline of bringing financial rigour to how a company records, values, monitors, and makes operating decisions about the stock it holds — raw materials, work-in-progress, finished goods, and goods in transit — alongside the broader business management questions that inventory touches: pricing, purchasing, supplier terms, warehousing cost, and cash flow. It sits at the intersection of accounting (getting the inventory valuation and cost of goods sold right on the books) and operating advisory (helping management actually run the stock cycle better). Done properly, it answers questions a standard bookkeeping engagement does not: which stock is moving, which is not; what is the true landed cost of an imported item once freight, customs duty, and clearance charges are added; how much cash is currently locked up in inventory that has not yet converted to a sale; and whether the valuation on the balance sheet reflects what the stock is genuinely worth today.
For UAE businesses, inventory accounting carries specific statutory weight. Under Federal Decree-Law No. 47 of 2022 governing UAE Corporate Tax, taxable income is derived from accounting profit prepared under applicable accounting standards (commonly IFRS or IFRS for SMEs), and the inventory valuation method used — typically weighted average cost or FIFO, consistently applied — directly affects cost of goods sold and therefore taxable profit for financial years commencing on or after 1 June 2023. Getting inventory valuation wrong is not a cosmetic bookkeeping issue; it distorts the profit figure the FTA taxes and the profit figure any lender or investor relies on. On the VAT side, under Federal Decree-Law No. 8 of 2017, imported goods typically attract import VAT accounted for through the reverse charge mechanism or paid at the point of clearance depending on the import route, and the treatment must be correctly reflected in the VAT return filed through EmaraTax — a business that mis-times or mis-books import VAT on inventory can misstate its VAT position for an entire filing period.
The advisory layer goes beyond correct booking. PNPC reviews the inventory cycle itself: how purchasing decisions are made and against what reorder logic, how long goods sit between purchase order and sale (the inventory days metric), which stock-keeping units are consistently slow-moving or dead stock quietly absorbing warehouse space and cash, and where the company's actual gross margin by product line differs from what management assumes because landed cost has not been fully allocated. For import/export and trading businesses specifically, goods can spend weeks in freight and customs clearance before they are sellable — a cash lock-up that is frequently underestimated in founder-run businesses managing this informally on spreadsheets or, in some cases, memory.
This service is distinct from, but closely linked to, cash flow and working capital management — inventory is one of the three components (alongside receivables and payables) of the working capital cycle, and a business cannot get a reliable cash forecast right without a properly managed inventory function feeding into it. It is also distinct from a formal stock audit or year-end statutory audit — an independent auditor tests and opines on the year-end inventory figure; PNPC's advisory role is the ongoing, forward-looking management of the inventory function itself, including the internal controls and valuation discipline an auditor will later test.
The deliverable set typically includes a documented inventory valuation policy consistent with the accounting standard applied, a periodic stock ageing and slow-moving/dead-stock report, a landed cost model for imported goods, inventory turnover and days-inventory-outstanding tracking by product line or category, a physical-versus-book reconciliation process, and management advisory on purchasing, pricing, and stock-level decisions informed by that data. Cost and timing depend mainly on the number of SKUs, the complexity of the supply chain (single-source domestic purchasing versus multi-country import), the state of the existing inventory records, and whether a physical count and reconciliation is needed as a starting baseline; PNPC confirms the exact fee in the engagement letter after reviewing the current inventory records and process rather than quoting a universal number for work whose scope the data condition changes.
What goes wrong without this discipline is rarely a single dramatic event — it accumulates quietly. Slow-moving stock sits on the balance sheet at its original cost long after its realistic sale value has fallen, overstating both inventory value and reported profit until a write-down eventually forces a correction. A business prices a product line without knowing its true landed cost, discovering only at year end that a supposedly profitable category was actually thin or loss-making once freight and clearance costs were properly allocated. Purchasing continues on habit rather than data, and cash that could have funded growth or covered a VAT or Corporate Tax obligation sits instead in warehoused stock that will not sell for months. A live inventory and business management discipline exists to surface each of these in the month it starts to matter, not the month a write-off or a cash shortfall forces the conversation.
