Abstract:
A value-based framework is used for managing inventory. This framework allows firms to set risk and return targets for inventory related capital investments and operational management. A set of possible inventory investments is generated, and a value of possible inventory investments is then computed. The value of possible inventory investments is computed by first decomposing cash flows associated with the inventory investment into a combination of cash flows that can be represented by a portfolio comprised of long and short positions in an underlying asset. Then a valuation methodology is used to compute the value of each long and short position in the portfolio. The values of each long and short position in the portfolio is summed to determine a value of the portfolio. The value of the inventory investment is set equal to the value of the portfolio. An inventory investment with a best value is selected.

Description:
DESCRIPTION  
       Background of the Invention  
         [0001]    1. Field of the Invention  
           [0002]    The present invention generally relates to inventory management and, more particularly, to a value-based framework for inventory management that enables companies to calculate optimal inventory quantities using financial tools usually used to manage a portfolio of financial instruments.  
           [0003]    2. Background Description  
           [0004]    Inventory management is a well-established discipline both in the academic and business world. The methodologies and techniques are also well known. The common objective of widely used methods is typically to minimize inventory related costs or achieve a pre-specified customer serviceability target within a budget. It can also be profit or revenue maximization. In general, one can classify inventory management problems into two categories: deterministic demand, and stochastic demand. In both categories there are well known models that have been developed over the years. For instance, the method of MRP (Material Requirements Planning) is an example of deterministic inventory planning. MRP is used in relatively more complicated manufacturing and distribution systems and therefore, in order to simplify the planning process, future demand is typically assumed to be a known quantity. An example to the second category is the (S,s) inventory model where an order of Q=S−s is placed when inventory position (inventory on hand+on order−demand backlogs) drops to s. Optimality of (S,s) policies were proven by Herbert Scarf in “The Optimality of (s,S) Policies in the Dynamic Inventory Problem”,  Mathematical Methods in the Social Sciences , (Ed.), Arrow, Karlin, Suppes, Stanford University Press, (1959), pp. 196-202, and later by D. L. Iglehart in “The Dynamic Inventory Problem with Unknown Distributions of Demand”,  Management Science,  10, (1964), pp. 429-440, under more general conditions. Since then, (S,s) policies have received a lot of attention from researchers in both industry and academia. Practical implementation of (S,s) policies are facilitated by R. Ehrhardt in “The Power Approximation for Computing (S,s) Inventory Policies”,  Management Science,  25, (1979), pp. 777-786, and more recently by Y. S. Zheng and A. Federgruen in “Finding Optimal (s,S) Policies Is About as Simple as Evaluating a Single Policy”,  Operations Research,  39, 4, (1992), pp. 654-665. A collection of inventory models in advanced distribution systems can be found in L. B. Schwartz,  Multi - Level Production/Inventory Control Systems: Theory and Practice , North-Holland, Amsterdam, (1981). For a more focused analysis of single-product, single-facility inventory systems, see H. L. Lee and S. Nahmias, “Single-Product, Single-Location Models”,  Logistics of Production and Inventory, Handbooks in Operations Research and Management Science , S. C. Graves, H. G. Rinnooy Kan, and P. H. Zipkin (Eds.), vol. 4, North-Holland, Amsterdam, (1993).  
           [0005]    Well established inventory replenishment methods such as the (S,s) inventory model are widely used across industries, most typically for retail, wholesale and manufacturing environments. The general focus of these methods is to calculate optimal inventory levels so as to meet customer serviceability objectives and/or financial objectives such as maximizing profit or revenue or minimizing cost. or revenue or minimizing cost.  
           [0006]    Inventory management is perceived to be a different problem than financial risk management in company practice today. However, one can draw a parallel between inventory management and asset portfolio management and, using this parallel, one can put inventory management into a financial management perspective.  
         SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION  
         [0007]    It is therefore an object of the present invention to enable firms to use existing financial asset portfolio management tools to manage their inventory.  
           [0008]    This invention enables companies to calculate optimal inventory quantities using a technology that already exists in the field of finance. It expresses a large class of inventory problems as a combination of long and short positions and put and call options on an asset. In doing so, it opens the door for using financial tools that are available to manage portfolios of these financial instruments.  
