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On the Cost of Capital in Inventory Models: The Case of Deterministic Demand



Author(s): Alejandro Serrano

Source:
    Journal:Foundations and Trends® in Technology, Information and Operations Management
    ISSN Print:1571-9545,  ISSN Online:1571-9533
    Publisher:Now Publishers
    Volume 10 Number 3-4,
Pages: 22 (338-357)
DOI: 10.1561/0200000060
Keywords: Supplier financing;Supply chain finance;Cost of capital

Abstract:

In the operations management literature, the financial risk in an inventory model is usually assumed to be captured by the (constant) weighted average cost of capital (WACC) of the firm. This assumption is, at best, an approximation, since this cost depends on the risk of the cash flows, which, in turn, depends on the inventory policy. This paper explores what the right cost of capital should be in an inventory model with deterministic demand. We find that, in contrast to other existing models, risk is not in general a monotone function of inventory. Also, a rate close to the risk-free rate, which typically deviates significantly from the WACC, should be used to value inventory-related investments when the inventory cost function is dominated by holding cost for large order quantities, even if investments are subject to other sources of financial variability.