When this engagement is the right fit for a UAE business
You hold meaningful physical stock — raw materials, work-in-progress, or finished goods — and cannot currently say with confidence how much cash is tied up in it or how fast it is turning
You import goods and want a proper landed cost model that allocates freight, customs duty, and clearance charges to each product line, rather than a rough blended estimate
Your balance sheet inventory valuation has not been reviewed in some time and you suspect it may be overstated by slow-moving or dead stock still carried at original cost
You are preparing for UAE Corporate Tax filing and need confidence that your inventory valuation method is applied consistently and supports the cost of goods sold figure feeding into taxable profit
You are approaching a bank facility, trade finance line, or investor conversation and inventory is a material part of the balance sheet the lender or investor will scrutinise
Gross margin reported by product line does not match management's intuition, and you suspect landed cost, wastage, or shrinkage is not being properly captured
You are scaling purchasing volume or SKU count and the informal, spreadsheet-based tracking that worked at a smaller scale is starting to break down
You want a periodic physical-count-to-book reconciliation process established, rather than an ad hoc stock check that happens irregularly or not at all
Multiple warehouses, free zone bonded storage, or a mix of mainland and free zone inventory holding locations need to be tracked and reconciled consistently
When a different or lighter-touch approach fits better
Your business is a pure services company with no physical stock holding — this engagement is specifically for businesses carrying inventory as a material balance sheet item
You need a one-off, independent stock count and valuation opinion for a statutory or year-end audit — that is an audit assurance engagement distinct from ongoing inventory management advisory, though PNPC can support the audit process where relevant
Your inventory volume is genuinely minimal and a simple manual count reviewed quarterly by the founder is proportionate to the business's current scale — revisit this engagement once SKU count or stock value increases
Your books are not yet reconciled and the underlying accounting function needs a backlog clean-up first — an inventory valuation review is only as reliable as the general ledger and purchase records feeding it
You need a specific dispute or legal question resolved about inventory ownership, a supplier contract, or a customs classification matter — that requires legal or customs counsel before or alongside any accounting advisory
The company already runs a mature in-house inventory and supply chain function with dedicated systems and headcount — PNPC's role there is more likely a periodic advisory review or Corporate Tax/VAT-specific input than building the function from scratch
You need warehouse operations, logistics routing, or physical supply-chain management itself — PNPC advises on the financial and accounting dimension of inventory, not physical logistics execution
The immediate priority is basic bookkeeping and VAT/Corporate Tax compliance for a business that has not yet stabilised its core accounting records — PNPC generally recommends establishing that foundation first
PNPC Inventory & Business Management Advisory vs alternative approaches
| Feature | PNPC Inventory & Business Management Advisory | In-House Inventory/Supply Chain Hire | Generic Bookkeeping (stock recorded, not managed) | Annual Physical Count Only | No Formal Inventory Process |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Valuation method consistency (FIFO/weighted average) | Documented policy, consistently applied and reviewed for Corporate Tax alignment | Depends on the hire's accounting background | Often applied inconsistently period to period | Set once at year-end count, not maintained through the year | No consistent method — value assigned informally |
| Landed cost modelling for imports | Freight, duty, and clearance allocated to each product line | Depends on hire's costing expertise | Rarely allocated beyond invoice cost | Not modelled | Not modelled — margin distorted |
| Slow-moving / dead stock identification | Periodic ageing report with write-down recommendations | Yes, if the function is resourced for it | Not typically produced | Only surfaces at the annual count, if at all | Not identified until stock is physically obviously unsellable |
| Cash tied up in inventory (working capital view) | Tracked and fed into the broader cash flow forecast | Depends on integration with finance function | Not connected to cash flow forecasting | Not tracked between counts | Not tracked at all |
| Corporate Tax cost of goods sold accuracy | Reviewed for consistency with valuation policy each period | Depends on hire's UAE CT familiarity | Sometimes correct, rarely reviewed proactively | Corrected only at year end, if noticed | Risk of understated or overstated taxable profit |
| Physical-to-book reconciliation | Structured periodic process with variance investigation | Depends on hire's process discipline | Rarely performed outside year end | Performed once a year only | Not performed |
| Purchasing and pricing advisory | Data-informed recommendations on reorder points and product-line margin | Yes, if the hire has commercial as well as accounting remit | Not typically in scope | Not provided | Purchasing decisions made on habit or gut feel |
| Cost profile | Predictable retainer, scaled to SKU count and complexity | Salary, visa, WPS, benefits, management overhead | Lower cost but limited value beyond basic recording | Low one-time cost, limited ongoing value | No direct cost, high hidden risk of margin erosion |
| Continuity if a team member changes | Unaffected — team-based delivery model with documented policy | High risk — process knowledge often held by one person | Depends on continuity of the bookkeeper | N/A — static annual exercise | N/A — undocumented and person-dependent |
The right approach depends on inventory value relative to the overall balance sheet, SKU complexity, whether imports are involved, and whether external stakeholders (a bank, an investor, an auditor) will scrutinise the inventory figure. A short scoping conversation is the right starting point before committing to a full retainer.