           [0009]    According to the invention, firms can set risk and return targets for inventory related capital investments and for operational management of their inventories. This allows a firm to put its inventory management within the framework of its quarterly, annual or long term financial objectives. As a result of this methodology, firms can position themselves more accurately vis-a-vie their financial goals. Because this will reduce uncertainty of achieving financial goals, it will positively impact the market value of a firm. This invention enables firms to use well established portfolio management tools that are developed in finance industry in managing their inventory. Namely, they can calculate optimal inventory quantities that can achieve their revenue (profit) targets with an acceptable revenue (profit) risk. Alternatively, target. 
       
    
    
     BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS  
       [0010]    The foregoing and other objects, aspects and advantages will be better understood from the following detailed description of a preferred embodiment of the invention with reference to the drawings, in which:  
         [0011]    [0011]FIG. 1 is an illustration of a computer system architecture on which the invention may be implemented; and  
         [0012]    [0012]FIG. 2 is a flow diagram showing the process of calculating optimal inventory for a cost minimization problem with service constraints. 
     
    
     DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF A PREFERRED EMBODIMENT OF THE INVENTION  
     Problem Formulation  
       [0013]    We will look at a simple tradeoff that typically appears in many inventory problems. We will formulate the problem and illustrate that it can be modeled as an options portfolio problem. Then, we will illustrate the benefit of the portfolio approach in an example.  
         [0014]    Assume there are n products. Subscript i denotes a product (or an asset). We will use the following notation:  
         [0015]    D i : Demand during the Period, for product i (price of asset i at the end of the period).  
         [0016]    Q i : Supply quantity for product i (both put and call option strike price for asset i).  
         [0017]    h i : Holding cost for inventory at the end of the period (number of asset i based put options purchased).  
         [0018]    b i : Backlogging cost of demand at the end of the period (number of asset i based call options purchased).  
         [0019]    p i : Selling price for product i.  
         [0020]    c i : Purchase price for product i.  
         [0021]    s i : Salvage value for unsold product i.  
         [0022]    Q, h, b: Vectors of Q i &#39;s, h i &#39;s, b i &#39;s, respectively (i=1, . . . ,n).  
         [0023]    C i (x): Cost of supplying x units of product i at the end of period (combined value of h i  type i put options and b i  type i call options with strike price x at the end of the period).  
         [0024]    EC i (x): Expected value of C i (x).  
         [0025]    σ: Target inventory risk or standard deviation of total inventory cost.  
         [0026]    β: Target cost of inventory or expected value of total inventory cost.  
         [0027]    For real numbers x and y, we define (x−y) + =max(0, x−y). The expected cost of holding a supply of Q i  for product i is 
           EC   i ( Q   i )= b   i   E ( D   i   −Q   i ) +   +h   i   E ( Q   i   −D   i ) +   (1) 
         [0028]    The objective from typical inventory management point of view would be solve the following problem: 
         Min Q Σ i   EC   i ( Q   i ).  (2) 
         [0029]    Problem (2) refers to calculating supply quantity vector Q that minimizes the expected cost of backlogging and inventory. There can be different variations of this problem. Below are some examples. 
         Min Q Σ i   h   i   E ( Q   i   −D   i ) +  subject to Prob( D   i   &lt;Q   i )&gt; p   i  for all i=1,2, . . . , n.  (2.a) 
         Min Q Σ i   h   i   E ( Q   i   −D   i ) +  subject to Σ i Prob( D   i   &lt;Q   i )/ n&gt;p.   (2.b) 
         Max Q Σ i Prob( D   i   &lt;Q   i ) subject to Σ i   h   i   E ( Q   i   −D   i ) +   &lt;B.   (2.c) 
         [0030]    In these variations “Prob” means probability. Problem (2.a) refers to calculating quantity vector Q that minimizes cost of inventory so as to satisfy demand with no less than a certain probability for each product. Problem (2.b) has the same objective so as to achieve a certain average customer service level for all products. Problem (2.c) maximizes average customer service within a budget constraint.  
         [0031]    Now, we will express these problems as a combination of put and call options. A call option gives its owner the right to buy an asset at a pre-specified price. A put option gives its owner the right to sell an asset at a pre-specified price. These options have a last exercise date beyond which they are worthless and therefore require the owners to exercise their rights that they are entitled to before this date. It is optional to exercise the right and there is no penalty for not exercising.  
         [0032]    Let S be the pre-specified strike price of an option (strike price). Let P be the price of the underlying asset at a future point in time. Here, P is a random variable, and therefore the value of the option is a random variable given by  
         [0033]    (P−S) +  for call options, and  
         [0034]    (S−P) +  for put options.  
