Skip to main content
cancel
Showing results for 
Search instead for 
Did you mean: 

The Power BI Data Visualization World Championships is back! Get ahead of the game and start preparing now! Learn more

Reply
redhol
Frequent Visitor

Weekly Inventory through Inventory movements column

Hi All,

 

Might be an easy one but I have yet to figure it. I am trying to display closing stock for each week for some inventory analysis that I am working on - I am struggling to get this value as I do not have a "Stock on Date" field our ERP but I do have a ledger of all our stock movements (sales, delvieries, returns etc. displayed as +1 / -1 and so on.

 

What I want to be able to do is have a table split by week and the table display the position up to the close of that week, example in the picture.

WSSI.png

The problem I have at the moment is that my formula is calculating that week only and not the value up to that date (or week end in this case).

 

Hope this makes sense and any help is appreciated!

 

1 ACCEPTED SOLUTION

Hi @redhol,

 

The cause could be the [Date] in the dates. Please try the formula below.

Rolling Stock =
CALCULATE (
    SUM ( HR_StockMovements[MovementQty] ),
    FILTER (
        ALL ( 'Calculations'[Date]),
        'Calculations'[Date] <= MAX ( 'Calculations'[Date] )
    )
)
Rolling Stock =
CALCULATE (
    SUM ( HR_StockMovements[MovementQty] ),
    FILTER (
        ALL ( 'Calculations'[Date].[Date] ),
        'Calculations'[Date].[Date] <= MAX ( 'Calculations'[Date].[Date] )
    )
)

Best Regards,

Dale

Community Support Team _ Dale
If this post helps, then please consider Accept it as the solution to help the other members find it more quickly.

View solution in original post

4 REPLIES 4
v-jiascu-msft
Microsoft Employee
Microsoft Employee

Hi @redhol,

 

Can you share a sample?

What's your formula for now? 

Are the 1 and 2 in the snapshot weeks?

 

Best Regards,

Dale

Community Support Team _ Dale
If this post helps, then please consider Accept it as the solution to help the other members find it more quickly.

Hi Dale,

 

THanks for the reply - data for stock movements is shown below

 

Sample.pngAnd current formula is

 

Rolling Stock =
CALCULATE(
Sum(HR_StockMovements[MovementQty]),
Filter(
ALL('Calculations'[Date].[Date]),
'Calculations'[Date].[Date] <= MAX('Calculations'[Date].[Date])
)
)

 

The date formulas are in a seperate table as I have a few different tables that the dashboard is pulling from. 

 

And yes the 1 and 2 are weeks in the snapshot.

 

Many Thanks,

Hi @redhol,

 

The cause could be the [Date] in the dates. Please try the formula below.

Rolling Stock =
CALCULATE (
    SUM ( HR_StockMovements[MovementQty] ),
    FILTER (
        ALL ( 'Calculations'[Date]),
        'Calculations'[Date] <= MAX ( 'Calculations'[Date] )
    )
)
Rolling Stock =
CALCULATE (
    SUM ( HR_StockMovements[MovementQty] ),
    FILTER (
        ALL ( 'Calculations'[Date].[Date] ),
        'Calculations'[Date].[Date] <= MAX ( 'Calculations'[Date].[Date] )
    )
)

Best Regards,

Dale

Community Support Team _ Dale
If this post helps, then please consider Accept it as the solution to help the other members find it more quickly.

That works perfect. 

 

Thanks for your help. 

Helpful resources

Announcements
Power BI DataViz World Championships

Power BI Dataviz World Championships

The Power BI Data Visualization World Championships is back! Get ahead of the game and start preparing now!

December 2025 Power BI Update Carousel

Power BI Monthly Update - December 2025

Check out the December 2025 Power BI Holiday Recap!

FabCon Atlanta 2026 carousel

FabCon Atlanta 2026

Join us at FabCon Atlanta, March 16-20, for the ultimate Fabric, Power BI, AI and SQL community-led event. Save $200 with code FABCOMM.