| # | Stage & What PNPC Does | What Informal Tracking Misses | Timeline |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Discovery & Scoping — Understanding the stock, the supply chain, and the current process | We ask what a generic bookkeeping engagement never asks: how many SKUs, how many warehouse or storage locations (including any free zone bonded storage), what proportion is imported versus locally sourced, and what valuation method — if any — is currently applied consistently. | Week 1 |
| 2 | Baseline Inventory Review — Reconciling book value against what is actually known to exist | A management review built on an unreconciled inventory ledger inherits every error in it. We review the current book inventory value against the last physical count (or recommend one if none has been performed recently) before any forward advisory work begins. | Week 1–2 |
| 3 | Valuation Policy Documentation — FIFO or weighted average, applied consistently | Generic bookkeeping often applies whichever method is easiest for the current transaction rather than a documented, consistently applied policy. We formalise the valuation method aligned to the applicable accounting standard, so cost of goods sold — and therefore taxable profit under UAE Corporate Tax — is calculated on a defensible, consistent basis. | Week 2 |
| 4 | Landed Cost Model Build — For imported inventory | Freight, customs duty, and clearance agent charges are frequently expensed generally rather than allocated to the specific goods they relate to, distorting product-line margin. We build a landed cost model that allocates these costs to the relevant SKUs or shipments. | Week 2–3 |
| 5 | Slow-Moving & Dead Stock Identification — Ageing analysis by SKU or category | Stock that has not moved in months is easy to overlook when it is buried in a large aggregate inventory figure. We produce a stock ageing report that flags slow-moving and dead stock explicitly, with a recommended write-down where the carrying value no longer reflects realistic recoverable value. | Week 3 |
| 6 | Working Capital Integration — Inventory days fed into the broader cash forecast | Inventory sitting unsold is cash that is not available for payroll, VAT, or Corporate Tax obligations. We calculate inventory turnover and days-inventory-outstanding and feed these into the business's broader cash flow forecast, where one exists, or flag the need to build one. | Week 3–4 |
| 7 | Physical-to-Book Reconciliation Process Design — A repeatable cycle, not a one-off count | An annual count alone leaves eleven months of the year where book and physical inventory can silently diverge. We design a periodic reconciliation cadence (commonly quarterly, or more frequently for high-value or fast-moving categories) with a documented variance investigation process. | Week 4 |
| 8 | Purchasing & Pricing Advisory Review — Data-informed recommendations | Reorder decisions made on habit rather than actual turnover data tend to overstock slow movers and understock fast movers. We review purchasing patterns against actual sales velocity and margin by product line, and flag where pricing does not reflect true landed cost. | Week 4–5 |
| 9 | Management Review & Sign-Off — Findings walked through with leadership | The valuation policy, ageing report, and recommendations are walked through directly with the business owner or finance lead before being finalised — including any recommended write-downs and their Corporate Tax and reported-profit implications. | Week 5 |
| 10 | Ongoing Periodic Reporting — Inventory ageing and turnover tracked on a recurring cycle | Once the baseline is set, PNPC produces the agreed periodic inventory ageing, turnover, and reconciliation reports on a recurring cadence, so the discipline continues rather than being a one-time clean-up. | Monthly or quarterly, ongoing |
| 11 | Corporate Tax & Audit Support — Consistency check at each filing and audit cycle | At each Corporate Tax filing and any statutory audit, PNPC confirms the inventory valuation method has been applied consistently through the period and that cost of goods sold reconciles to the documented policy, reducing the risk of an inconsistency an auditor or the FTA would query. | Annually, and at each filing cycle |
| 12 | Structural Review — Reassessed as the business changes | As SKU count grows, new import routes open, or a new warehouse or free zone storage location is added, the inventory management framework is revisited and extended rather than left to apply to a business structure that no longer matches reality. | As needed, on material business change |
An initial valuation policy, landed cost model, and stock ageing baseline is typically deliverable within 4–5 weeks of engagement, assuming the underlying purchase and sales records are reasonably accessible. Where a physical count is needed as a starting baseline, that is scoped and timed separately before the advisory work is finalised. Ongoing periodic reporting and reconciliation then continue on a retainer cycle.
