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Stock Movements

Audience: Warehouse managers, operations team, logistics coordinators


Overview

A stock movement is when inventory physically moves from one location to another within the company. The total quantity in the company doesn't change—only the location changes.

Key Point: This is an internal transfer—not a purchase or sale.


What is a Stock Movement?

Definition

Moving inventory from a source location to a destination location.

Examples

  • Moving 100 bottles from Main Warehouse to Retail Store
  • Transferring 50 kg of fragrance oil from Receiving Area to Production Floor
  • Relocating finished goods from Production to Finished Goods Warehouse
  • Moving damaged items from active storage to Quarantine Area

Not a Movement

  • Receiving from supplier → This is a Purchase Receipt
  • Shipping to customer → This is a Sales Shipment
  • Consuming in production → This is an Assembly Transaction
  • Correcting quantity errors → This is a Stock Adjustment

Why Do We Move Stock?

1. Physical Transfer

Scenario: Inventory arrives at receiving dock and needs to be put away in the proper storage location.

Movement:

  • From: Receiving Dock
  • To: Main Warehouse - Zone A - Bin 12
  • Why: Organizing inventory in proper location

2. Replenishment

Scenario: Retail store is running low on a popular item.

Movement:

  • From: Main Warehouse
  • To: Retail Store
  • Why: Restocking retail location

3. Production Staging

Scenario: Components needed for tomorrow's production run.

Movement:

  • From: Main Warehouse
  • To: Production Floor - Staging Area
  • Why: Preparing materials for manufacturing

4. Quarantine

Scenario: Received items need quality inspection before use.

Movement:

  • From: Receiving Dock
  • To: Quarantine Area
  • Why: Quality control process

Then later, after passing inspection:

Movement:

  • From: Quarantine Area
  • To: Main Warehouse
  • Why: Approved for use

5. Damage or Returns

Scenario: Items found to be damaged during routine checks.

Movement:

  • From: Active Storage
  • To: Damaged Goods Area
  • Why: Segregating damaged inventory

How Stock Movements Work

What Gets Recorded

Every stock movement captures:

  1. Source Location - Where the items are coming from
  2. Destination Location - Where the items are going
  3. Items Being Moved - Which items and how many
  4. Units of Measure - What units (pieces, kg, liters)
  5. Reason - Why the movement is happening
  6. Date & Time - When it occurred
  7. Who Authorized It - Which user performed the movement
  8. Reference Number - Optional link to work order, transfer request, etc.

Inventory Impact

Before Movement:

Main Warehouse: 500 bottles
Retail Store: 100 bottles
Total in Company: 600 bottles

Movement: Transfer 50 bottles from Main Warehouse → Retail Store

After Movement:

Main Warehouse: 450 bottles (decreased by 50)
Retail Store: 150 bottles (increased by 50)
Total in Company: 600 bottles (unchanged)

Key Insight: Total company inventory doesn't change—only the distribution across locations changes.


Real-World Example

Scenario: Restocking a Retail Store

Background:

  • Item: Midnight Rose Perfume 100ml
  • Retail store sells 20 bottles per week
  • Currently has only 10 bottles left
  • Main warehouse has 500 bottles

Decision: Transfer 100 bottles to retail store

Stock Movement Transaction:

  • Source Location: Main Warehouse - Zone B - Bin 5
  • Destination Location: Downtown Retail Store - Display Area
  • Item: Midnight Rose Perfume 100ml
  • Quantity: 100 pieces
  • Reason: "Weekly retail replenishment"
  • Reference: "Transfer Request #TR-2024-0456"
  • Performed By: John Smith (Warehouse Manager)
  • Date: October 28, 2024

Result:

  • Main Warehouse: 500 → 400 bottles
  • Retail Store: 10 → 110 bottles
  • Retail store now has 5+ weeks of stock

Multi-Item Movements

You can move multiple items in a single movement transaction.

Example: Production Staging

Scenario: Preparing materials for tomorrow's production of 100 "Luxury Gift Sets"

Stock Movement:

  • Source: Main Warehouse
  • Destination: Production Floor - Staging Area
  • Items:
    • Rose Perfume 50ml: 100 bottles
    • Gift Boxes: 100 pieces
    • Ribbon: 100 meters
    • Greeting Cards: 100 pieces
  • Reason: "Production preparation for Work Order WO-2024-789"

Benefit: Single transaction for the entire movement, easier to track and audit.


Business Rules

Rule 1: Source and Destination Must Be Different

Invalid: Moving items from "Main Warehouse" to "Main Warehouse"

Why: That's not a movement—the location hasn't changed.

Rule 2: Items Must Be Stockable

Invalid: Moving a "Consulting Service" item

Why: Services don't physically exist in locations—they can't be moved.

