<P> Lower of cost or market (LCM or LOCOM) is a conservative approach to valuing and reporting inventory . Normally, ending inventory is stated at historical cost . However, there are times when the original cost of the ending inventory is greater than the net realizable value, and thus the inventory has lost value . If the inventory has decreased in value below historical cost, then its carrying value is reduced and reported on the balance sheet . The criterion for reporting this is the current market value . Any loss resulting from the decline in the value of inventory is charged to "Cost of goods sold" (COGS) if non-material, or "Loss on the reduction of inventory to LCM" if material . </P> <P> The lower of cost or market concept first became part of normal accounting practices in England during the nineteenth century . Lower of cost or market was considered fair because assets were valued on a going - concern basis, rather than the price at which the assets were purchased . During the nineteenth century, lower of cost or market was not common practice for valuation of factory inventory in the United States . The concept was not easy for the Academic Accountants to accept due to its lack of logic . Despite the criticism, lower of cost or market quickly caught on in practice and by the early twentieth century was described as the most commonly accepted method for inventory valuation according to the Report of the Special Committee on Co-operation with Stock Exchanges . Although it lacked accounting logic, lower of cost or market survived because of its conservative approach to valuation and because it addressed opposing principles of cost and value . Its conservatism allowed users to value the inventory at the price for which the inventory could be sold . </P>

Inventory is valued at the lower of cost