Current inventory listing with quantities, unit cost, and total valuation by SKU or category
Inventory management system or spreadsheet export currently used to track stock, if any
Most recent physical stock count results, if one has been performed, and the date it was conducted
Prior year audited or reviewed financial statements showing the inventory balance, if available
Purchase orders and supplier invoices for the trailing 6–12 months
Import documentation — bills of lading, customs declarations, and clearance agent invoices — for imported goods
Supplier list with standard payment terms and typical lead times from order to delivery
Freight and logistics cost invoices for the trailing 6–12 months, to support landed cost allocation
Sales data by product line or SKU for the trailing 12 months, including quantity and revenue
Current pricing list and any recent pricing changes by product line
Cost of goods sold as currently recorded in the accounting system, by product line where available
Any known bulk, promotional, or clearance sales that materially affect a normal margin comparison
UAE VAT registration details — Tax Registration Number and assigned filing period — and how import VAT is currently treated in the VAT return
UAE Corporate Tax registration status and confirmation of the accounting standard applied (IFRS or IFRS for SMEs)
Trade licence details showing the licensed trading or manufacturing activity, and confirmation of any free zone bonded storage arrangement
Any customs classification rulings or disputes relevant to imported inventory
List of all warehouse, storage, or free zone bonded facility locations holding inventory
Warehousing or storage cost invoices, to the extent these should be allocated to landed cost
Any insurance coverage details for stored inventory, relevant to risk assessment
Access arrangements for a physical count, if one is to be conducted as part of the engagement
The named person on the client side who owns purchasing decisions and inventory sign-off
Current process, if any, for identifying and writing down slow-moving or obsolete stock
Any prior inventory valuation policy document, even if informal or inconsistently applied
Reporting format and cadence expected by management, a board, or a lender for inventory-related metrics
| Phase | Triggered By | PNPC Guidance | Risk If Ignored |
|---|---|---|---|
| Initial Baseline & Policy Build (Week 1–5) | Engagement start | Discovery, book-to-physical baseline review, valuation policy documentation, landed cost model, and initial ageing analysis, delivered with management sign-off. | Advisory built on an unreconciled inventory ledger or an inconsistently applied valuation method produces recommendations that do not hold up under audit or FTA review. |
| First Periodic Reconciliation (Month 1–3) | First scheduled physical-to-book reconciliation after baseline | Variance between book and physical count investigated and explained — shrinkage, miscounting, or unrecorded movements identified and corrected before they compound. | Without a reconciliation cadence, book and physical inventory can silently diverge for months, distorting both the balance sheet and reported margin. |
| VAT Filing Cycle (Monthly/Quarterly) | FTA-assigned VAT period | Import VAT treatment on inventory reconciled against the filed VAT return, so the reverse charge or import VAT position is correctly reflected each period. | Incorrect import VAT treatment on inventory can misstate the VAT return for the whole filing period, creating exposure to correction and potential FTA query. |
| Corporate Tax Filing Preparation | Approach of financial year end / Corporate Tax filing deadline | Inventory valuation method and cost of goods sold reviewed for consistency with the documented policy before the tax return is prepared, minimising the risk of an inconsistency the FTA queries. | An inconsistently applied valuation method, or unrecognised write-downs, can materially misstate taxable profit and create exposure at filing or in a later FTA review. |
| Slow-Moving Stock Review (Quarterly or as agreed) | Scheduled ageing analysis | Stock ageing report reviewed with management, write-down recommendations discussed and actioned where the carrying value no longer reflects realistic recoverable value. | Stock left at original cost long after it has become genuinely slow-moving or obsolete overstates both inventory value and reported profit until an eventual, often larger, correction. |
| Bank / Investor Reporting Events | Facility renewal, funding round, or board request | Inventory metrics — valuation, turnover, ageing — reformatted and refreshed to what the specific lender, investor, or board expects to see, with PNPC available to walk the numbers through directly. | A stale or unexplained inventory figure presented to a bank or investor damages credibility and invites closer scrutiny of the rest of the balance sheet. |
| Annual Statutory Audit | Year-end audit engagement | Documentation, valuation policy, and reconciliation records prepared in a form the independent auditor can test directly, reducing audit queries and time. | An auditor testing an undocumented or inconsistent inventory process typically raises material queries, extends audit timelines, and can affect the audit opinion. |
| Structural Change (New SKU Line, New Warehouse, New Import Route) | Business expansion or supply chain change | The inventory management framework is extended to reflect the new structure — including landed cost treatment for a new import route or valuation treatment for a new product category. | A framework not updated for a structural change quickly becomes disconnected from how the business actually holds and moves stock. |
What is the difference between inventory accounting and inventory management advisory?