See: Stockable vs Non-Stockable Items

Rule 3: Source Location Must Have Enough Stock

Scenario: Main Warehouse has 50 bottles

Valid Movement: Move 30 bottles (50 available, moving 30) ✓

Invalid Movement: Move 100 bottles (only 50 available) ✗

Exception: If the item allows negative stock (configurable), then you can move more than available. Inventory goes negative.

See: Negative Stock Policy

Rule 4: Movements Are Immutable

Once created, a movement transaction cannot be modified.

Why?

  • Audit trail integrity
  • Financial reporting accuracy
  • Prevents tampering with history

What if there's a mistake?

  • Create a reversal movement (move the items back)
  • Or create a stock adjustment to correct the error

Common Movement Scenarios

Scenario A: Receiving Putaway

Steps:

  1. Supplier delivery arrives at Receiving Dock
  2. Create Purchase Receipt transaction (increases inventory at Receiving Dock)
  3. Quality inspection completed
  4. Create Stock Movement from Receiving Dock → Proper Storage Location

Scenario B: Cross-Dock

Steps:

  1. Supplier delivery arrives
  2. Immediately needed for customer order (no storage needed)
  3. Create Purchase Receipt at Receiving Dock
  4. Create Stock Movement from Receiving Dock → Shipping Dock
  5. Create Sales Shipment from Shipping Dock

Scenario C: Inter-Warehouse Transfer

Steps:

  1. Warehouse A has excess inventory
  2. Warehouse B is running low
  3. Create Stock Movement from Warehouse A → Warehouse B
  4. Physical transfer happens (truck, courier, etc.)
  5. Both warehouses now have correct inventory levels

Scenario D: Damaged Goods

Steps:

  1. During routine checks, 10 bottles found damaged
  2. Create Stock Movement from Active Storage → Damaged Goods Area
  3. Later, create Stock Adjustment to remove from inventory (if scrapped)
  4. Or create Stock Movement back to Active Storage (if repaired)

Tracking and Reporting

Movement History

For any item, you can view:

  • All movements involving that item
  • Source and destination locations
  • Dates and quantities
  • Who authorized each movement
  • Reasons and references

Location History

For any location, you can view:

  • All items that moved in
  • All items that moved out
  • Current inventory balance
  • Movement trends over time

Audit Trail

Every movement creates a permanent record:

  • Cannot be deleted
  • Cannot be modified
  • Timestamp and user are recorded
  • Supports compliance and auditing

Integration with Other Functions

Finance

Question: Do stock movements affect financial accounts?

Answer: Usually no for simple movements.

Why: Moving items doesn't change their value—they're still owned by the company.

Exception: If movements cross business units or cost centers, finance may require journal entries to reassign ownership.

See: Finance Integration

Warehouse Management

  • Movement transactions drive pick lists (what to move)
  • Update bin locations (where items are stored)
  • Support cycle counting (verify quantities by location)

Common Questions

Q: Can I move items between different companies?

A: No. Stock movements are internal to one company. To transfer between companies, you need:

  • Sales Shipment from Company A (selling to Company B)
  • Purchase Receipt at Company B (buying from Company A)

Q: What if I physically moved items but forgot to record the movement?

A: The system won't know about the physical move. You'll need to:

  1. Create the movement transaction now (backdated if necessary)
  2. Or create Stock Adjustments at both locations to correct quantities

Best Practice: Record movements as they happen to avoid discrepancies.

Q: Can I cancel a movement if I made a mistake?

A: No. Movements are immutable. Instead:

  • Create a reversal movement (move items back)
  • Document the reason for the reversal

Q: Do I need to record every tiny movement?

A: Depends on your business needs:

  • High-value items: Record every movement for audit trail
  • Low-value items: May consolidate movements (e.g., daily batch)
  • Regulated items: Must record every movement for compliance

Talk to your finance and compliance teams.


Best Practices

1. Use Clear Reasons

Poor: "Move" Better: "Weekly retail replenishment per schedule" Best: "Weekly replenishment for Store #45 per Transfer Request TR-2024-0456"

2. Reference Supporting Documents

  • Transfer requests
  • Work orders
  • Picking lists
  • Quality inspection reports

3. Perform Physical Movements Promptly

  • Don't create movement transactions for "future" moves
  • Record movements when they actually happen
  • Delays create inventory discrepancies

4. Verify Quantities

  • Count items before moving
  • Verify at destination
  • Update system immediately

5. Use Staging Areas

  • Don't move items directly from receiving to production
  • Use intermediate locations (staging areas)
  • Makes tracking and auditing easier


Last Updated: 2025-10-28