Gross Margin Return on Investment (GMROI) GMROI (also called GMROII β€” Gross Margin Return on Inventory Investment) measures how effectively a retailer turns inventory into gross profit. It shows the dollars of gross profit earned for every dollar invested in inventory. Why GMROI matters
* Indicates inventory profitability and efficiency.
* Helps compare performance across stores, categories, or time periods.
* Guides purchasing, pricing, and assortment decisions by revealing which SKUs generate the best return on investment.
* Serves as a benchmark for covering operating costsβ€”retailers often target a GMROI significantly above 1; a common rule of thumb is about 3.2 to cover occupancy, labor, and other operating expenses.
How to calculate GMROI GMROI = Gross profit / Average inventory cost Explore More Resources

Steps:
1. Calculate gross profit: Revenue βˆ’ Cost of Goods Sold (COGS).
2. Determine average inventory cost: typically the average of ending inventories over the measurement periods (e.g., months or quarters). Adjust for obsolete or markdown-prone stock where appropriate.
3. Divide gross profit (in dollars) by average inventory cost (in dollars). Example of the formula in numbers:
* If gross profit = $65,000,000 and average inventory cost = $20,000,000, GMROI = 65,000,000 / 20,000,000 = 3.25. Explore More Resources

Interpreting GMROI
* GMROI > 1: Inventory generates more gross profit than its cost.
* GMROI < 1: Inventory is not covering its own cost in gross profit and will struggle to cover other operating expenses.
* Higher GMROI = better return per dollar of inventory investment, but comparisons should be made within the same product class or retail format.
Example comparison Company ABC:
Revenue: $100 million
COGS: $35 million β†’ Gross profit = $65 million
Average inventory cost: $20 million
GMROI = 65 / 20 = 3.25 (strong; above the 3.2 rule of thumb) Company XYZ:
Revenue: $80 million
COGS: $65 million β†’ Gross profit = $15 million
Average inventory cost: $20 million
GMROI = 15 / 20 = 0.75 (weak; likely insufficient to cover SG&A and other costs) Explore More Resources

Practical applications
* Purchasing: Allocate capital to SKUs or categories with higher GMROI.
* Assortment and merchandising: Identify slow movers or low-return items for clearance or delisting.
* Pricing and promotions: Evaluate whether markdowns or promotions improve turnover enough to justify reduced margins.
* Inventory planning: Balance turnover and margin to optimize space and cash flow.
Limitations and considerations
* Comparisons should be contextualized by product type, seasonality, and market segment; luxury goods often have higher margins but lower turnover, affecting GMROI.
* Inventory valuation methods (FIFO, LIFO, weighted average) and timing of counts affect the average inventory figure.
* GMROI focuses on gross profit, not net profit β€” it does not directly account for SG&A, marketing, holding costs, or capital costs.
* One-time markdowns, returns, and obsolescence can skew results; adjust calculations or analysis period as needed.
Ways to improve GMROI
* Increase selling price or improve gross margin where market allows.
* Reduce COGS through better sourcing or negotiation.
* Increase inventory turnover with promotions, assortment optimization, or demand forecasting.
* Reduce average inventory levels while maintaining service levels to customers.
Key takeaways
* GMROI quantifies how well inventory investment converts into gross profit.
* Use GMROI alongside other metrics (turnover, margin, net profit) and benchmark within relevant categories.
* A GMROI significantly above 1 is necessary; many retailers target around 3.2 or higher to cover full operating costs and be profitable.