How accounting could change profitability amid tariffs

As more tariffs take effect on goods imported into the U.S., a specific accounting method could have major implications for how American retailers calculate the impact.
A tariff adds to the cost of an imported item when it’s received and paid for when it crosses a border. While there’s debate over who pays that tariff — the manufacturer, the retailer, the consumer or some combination — the hit will likely show up in retailers’ bottom lines.
But a specific accounting practice, called retail inventory method accounting, or RIM, can make profitability appear stronger than it is in the short term.
“Retail inventory method accounting (RIM) is less responsive to initial product cost changes compared to cost accounting, and can initially overstate profitability,” said Ali Furman, PwC U.S. consumer markets industry leader. “This would normalize once tariffs stabilize, depending on how much of the cost retailers absorb.”
Because RIM uses an average cost-to-retail price ratio across a broad group of items, rather than the actual cost of every item, like in cost accounting, RIM does not entirely capture the immediate impact of rising costs.
The retail method of accounting.
CNBC US source
Nearly a quarter of U.S. retailers use the retail inventory method of accounting, according to PwC. Walmart, Target and Home Depot are among them. All three retailers report quarterly earnings this week, and their results may not fully show how tariffs have cut into their profitability so far.
Take Walmart, the largest U.S. retailer, which will post fiscal second-quarter earnings Thursday.
TD Cowen analyst Oliver Chen estimated about half of Walmart’s quarter will include the impact of levies, as the company brought in inventory at different cost levels before and after new tariff rates took effect. That could temporarily distort gross margin profitability, Chen said.
Walmart’s accounting has in part informed its strategy in recent months as it navigates President Donald Trump‘s unpredictable tariff policy.
A week after Trump’s April 2 announcement of so-called “reciprocal tariffs” on a wide swath of trade partners, Walmart withdrew its guidance for operating income in its first fiscal quarter. However, the company maintained its annual forecast, citing in part the influence of RIM accounting.
Walmart employee Losing Spicer helps transport bikes on Friday, Dec. 8, 2023, in Conroe.
Jason Fochtman | Houston Chronicle | Hearst Newspapers | Getty Images
Then when it reported its fiscal first-quarter earnings in May, Walmart said it would mitigate higher costs as much as possible, but would likely have to increase some prices at the current tariff rates.
In response, Trump wrote on his Truth Social platform that Walmart should “just eat” the tariffs.
Doing so could actually benefit a retailer’s bottom line, at least initially, according to Furman.
“The more costs retailers absorb in retail accounting, the greater the risk of overstating profitability during periods of increasing costs, such as tariff increases,” she said.
Walmart management briefed Trump this spring about the impact its accounting method may have on results in a high-tariff environment, according to a person familiar with the discussion, who asked to remain unnamed while speaking about private conversations.
Still, James Bowie, managing director in EY’s technical accounting advisory group, warned “all of the inventory costing methodologies will be affected in some ways.”
An employee folds towel at a Manhattan retail store on July 15, 2025 in New York City.
Spencer Platt | Getty Images
It typically takes a large, non-fast fashion retailer using RIM roughly two to four quarters for cost volatility to settle and profitability to get closer to its true level, according to PwC. The method could make profitability look higher initially, then lower in a subsequent quarter, before it has time to stabilize.
“It’s kind of like you’ve got a speed boat on the price,” he said. “I can turn pretty quickly, but I’ve got a cruise liner that is carrying all my average of my inventory. It takes a little longer for it to turn and so even though they might ultimately be able to go the same speed, it takes a little bit of time for that one turn to take place.”
While RIM is more likely to lead to a temporary overstating of profitability, it can also wind up understanding profits if tariffs are negotiated lower.
Bowie said if a retailer responds to lower tariff rates by cutting retail prices, under RIM accounting, “it looks like my margin has eroded, but it’s only because I now am waiting for the cost relationship to catch back up, so [it] might look like there’s margin compression even in a period of decreasing tariffs.”
Furman added that PwC is seeing “a clear…
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