Inventory accounting is the bookkeeping function that records purchases, cost of goods sold, and the closing inventory balance in the general ledger. Inventory management advisory is the broader, forward-looking discipline built on top of that accounting — reviewing whether the valuation method is applied consistently, identifying slow-moving stock, modelling landed cost, and advising management on purchasing and pricing decisions informed by that data. PNPC delivers both, because the advisory layer is only as reliable as the underlying accounting.
Which inventory valuation method should our UAE business use — FIFO or weighted average cost?
Both FIFO and weighted average cost are acceptable methods under IFRS and IFRS for SMEs, and the choice depends on the nature of the business and the goods held. What matters most for UAE Corporate Tax purposes under Federal Decree-Law No. 47 of 2022 is that the chosen method is documented and applied consistently period to period, since taxable income flows from accounting profit prepared under the applicable standard. We recommend the method that best reflects the actual flow of goods for the specific business, then document it as policy.
How does landed cost work for imported inventory?
Landed cost is the total cost of getting an imported item into sellable condition — the supplier invoice price plus freight, insurance, customs duty, and clearance agent charges, allocated to the specific goods or shipment they relate to. Many businesses record these additional costs as a general operating expense rather than allocating them to the relevant inventory, which understates the true cost of goods sold and overstates the apparent margin on imported product lines. We build a landed cost model that allocates these costs properly, so reported margin reflects reality.
What is slow-moving or dead stock, and why does it matter for the balance sheet?
Slow-moving stock is inventory that has not sold within the timeframe the business would normally expect for that category; dead stock is inventory that is effectively unsellable at its carrying value, whether due to obsolescence, damage, or a change in demand. Both matter because accounting standards require inventory to be carried at the lower of cost and net realisable value — stock carried at original cost long after its realistic sale value has fallen overstates both the balance sheet and reported profit until a write-down eventually corrects it.
How often should a physical inventory count be performed?
Most PNPC engagements recommend at least an annual full physical count, aligned with the financial year end for audit purposes, supplemented by more frequent cycle counts — a rolling subset of SKUs counted on a rotating schedule, commonly quarterly or monthly for higher-value or fast-moving categories — so book and physical inventory do not silently diverge for an entire year between counts.
How does inventory affect our UAE VAT position?
VAT under Federal Decree-Law No. 8 of 2017 applies to the purchase of goods domestically at the standard 5% rate, generally recoverable as input VAT for a VAT-registered business making taxable supplies. For imported goods, import VAT is typically accounted for through the reverse charge mechanism or paid at the point of clearance depending on the import route and the registrant's arrangement with the Federal Tax Authority, and must be correctly reflected in the periodic VAT return. Getting the treatment wrong on inventory purchases and imports can misstate an entire filing period's VAT return.
How does inventory valuation affect UAE Corporate Tax?
Under Federal Decree-Law No. 47 of 2022, taxable income is derived from accounting profit, and cost of goods sold — driven directly by the inventory valuation method applied — is a major determinant of that profit for a trading, distribution, retail, or manufacturing business. An inconsistently applied valuation method, or inventory carried at a value that does not reflect a required write-down, can materially misstate taxable profit for a financial year commencing on or after 1 June 2023, when Corporate Tax first became effective.
What is inventory turnover and why does PNPC track it?
Inventory turnover measures how many times stock is sold and replaced over a period, or expressed as days-inventory-outstanding, how many days on average stock sits before it sells. It is one of the clearest indicators of whether cash is being efficiently converted through the stock cycle or is instead accumulating in warehoused goods. We track this by product line or category, not just as a single blended figure, because a healthy overall turnover figure can mask a specific slow-moving category quietly absorbing cash.
