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consignment

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Consignment

Consignment is a process whereby a person gives permission to another party to take care of their property and retains full ownership of the property until the item is sold to the final buyer.[1] It is generally done during auctions, shipping, goods transfer, or putting something up for sale in a consignment store.[2] The owner of the goods pays the third-party a portion of the sale for facilitating the sale. Consignors maintain the rights to their property until the item is sold or abandoned. Many consignment shops and online consignment platforms have a set time limit (usually 60–90 days) at which an item's availability for sale expires. Within the time of contract, reductions of the price are common to promote the sale of the item, but vary by the type of item sold (depending largely on the price point, or whether or not the item can be considered a luxury item).
Consignment stock is stock legally owned by one party but held by another, meaning that the risk and rewards regarding the said stock remain with the first party while the second party is responsible for distribution or retail operations.[3][4]
The verb consign means "to send", and therefore the noun consignment means "sending goods to another person". In the case of retail consignment or sales consignment (often just referred to as a "consignment"), goods are sent to an agent for the purpose of sale. Legal ownership of these goods remains with the sender. The agent sells the goods on behalf of the sender according to instructions. The sender of goods is known as the consignor, and the agent entrusted with the custody and care of the goods is known as the consignee.
Consignment (Latin: consignatio, meaning "securitization" or "document") is a traditional legal and accounting technical term for logistics and business management and describes a special form of delivery of goods.[5]
Generally, three conditions must be met for a good to be considered part of a consignment trade:
The consignment scheme is traditional and still often practiced across the world in many different forms:
.The traditional form of shipping business, where a captain sells and buys on consignment schemes on behalf of another party in a distant port from another nation, is generally no longer possible, due to customs and VAT regulations.
Internationally, this previously common form of international consignment trade is now quite rare. This is because there are major legal, tax-related, and accounting difficulties in conducting cross-border consignment trade. Modern uses of consignment are typically domestic.
In business law and accounting, the concept of consignment trade has particular meaning.
It is important for the lawyer and the bookkeeper to have a clear idea of what consignment trade is, in order to be able to report it correctly, and assert the parties' rights and obligations, even if the concept of consignment trade is not specified in the agreements.
The legal conditions of consignment trade have been clear since ancient times.
Consignment inventory is a stock control model whereby the retailer sells the goods but the ownership remains with the supplier only till the products are sold. The retailer therefore only pays for the products he has sold and he is not required to purchase the goods. Beforehand, the two parties may have sign a consignment agreement with the terms like how long will the unsold goods take before being returned.[6]
A consignor who consigns goods to a consignee transfers only possession, not ownership, of the goods to the consignee. The consignor retains title to the goods. The consignee takes possession of the goods subject to a trust. If the consignee converts the goods to a use not contemplated in the consignment agreement, such as by selling them and keeping the proceeds of the sale for the consignee, the crime of conversion has been committed.
The word consignment comes from the French consigner, meaning "to hand over or transmit", originally from the Latin consignor "to affix a seal", as it was done with official documents just before being sent.
"Consignment shop" is an American term for shops, usually second-hand, that sell used goods for owners (consignors), typically at a lower cost than new goods. Not all second-hand shops are consignment shops, and not all consignment shops are second-hand shops. In consignment shops, it is usually understood that the consignee (the seller) pays the consignor (the person who owns the item) a portion of the proceeds from the sale. Payment is not made until and unless the item sells. Such shops are found around the world. They can be chain stores, like the Buffalo Exchange or individual boutique stores. The consignor retains title to the item and can end the arrangement at any time by requesting its return. A specified time is commonly arranged after which if the item does not sell, the owner is expected to reclaim it (if it is not reclaimed within a specified period, the seller can dispose of the item at discretion).
Merchandise often sold through consignment shops includes antiques, athletic equipment, automobiles, books, clothing (especially children's, maternity, and wedding clothing, which are often not worn out), furniture, firearms, music, musical instruments, tools, paragliders and toys. eBay, drop-off stores and online sellers often use the consignment model of selling. Art galleries, as well, often operate as consignees of the artist.
The consignment process can be further facilitated by the use of vendor managed inventory (VMI) and customer managed inventory (CMI) applications. VMI is a business model that allows the vendor in a vendor-customer relationship to plan and control inventory for the customer, and CMI allows the customer in the relationship to have control of inventory.
Consignment shops differ from charity or thrift shops in which the original owners surrender both physical possession and legal title to the item as a charitable donation, and the seller retains all proceeds from the sale. They also differ from pawn shops in which the original owner can surrender physical possession (but not legal title) of the item in exchange for a loan and then reclaim the item upon repayment of the loan with interest (or else surrender legal title to the item), or alternatively can surrender both physical possession and legal title for an immediate payment; the pawn shop would retain all proceeds from any subsequent sale.
In the UK, the term "consignment" is not used, and consignment shops that sell women's clothing are called "dress agencies". Although the other types of consignment shop exist, there is no general term for them.
A consignor brings their second-hand items in to be reviewed.
After the review, the consignee will return those items deemed unsuitable for resale to the consignor (such as torn or dirty items or items deemed to be fakes, which cannot be sold in some jurisdictions), accept those to be resold, and establish the target resale price, the consignee's share of it, and the length of time the items will be held for sale.
When a consignor's items sell (or in some cases, after the agreed-upon period ends), the consignee takes a share of the profits and pays the consignor the share. Items that are not sold are returned to the consignor (who must retrieve them within a set time or forfeit title to them; in some cases, the consignor may agree ahead of time to allow the consignee to donate them to charity).
When a vendor (consignor) provides goods on consignment to a distributor (consignee) then revenue cannot be recognized when control has transferred. This could occur at the expiration of a specified consignment period, or the sale of an item to an end-consumer. The SEC has provided examples of consignment arrangements in question 2 of SAB Topic 13.A.2 including the following:[7]
Accounting Standards Codification (ASC) 606-10-55-80 (implemented for public companies December 15, 2017) provides three indicators of the presence of consignment arrangement that provides the principles behind the examples that the SEC has outlined. These indicators are as follows:[8]
This list of indicators of a consignment arrangement is not all-inclusive, so companies should also consider other indicators of the transfer of control found in ASC 606-10-25-30.[9]
The owner or supplier must make the good(s) physically available to the sales agent in contracted quantities for trade or consumption. Risk remains solely with the supplier, allowing the agent to concentrate on sales; the agent does not need capital to cover the goods. Such arrangements are typically used by suppliers who lack the time or resources necessary to effect the sale of the good(s). By providing the customer with a stock, the supplier encourages consumption and sales.
The sales agent must receive some form of payment or compensation from the supplier for facilitating the sale. The supplier is usually paid by the sales agent only after the good is sold and has been paid for by the buyer. The agreement typically, though not necessarily, includes a continuous replenishment of supplies for the sales inventories.
Until the good is purchased by the buyer, ownership of the good legally remains with the supplier, despite the sales agent having physical custody of the good. This means that the stock represents a form of credit from the supplier and a debt for the sales agent. The sales agent is contractually obligated to repay the value of this debt, minus the fee for facilitating the sale, to the supplier when the stock is finally sold. In legal disputes or bankruptcies, the good is the supplier's and not the sales agent's property.
in return for the service of consignee, commission is paid to him by Consignor