         [0035]    Notice that equation (1) consists of similar terms. Shortage quantity (D i −Q i ) +  corresponds to the value of a call option at a strike price of Q i  and asset price of D i . Similarly, inventory quantity (Q i −D i ) +  corresponds to a put option at a strike price of Q i  and asset price of D i . Therefore, equation (1) can be seen as Notice that equation (1) consists of similar terms. Shortage quantity (D i −Q i ) +  corresponds to the value of a call option at a strike price of Q i  and asset price of D i . Similarly, inventory quantity (Q i −D i ) +  corresponds to a put option at a strike price of Q i  and asset price of D i . Therefore, equation (1) can be seen as the total expected value of a portfolio of put and call options. Notice that problem (2) is equivalent to the following problem: 
         Max Q −Σ i   b   i   E ( D   i   −Q   i ) + −Σ i   h   i   E ( Q   i   −D   i ) + .  (3) 
         [0036]    This problem can be interpreted as a portfolio optimization problem in finance. The objective here is to determine the best strike prices (Q i ) that maximizes the expected value of a portfolio of put and call options given that we have b i  call options and h i  put options for asset i in the portfolio.  
         [0037]    Notice that the term Prob(D i &lt;Q i ) in financial context means the probability that a call option of strike price Q i  will expire worthless, or a put option of strike price Q i  will be exercised. Therefore, Σ i Prob(D i &lt;Q i )/n can be taken as a measure of portfolio risk because it is the probability that put options will be exercised (i.e., claimed on the portfolio).  
         [0038]    We will give another example. The profit function in the Newsboy problem, which is well known in inventory control theory (see Herbert Scarf, supra, page 297), is given by 
           P=p ( D− ( D−Q ) + )+ s ( Q−D ) +   −cQ.   (4) 
         [0039]    The first term in the equation is the total revenue (where p is price per item) when the total demand is D units. The second term is the total salvage value from unsold inventory (where s is salvage value per item), and the last term is the total purchase cost of Q items (where c is the price of an item). position on an asset, (p−c) units of short position on a call option of strike price Q, and (c−s) units of short position on a put option of strike price Q.  
         [0040]    Typically, there are multiple products, and therefore the problem to solve is 
         Max Q Σ i   P   i ( Q   i )=Σ i (( p   i   −c   i ) D   i −( p   i−c   i )( D   i   −Q   i ) + −( c   i   −s   i )( Q   i   −D   i ) + ).  (5) 
         [0041]    This is equivalent to maximizing the value of a portfolio that has a covered call and a put on each of the assets i=1,2, . . . , n. The objective is to calculate the best set of strike prices (Q i ) that maximizes expected value of the portfolio given that the portfolio should have (p i −c i ) units of covered calls and (c−s) units of short position on puts for asset i.  
         [0042]    Because optimizing a portfolio of financial instruments such as assets and derivatives has been well established practice in finance and because there are tools available for this purpose, these tools can also be used to optimize inventory problems using our conversion methodology.  
         [0043]    This approach can be applied to all inventory problems where individual terms in the objective function(s) and constraint(s) can be expressed as asset or derivative values.  
         [0044]    Table 1 shows a small example that uses Monte Carlo approach to calculate the inventory quantities that maximizes expected profit. Because this is an illustration, sample size is only 30. The same model can be used with a large sample size to make Monte Carlo simulation results more accurate in practice. The example has ten products with different prices, costs and salvage values as well as different demand distributions. Optimal inventory quantities as well as profit associated with the demand sample shown in the table are calculated.  