Can this engagement help identify shrinkage or stock loss?
Yes. A structured physical-to-book reconciliation process, performed on a regular cycle rather than only annually, is one of the more reliable ways to identify shrinkage — loss through damage, theft, miscounting, or unrecorded movement — early enough to investigate the cause while it is still traceable, rather than discovering an unexplained variance only at year end.
Does this service cover warehouse operations or physical logistics?
No. PNPC's Inventory & Business Management Advisory covers the financial, accounting, and business-decision dimension of inventory — valuation, cash impact, margin analysis, and purchasing/pricing advisory. It does not cover physical warehouse operations, logistics routing, or supply chain execution, which remain the client's own operational function or that of a dedicated logistics provider.
How does PNPC price an inventory and business management advisory engagement?
PNPC charges a fixed, agreed fee for the initial baseline review, valuation policy build, and landed cost model, scoped to the number of SKUs, storage locations, and supply chain complexity, and a separate fixed retainer for ongoing periodic reporting and reconciliation. The exact fee is confirmed in writing before any work begins, and is often bundled with a broader virtual accounting or Virtual CFO retainer for clients who want the full finance function under one engagement.
Can PNPC support an inventory review as part of a due diligence or acquisition process?
Yes. Where a business is being acquired, sold, or brought into a group structure, inventory valuation accuracy and the presence of unrecognised slow-moving or obsolete stock are common areas of dispute or adjustment in a transaction. PNPC can perform a focused inventory review as part of a broader financial due diligence exercise, working alongside our corporate finance team where a formal due diligence engagement is required.
Does PNPC help with inventory across multiple free zones or a mix of free zone and Mainland storage?
Yes. Each storage location's inventory is tracked and valued on a consistent basis first, and then consolidated into a group view for management reporting, with any free zone bonded storage arrangements and their specific customs and VAT implications flagged separately, since these can differ from Mainland storage treatment.
How does this engagement interact with PNPC's Cash Flow & Working Capital Management service?
Inventory is one of the three core components of the working capital cycle, alongside receivables and payables. Inventory turnover and the cash tied up in stock are core inputs into the rolling cash flow forecast built under Cash Flow & Working Capital Management. Businesses that engage both services get a genuinely integrated view — inventory decisions are modelled directly into the cash forecast rather than assessed in isolation.
What accounting or inventory systems does PNPC work with?
We build the valuation policy, landed cost model, and reporting around whatever system the business currently uses — commonly Zoho Inventory, QuickBooks Online, Xero, Tally, or a dedicated ERP/inventory management system for larger operations. We do not require a system migration to take on this engagement; the advisory work is layered on top of the existing data source.
What happens if we discover a large valuation discrepancy during the baseline review?
We document the discrepancy, investigate the likely cause where the evidence allows, and present the finding to management with a clear recommendation — a write-down, a correction to the recording process, or in some cases a more detailed physical recount. We do not quietly absorb a material discrepancy into a routine adjustment without walking management through what was found and why.
Can this service help decide how much stock to hold going into a peak or seasonal period?
Yes. Using historic sales velocity by product line and the actual lead time from purchase order to sellable stock, we help model an appropriate stock level ahead of a known seasonal peak — balancing the risk of a stockout against the cash cost of overstocking ahead of demand that may not fully materialise.
Does PNPC advise on pricing, or only on inventory valuation?
Both, where relevant. Because landed cost and true product-line margin are core outputs of this engagement, we routinely flag where current pricing does not reflect the actual cost of a product once freight, duty, and clearance are properly allocated. Full pricing strategy — competitive positioning, market rate benchmarking — sits closer to a broader business advisory engagement, but the cost-side input we provide is directly actionable for pricing decisions.
How long does the initial inventory baseline and policy build take?
A first valuation policy, landed cost model, and stock ageing baseline is typically deliverable within 4 to 5 weeks of engagement start, assuming purchase, sales, and inventory records are reasonably accessible. Where a physical count is needed first as a reliable starting baseline, that is scoped and timed separately, and the advisory timeline extends accordingly.
Who at PNPC reviews the inventory findings before they go to the client?
