Pub. 19 2020-2021 Issue 4

N E W J E R S E Y C O A L I T I O N O F A U T O M O T I V E R E T A I L E R S I S S U E 4 | 2 0 2 0 12 new jersey auto retailer Many dealers have struggled to hold on to incoming inventory to meet the market demands with industrywide inven- tory shortages. With the sales f luctuations for new and used car dealerships, it will pose some problems going into year-end tax planning scenarios for those valuing inventory under the Last In First Out ( LIFO ) accounting method. LIFO reserves contain cumulative layers of year-over-year changes in price indexes relating to inf lation. In short, it is de- ferred income. The longer you have been on LIFO, the chances are the greater size of your reserve in relation to your total inventory. It often comes up in transfers of stock and valuations as an adjustment to value ( for the deferred liability ). Historically, if your inventory remains the same and inf lation keeps increas- ing, the reserve will grow. Each addition to LIFO accumu- lates a “layer.” Each layer represents the historical capture of these changes in price cost on specific models. It reduces your inventory cost and increases your cost of goods sold if the cost increases and vice versa for the cost decreases. For example, if a new model is added, it starts with an inf lation index of one. The next year, the cost of these vehicles’ is adjusted by the price in- crease ( or decrease ) put out by manufacturers. A lot of what hap- pens to LIFO reserves has to do with the cost changes and how it relates to inf lation, and for this reason, dealers should watch inf lation very closely. It would also be wise to look at what your manufacturer is doing. If it is restructuring any given model’s cost, the LIFO index will result in a net income pickup. It is an often extremely complex calculation and requires experts and software to calculate. There are very few industries, besides automotive, that value their inventory under LIFO, but it tends to be a large number that do. It represents upward of $1 billion of deferred tax rev- enue. Because of this figure, LIFO always seems to be on the table in congressional tax discussions on raising tax revenue. It also appears to be discussed in tax accounting and lobbying circles across the country. It is a welcome tax deduction for most dealers every year but, like any reserve, will eventually be recaptured. If Congress were to get rid of LIFO, dealers would need to recapture the income, most likely in four years, at higher rates than currently in place ( 39.6% if reverting to pre-Trump era TCJA and about 29.6% in the current rate structure ). As the political landscape changes, it is always possible LIFO will be repealed. Depending on the size of a dealer’s LIFO reserve and the cur- rent inventory’s size, dealers could be in for a sizable income pickup from the prior year. This could have an impact on future tax scenarios for either the dealership or its pass-through owners. LIFO is an accounting method that dealers elect to use. They can choose to elect off as well. First in First Out ( FIFO ) is the other accounting method dealers will use if they are not on LIFO, although FIFO results in higher-cost inventory and no deductions for price increases on older inventory. Is It Time to Elect Off LIFO? BY PHIL CRAFT, CPA AND BRIAN WALLACE, CPA

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