                                                                                                                             TABLE 1                       Illustration of Monte Carlo approach in calculating optimal quantities       and expected profit in multi-product inventory management problem.                                Product   1   2   3   4   5   6   7   8   9   10               Price (p)   $10.00   $15.00   $20.00   $25.00   $30.00   $35.00   $40.00   $45.00   $50.00   $55.00       Profit Margin   10%   12%   14%   16%   18%   20%   22%   24%   26%   28%       Cost (c)   $9.00   $13.20   $17.20   $21.00   $24.60   $28.00   $31.20   $34.20   $37.00   $39.60       Salvage (s)   $4.50   $6.60   $8.60   $10.50   $12.30   $14.00   $15.60   $17.10   $18.50   $19.80       Demand mean   400   400   300   300   250   250   200   200   200   200       Demand Stdev   40   50   45   53   50   56   50   55   60   65       Optimal_quantity   364   360   269   269   225   226   182   184   187   190       Mean_profit   $12,043       Stdev_profit   $3,525       CV_profit   29.27%                        sample size               30   Demand            Total Demand   Sample   1   2   3   4   5   6   7   8   9   10               3,213   1   0   7   0   495   0   1,679   0   0   0   1,032       7,438   2   0   164   0   127   368   0   0   1,066   1,559   4,154       4,142   3   0   194   0   0   0   698   0   76   0   3,175       2,028   4   0   0   0   342   0   1,465   0   221   0   0       2,441   5   0   0   0   0   301   0   1,624   0   516   0       1,942   6   0   0   0   0   0   0   0   89   1,720   134       4,302   7   0   0   0   293   0   2,497   0   0   1,512   0       210   8   0   0   0   6   0   204   0   0   0   0       348   9   0   0   0   87   0   0   0   261   0   0       754   10   0   205   0   169   379   0   0   0   0   0       4,286   11   0   607   0   484   531   0   0   0   0   2,666       2,390   12   0   0   0   0   0   0   1,721   669   0   0       1,784   13   0   0   0   0   0   0   0   0   1,784   0       4,180   14   0   0   0   258   0   1,117   150   0   2,656   0       4,278   15   0   0   0   0   0   0   1,106   2,185   988   0       8,297   16   0   0   0   0   0   0   1,888   1,923   1,744   2,742       4,395   17   0   0   0   0   0   0   1,635   229   369   2,163       1,618   18   0   424   0   0   0   0   1,124   0   69   0       3,625   19   0   205   103   0   0   0   538   904   0   1,874       2,282   20   0   165   0   478   0   0   0   0   1,639   0       2,705   21   0   0   0   0   0   0   0   0   987   1,718       4,856   22   0   0   0   505   656   1,159   886   0   355   1,295       4,954   23   0   0   76   343   125   684   0   202   0   3,525       552   24   0   133   0   420   0   0   0   0   0   0       1,571   25   0   0   0   0   0   0   0   0   1,318   253       448   26   0   0   169   279   0   0   0   0   0   0       2,411   27   0   94   0   0   352   300   0   0   1,665   0       4,294   28   168   0   0   629   0   1,499   0   1,141   856   0       860   29   0   0   0   0   0   0   0   860   0   0       1,222   30   0   0   0   0   0   0   0   0   1,222   0                  
 
       Implementation  
       [0045]    This method can be implemented for all problems mentioned above (see Problems 2, 2.a,b,c, 5) or similar versions not specifically mentioned here. A computer system illustrated in FIG. 1 or a similar system can be used to implement this methodology. In the specific system illustrated, a server  101  serves as the hub of a computer system that includes clients  102   1  to  102   6  connected via an intranet  103 , wireless clients  104   1  to  104   4 , and multiple other clients of various types  105   1  to  105   5  connected via the Internet  106 . The server  101  is also connected to a storage system  107  which provides storage for the computer system.  
         [0046]    [0046]FIG. 2 shows a flow diagram that can be used as a general approach to solve such problems. The data  200  (stored for example in storage system  107 ) includes  
         [0047]    demand forecast: probability distribution of demand  
         [0048]    market price for products  
         [0049]    manufacturing or purchasing cost for products  
         [0050]    holding and backlogging cost for products  
         [0051]    inventory quantities for products  
         [0052]    The process begins by updating the data for each product in function block  201 . Then, the inventory problem is converted to a financial portfolio problem in function block  202 . Portfolio optimization is started in function block  203 . A grid of service targets (as set out in Problems 2.a, 2.b) is generated in function block  204 . A processing loop is then entered which begins with function block  205  where the next service target is accessed. In function block  206 , Monte Carlo technique or other methods are used to calculate the strike prices (inventory quantities) that minimize cost for the given service or maximize service for the given Problems 2, 2.a, 2.b, 2.c, or 5. The results (quantities, service, cost) are recorded in function block  207 . A determination is made in decision block  208  as to whether all service targets have been covered. If not, the process loops back to function block  205  to access the next service target. When all service targets are serviced, tables and graphs of the collection of calculated values (quantities, service, cost) is generated in function block  209 .  
         [0053]    While the invention has been described in terms of a single preferred embodiment, those skilled in the art will recognize that the invention can be practiced with modification within the spirit and scope of the appended claims.