
Valuated Project Stock: Scenario
Prerequisites
Project Definition
When creating a project, the Valuated project stock indicator must be set in the Project stock section in the project definition.
Material
In the material master, the Individual/Collective indicator on the MRP 4 tab page must be set to Individual (1) or Individual/Collective ( ).
A valuation class for project stock must be entered in the relevant Accounting tab page. If you do not maintain a specific valuation class for the project stock, the system uses the valuation class from plant stock.
Cost Elements for Stock Accounts
In the stock bearing WBS elements, you can post statistical actual costs for the stock movements in and out to the stock accounts in Financial Accounting. You can then use the Project Information System to display the funds committed as stock.
In order for the stock lines from financial accounting documents to be posted as statistical actual costs in CO/PS, statistical cost elements of cost element type 90 for each of the relevant stock accounts have to be created.
Process Flow
The description which follows only covers the special features for valuated individual stock. For a general description of the logistical processes, see
Logistical Processing When Working with Project Stock.Planning
From the network costing point of view, there are two assignments for a material component in valuated project stock:
You can separate responsibilities for network activities and material components by entering different WBS assignments for them.
Looking at the component from the procurement point of view, it may be a good idea to undertake a cost component split (for example, in the form of a unit costing) if you are producing the component internally. If you are procuring externally, you may want to apportion the procurement costs over time (by, for instance, maintaining an invoicing plan). When the user (network activity, production order) draws the material, the procurement element is credited with the costs. In the period-related view of committed funds, the incurrence of costs is kept chronologically separate from forwarding of costs.
Looking at the component from the use point of view, it is the costs that are of interest; when these are incurred they are displayed, evaluated using a consumption cost element. In such cases, there is no difference between this and direct external procurement/general production, because the user is debited with the material price only.

The diagram below shows the funds commitments in plan.

Note the following points relating to planning of components managed in individual stock:
The following planned values are recorded directly in the component:
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Planned debits for procurement under an inventory cost element-
Planned credits for issues under an inventory cost elementIf there is an invoicing plan for the component, the cost debits are evaluated as of the invoice dates and the credits as for the requirement dates. The planned credits are eliminated in the hierarchy reports in the costs information system as for internal business volume. The planned values for the components are not relevant for MRP In the case of non-stock components, the planned procurement payment flow - possibly based on the invoicing plan- is written to the component. The credit arising from the issue has no payment effect.

Planned cost values in the network component and planned payments in network activities and components are only generated using asynchronous network costing.
Valuated and non-valuated project stocks behave in the same way with regard to the MRP planning run.
In-House Production
The production orders are credited when the orders are delivered to stock. Higher-level production orders are debited as appropriate when semi-finished goods are taken from project stock. If this is the first delivery to project stock for that item, the system calculates a price in line with the price control data and values the quantity delivered accordingly. The goods issue is always valuated at the price in the individual stock segment.
External Procurement
The cost commitment arising from the purchase requisition/purchase order appears in the WBS element under a stock cost element.

For technical reasons, purchase requisitions created by the MRP planning run do not create cost commitments or payment obligations in the WBS elements to which they are assigned. This only happens when the purchase requisitions are converted into purchase orders.
The goods receipt is to project stock and is posted to the stock accounts in Financial Accounting.
When the invoice is received, an additional debit is entered for the material still in stock; or the value is posted to the price difference accounts, depending on price control .
Assembly in Networks
When you begin assembly using networks, goods are issued for the reservations. This leads to a reduction in stock and costs of consumption being posted to the network activity.
If you post a goods receipt to project stock using an assembly item in the network , the price of the component is credited to the relevant network activity and the stock value increases.
Delivery to Customer
When the goods are delivered to the customer, goods are issued for the reservations. Project stock is credited and appropriate cost postings take place to the relevant network activities.
Period-end closing
Commercially speaking, period-end closing for production orders is the same as for normal make-to-stock production.
The production orders have a settlement rule (received when planned orders are converted) where the project stock is entered as the settlement receiver.
You can carry out the following closing operations in the production orders:
The balance remaining after actual costs incurred and the delivery create have both been posted is charged to stock or the price different account, depending on the price control data specified. In addition, variances in the production orders are passed on to Profitability Analysis (CO-PA).

Profitability Analysis in WBS elements does not include the values from production orders assigned to the elements.