Every valuation policy, landed cost model, and write-down recommendation produced under this service is reviewed by a Chartered Accountant on the engagement team before being presented to the client, with specific attention to whether the recommended treatment aligns with the applicable accounting standard and UAE Corporate Tax expectations.
Can PNPC take over inventory management advisory from an outgoing bookkeeper or a previous provider mid-year?
Yes. We review whatever inventory records and prior valuation approach exist, assess whether they are reliable enough to continue from, and either build on the existing process or recommend a baseline reset against a fresh physical count and reconciliation — we are direct with the client about which is genuinely needed rather than quietly inheriting a flawed starting point.
PNPC Dubai vs typical alternatives for inventory & business management advisory
| Dimension | PNPC Global (Dubai) | In-House Inventory Hire | Generic Bookkeeping Firm | Warehouse Management Software Alone |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Valuation and tax alignment | Documented valuation policy reviewed against UAE Corporate Tax and VAT treatment at each filing cycle | Depends entirely on the individual hired — variable and often not UAE-tax-specific | Records inventory but rarely reviews valuation consistency against tax implications proactively | Tracks quantities and cost inputs but has no inherent tax or accounting-standard judgement |
| Landed cost accuracy | Freight, duty, and clearance allocated to specific SKUs or shipments, correcting distorted margin | Depends on hire's costing background | Freight and duty often expensed generally rather than allocated to goods | Can track cost inputs if configured correctly, but requires someone to set up and maintain the allocation logic |
| Slow-moving stock discipline | Periodic ageing analysis with write-down recommendations reviewed by a CA | Yes, if the function is resourced and prioritised for it | Typically only surfaces at year-end audit, if at all | Flags ageing data but provides no accounting or write-down judgement |
| Working capital integration | Inventory metrics fed directly into the broader cash flow forecast where that service is also engaged | Depends on integration with the finance function | Not connected to forward cash flow planning | Not connected to cash flow forecasting unless separately integrated |
| Continuity & accountability | A dedicated PNPC team, backed by a practising CA firm since 1986, not dependent on one individual | Continuity tied to the tenure of a single employee; departure creates a knowledge gap | Variable, depends on account manager continuity at the firm | No accountable person — a tool requires someone in-house to interpret and act on its output |
| Audit and Corporate Tax readiness | Documentation and reconciliation records prepared in a form an auditor or the FTA can test directly | Depends on hire's documentation discipline | Often assembled reactively once the audit or filing deadline is close | Produces data exports but no reviewed policy documentation an auditor would expect |
| Cost profile | Predictable fixed retainer, scaled to SKU count and complexity | Salary, visa, WPS, benefits, and management overhead regardless of month-to-month workload | Lower cost but limited to basic recording, not active management | Subscription cost plus the hidden cost of needing someone in-house to configure and interpret it |
What the PNPC package includes
- 01
Inventory and supply chain diagnostic covering SKU count, storage locations, and current valuation practice
- 02
Documented inventory valuation policy (FIFO or weighted average) aligned to the applicable accounting standard and reviewed for UAE Corporate Tax consistency
- 03
Landed cost model allocating freight, customs duty, and clearance charges to imported inventory
- 04
Periodic stock ageing report identifying slow-moving and dead stock, with write-down recommendations
- 05
Inventory turnover and days-inventory-outstanding tracking by product line or category
- 06
Structured physical-to-book reconciliation process with a documented variance investigation cadence
- 07
Purchasing and pricing advisory informed by actual sales velocity and true landed-cost margin
- 08
Import VAT treatment review for inventory, aligned to the EmaraTax filing cycle
- 09
Integration with PNPC's Cash Flow & Working Capital Management service, where both are engaged, so inventory cash impact feeds the rolling forecast
- 10
Audit-ready documentation package prepared ahead of the annual statutory audit
- 11
Corporate Tax filing consistency check on cost of goods sold and inventory valuation each filing cycle
- 12
Dubai-led coordination with PNPC's India offices where a group structure or cross-border supply chain is involved
- 13
Management reporting pack designed for owners, banks, investors, or a board
- 14
Written engagement letter with scope, assumptions, and fee confirmed before work begins
Talk to PNPC's Dubai team before your next stock count or Corporate Tax filing — inventory that has never been properly valued rarely corrects itself for the better.
Jurisdiction
Free zone, mainland & offshore
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