  • ^ "CONSIGNMENT Definition & Legal Meaning". Black's Law Dictionary (2nd ed.). Retrieved March 10, 2023.
  • ^ "Consignor vs. Consignee". Archived from the original on 8 January 2023. Retrieved 8 January 2023.
  • ^ Valentini and Zavanella (2003). "The consignment stock of inventories: industrial case and performance analysis" (PDF). International Journal of Production Economics. Retrieved 17 August 2018.
  • ^ Battini; et al. (2010). "Consignment Stock Inventory Policy: Methodological Framework and Model". International Journal of Production Research. Retrieved 17 August 2018.
  • ^ "Consignment" . Encyclopædia Britannica (11th ed.). 1911.
  • ^ Chuan Yang, Foo (October 9, 2022). "Practical Techniques to Control Warehouse Inventory". SIPMM Publications. Retrieved 2022-10-11.
  • ^ "Codification of Staff Accounting Bulletins - Topic 13: Revenue Recognition". U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission. Retrieved 2016-03-03.
  • ^ Nielson, Clark; Budd, Cassy (August 17, 2015). "Consignment Arrangements". RevenueHub. Archived from the original on Mar 17, 2016. Retrieved 2016-03-03.
  • ^ Riley, Brett (August 17, 2015). "Determining the Transfer of Control". RevenueHub. Archived from the original on 2016-03-06. Retrieved 2016-03-03.
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