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A transfer price is a price used to valuate the transfer of a good or service between

independently operating units of an organization. You can use a transfer price to


valuate goods movements between profit centers. Activities cannot be valuated with
transfer prices at this point.

The SAP R/3 System supports three types of transfer prices that represent the three
primary views of goods movements within a corporate group.

In the legal view, transfer prices represent the value (sales price) of goods or services
transferred between legally independent member companies in the group. These
values are reflected in the individual financial statements of those companies.

Transfer prices according to the group view represent the costs of goods


manufactured, which can be used for the allocation of goods and services within a
group of companies. For these prices, group-internal profits are eliminated from the
prices of the legal view.

Transfer prices according to the profit center represent valuation approaches


(management approaches) which are agreed between different areas of responsibility
(profit centers) and used to determine their internal profitability.

The above graphic shows the three different views:


...

       1.      Group view, in which business transactions within the group are represented using group-wide
cost rates
       2.      Profit center view, in which business transactions between profit centers are valuated using
managerial or controlling rates
       3.      Legal
view, in which business transactions between affiliated companies are valuated using
external sales prices

The following concepts are also of importance for an understanding of transfer pricing
in the R/3 System:

The three different views of business transactions - those of the individual company,
the group as a whole and the profit center - are referred to as valuations or valuation
views.

The R/3 System, each valuation view always uses its own currency type. The
combination of currency type and valuation view is referred to as the valuation
approach (see also Consistency of the Valuation Settings in Different Applications:
Currency and Valuation Profile).

In a currency and valuation profile, you can specify up to three valuation


approaches that you want to store in parallel in your system. This ensures that these
approaches are updated consistently throughout all the affected application
components (see also Consistency of the Valuation Settings in Different Applications:
Currency and Valuation Profile ).

Except in Profit Center Accounting, transfer prices from the legal view must be stored
in all application components. Storing up to two additional valuation approaches for
material inventories and goods movements in parallel is referred to as parallel
valuation.

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