ProfitabilityIndustry ContextFriday, April 24, 20264 min read

Inventory Forecasting: Why CFOs are Paying Attention

Retail TouchPointsYesterdayamazonwalmart
Inventory Forecasting: Why CFOs are Paying Attention
Executive Summary

Ecommerce return rates hit 19.3% in 2025 while Middle East conflicts and tariffs drive up costs, forcing CFOs to take control of inventory forecasting from operations teams. Traditional spreadsheet-based forecasting is failing as sellers manage multiple SKUs across Amazon, Walmart, and other marketplaces.

Our Take

Poor inventory forecasting directly hits your P&L through stockouts and overstock discounting, but most sellers still use basic min/max thresholds. Pull your inventory turnover reports by SKU and marketplace -- if turnover is below 6x annually or you're discounting more than 15% of inventory, upgrade your forecasting tools immediately.

What This Means

Margin compression from returns, tariffs, and shipping costs is forcing financial discipline on inventory decisions. Sellers who master demand forecasting across multiple marketplaces will gain competitive advantage as others struggle with cash flow.

Key Takeaways

Check Inventory Performance Index in Amazon Seller Central -- if above 350, you're overstocking and need better demand forecasting to avoid storage fees.

Set up automated reorder points in your inventory management system for top 20% of SKUs by revenue to prevent stockouts during promotional events.

Bottom Line

19.3% return rates plus supply chain chaos means inventory forecasting is now a CFO priority.

Source Lens

Industry Context

Useful background context, but lower-priority than direct platform, community, or operator intelligence.

Impact Level

medium

19.3% return rates plus supply chain chaos means inventory forecasting is now a CFO priority.

Key Stat / Trigger

19.3% of ecommerce sales were returned in 2025

Focus on the operational implication, not just the headline.

Relevant For
SellersBrandsAgencies

Full Coverage

Ecommerce retailers in 2026 are watching their profit margins erode in the face of multiple financial pressures. As escalating conflict in the Middle East disrupts global supply chains and drives oil prices higher, retail leaders are bracing themselves against rising costs across component parts, finished goods and shipping.

Returns are also eating into profits, with the National Retail Federation (NRF) estimating that 19. 3% of ecommerce sales were returned in 2025.

Unpredictable tariffs continue to contribute to bottom-line strain in 2026, not only cutting into profits but throwing a wet blanket over consumer demand as tariff-driven price hikes influence household budgeting priorities. Given that retail prices of imported goods rose seven percentage points from pre-tariff levels — and that U. S.

firms and consumers bore the brunt of the tariff impact in 2025, paying 90% of import tariffs — it’s no surprise that buyers are thinking twice before clicking “order now” on their favorite retailer’s website. Inventory Forecasting in the Spotlight What do softening demand and tightening margin pressures mean for retailers in 2026?

Savvy retail leaders are re-evaluating their ecommerce strategies from top to bottom to identify areas for efficiency gains and cost savings — without compromising the customer experience — and many eyes are on inventory management, specifically forecasting.

Given the capacity of inventory forecasting to impact cash flow, capital allocation and profitability, many ecommerce businesses are optimizing their forecasting tools and processes to shore up their bottom line.

Historically, forecasting was straightforward and intuitive, with the warehouse operations team tasked with getting products listed on the right channels to fulfill orders on time. They used simple minimum and maximum thresholds, supported by spreadsheets and manual adjustments.

This rudimentary approach was sufficient when sales cycles were predictable and channels were limited.

But today, brands run multiple promotional events each year, requiring a precise balancing act to ensure there are enough goods on hand to avoid disappointing customers with stockouts, while avoiding tying up capital and valuable warehouse space with excess stock.

Adding further complexity to the fulfillment process, online retailers are juggling an increasing number of SKUs, channels and marketplaces (e. g.

, Amazon, eBay, Walmart), while managing inventory across a geographically diverse mix of distribution centers, retail locations and third-party fulfillment services, such as Fulfilled by Amazon (FBA) and Walmart Fulfillment Services (WFS).

The High Stakes of Inventory Forecasting In today’s complex ecommerce environment, simple forecasting is no longer enough. Unfortunately, operations leaders often lack the financial expertise, tools and bandwidth to avoid costly inventory mistakes.

As a result, inventory forecasting has shifted from solely an operations concern to a significant capital allocation question, pulling financial leaders, including the Chief Financial Officer (CFO), into the decision-making process.

CFOs are keenly aware that forecasting mistakes show up not just as stockouts or overstocks, but as real hits to gross margin and working capital. Overselling leads to missed sales revenue opportunities (and disgruntled customers); overbuying often requires heavy discounting to clear excess stock.

And the repercussions of these forecasting decisions are felt on the profit and loss (P&L) statement. In fact, profitability swings can frequently be traced back to inventory decisions and a lack of visibility into forecasting workflows. Did the team buy the right products at the right time? Is stock positioned in the right locations to serve demand?

Is too much cash tied up in slow-moving or returned inventory? The answers to these types of inventory questions can determine whether an ecommerce retailer will be cash-rich or cash-strapped for the next season.

Practical Steps to Minimize Risk With so much at stake for the finance, procurement and warehouse teams, optimizing the bottom-line benefits of intelligent forecasting — and avoiding the costly mistakes of getting forecasting wrong — is critical. Ecommerce retailers can take practical steps to mitigate risk and protect margins: Involve finance earlier.

Define forecasting requirements jointly with operations and finance instead of handing off to finance after decisions are made. CFOs can help lead the charge in solving forecasting-related problems. Document the forecasting process.

Conduct an audit of current workflows, including who makes buying decisions, what data they rely on and where vulnerabilities and inefficiencies exist. Consider technology solutions. Evaluate technology based on its ability to model complexity, not just track inventory levels.

Tools must account for seasonality, returns, multiple locations and channel-specific demand. Technology Must-Have: The Financial Decision En

Original Source

This briefing is based on reporting from Retail TouchPoints. Use the original post for full primary-source context.

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