Calculator Form
Example Data Table
| Item | Quantity | Purchase Cost | Current Price | Damage % | Tax % | Fee % | Storage Cost |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Copper Wire Roll | 250 | 4.25 | 5.10 | 2 | 6 | 3 | 25 |
| LED Driver | 80 | 12.50 | 15.75 | 1 | 5 | 2.5 | 18 |
| Breaker Unit | 45 | 22.00 | 24.40 | 0 | 7 | 3 | 12 |
Formula Used
Usable Quantity = Quantity × (1 − Damage Percentage ÷ 100)
Book Value = Quantity × Purchase Cost Per Unit × Exchange Rate
Gross Current Value = Usable Quantity × Current Market Price × Exchange Rate
Tax Amount = Gross Current Value × Tax Rate ÷ 100
Selling Fee = Gross Current Value × Selling Fee Rate ÷ 100
Net Current Value = Gross Current Value − Tax Amount − Selling Fee − Storage Cost
Gain or Loss = Net Current Value − Book Value
Return on Stock = Gain or Loss ÷ Book Value × 100
How to Use This Calculator
Enter the electrical stock item name first. Add the quantity currently available. Enter the original purchase cost per unit. Then add the present market price per unit. Include damaged stock percentage when some units cannot be sold. Add tax, selling fee, storage cost, and exchange rate. Press the calculate button. The result appears above the form. Use the CSV button for spreadsheet records. Use the PDF button for reports or purchase reviews.
Current Stock Value Guide
Why Stock Value Matters
Electrical businesses often hold many fast moving parts. These include cables, breakers, relays, switches, meters, panels, and fittings. Each item may change in value after purchase. Copper prices may rise. Old models may fall. Storage may also reduce profit. A current stock value calculator helps you estimate the real worth of inventory today.
Better Inventory Decisions
This tool compares book value with current market value. Book value is based on the purchase cost. Current value is based on present selling price. The difference shows gain or loss. This helps managers decide whether to sell, hold, reorder, or discount stock. It also supports valuation before audits.
Useful Electrical Inputs
The calculator includes electrical inventory factors. Quantity shows total stock. Purchase cost records the original unit price. Current price reflects the expected market price. Damage percentage removes broken, obsolete, or unsellable pieces. Tax and selling fee reduce the final return. Storage cost adds warehouse impact. Exchange rate helps imported items.
Net Value Focus
Gross value can look strong. Net value is more useful. It removes charges that reduce actual return. This is important for wholesalers, repair shops, contractors, and online sellers. A stock item may show profit before fees. It may show lower profit after taxes, damage, and holding cost.
Planning and Reporting
Use the result before placing new orders. Compare several items. Find slow stock with weak returns. Review high value items often. Electrical stock can tie up cash quickly. Better valuation supports pricing, buying, and warehouse control.
Practical Advice
Update the current market price often. Use supplier quotes or recent sale prices. Keep damage estimates realistic. Add all selling costs. Include storage when items stay in stock for long periods. Export the result when reports are needed. This creates a clear record for later review.
FAQs
What is current stock value?
Current stock value is the estimated worth of inventory today. It uses current selling price, usable quantity, taxes, fees, damage, and holding costs.
Can this calculator be used for electrical stock?
Yes. It works well for cables, switches, breakers, panels, meters, lamps, connectors, tools, and other electrical inventory items.
What is book value?
Book value is the original cost of stock. It is usually based on quantity multiplied by purchase cost per unit.
Why include damaged stock percentage?
Damaged stock lowers usable quantity. It helps avoid overvaluing items that cannot be sold, installed, or returned.
What does net current value mean?
Net current value is the value left after removing taxes, selling fees, and storage cost from gross current value.
How is return on stock calculated?
Return on stock is calculated by dividing gain or loss by book value. The result is then multiplied by 100.
Can I use another currency?
Yes. Enter your preferred currency symbol. You can also use the exchange rate field for imported electrical stock.
Why download CSV or PDF?
CSV is useful for spreadsheets and inventory systems. PDF is helpful for printable reports, audits, and management reviews.