Consignment stock
Inventory held at the buyer's site but owned by the supplier until it is actually consumed or sold.
Definici贸n
Under a consignment-stock arrangement the supplier places goods at the buyer's premises but retains ownership until they are drawn down, at which point title transfers and payment falls due. It improves availability and frees the buyer's working capital, while raising questions of risk, insurance and retention of title.
Ejemplo
A hospital keeps consignment implants on-site and is invoiced only for each one used in surgery.
Por qu茅 es un riesgo para la empresa
For the buyer, consignment stock creates questions of loss, damage and insurance responsibility while goods are on-site but unowned. If the supplier becomes insolvent, the goods remain the supplier's property and may be recovered by an administrator, disrupting supply. For the supplier, accurate consumption tracking is essential to avoid billing errors or undetected stock shrinkage.
C贸mo gestionarlo
- Define clearly in the contract who bears the risk of loss or damage while goods are on the buyer's premises.
- Agree on the consumption-reporting method and frequency so invoicing is accurate and timely.
- Conduct regular stock counts and reconcile them with reported consumption to detect shrinkage or reporting errors.
- Check whether the supplier's retention of title is validly registered and enforceable in the relevant jurisdiction.
- Include insolvency provisions so both parties know what happens to on-site stock if either side becomes insolvent.
Referencias legales
Salvo indicaci贸n en contrario, las referencias remiten al derecho neerland茅s (Burgerlijk Wetboek, el C贸digo Civil neerland茅s); los instrumentos de la UE como el RGPD se aplican en toda la UE. Se trata de informaci贸n general, no de asesoramiento legal. Otras jurisdicciones tratan estos conceptos de forma distinta. Verifique el texto vigente y su situaci贸n con un abogado cualificado.
Preguntas frecuentes
Preguntas comunes sobre este t茅rmino.