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Question 1:

Question 1: Cost-Volume-ProCost-Volume-Profit fit AnalysisAnalysis Marbles Corporation has a

Marbles Corporation has a maximum capacity of maximum capacity of 200,000 units per 200,000 units per year. year. VariableVariable manufacturing costs (with respect

manufacturing costs (with respect to units manufactured) are $11.50 per unito units manufactured) are $11.50 per unit. t. FixedFixed manufacturing overhead is $875,000 per year.

manufacturing overhead is $875,000 per year. Variable marketing, Variable marketing, distribution, cusdistribution, customertomer service and administrative costs (with respect to units sold) are $1.90 per unit, and fixed service and administrative costs (with respect to units sold) are $1.90 per unit, and fixed marketing, distributi

marketing, distribution, customer service and adminison, customer service and administrative costs are $115,000 per trative costs are $115,000 per year. year. TheThe current selli

current selling price is ng price is $21 per unit. $21 per unit. Marbles has no Marbles has no beginning or endibeginning or ending inventory. ng inventory. TheThe company’s tax rate is 32%.

company’s tax rate is 32%.

How many units must be sold to earn a target operating income of $360,000 per year? How many units must be sold to earn a target operating income of $360,000 per year?

(2)

6 points for this part of the question 6 points for this part of the question Many ways to

Many ways to present this information – I’ll stick with the formula we present this information – I’ll stick with the formula we ultimately ended up with inultimately ended up with in the slides:

the slides: FC

FC + + Target Target operating operating income income = = 875m 875m + + 115m 115m + + 360m360m  _____

 __________________________________________ ___ ____________________________________ CM

CM per per unit unit 21 21 – – 11.5 11.5 – – 1.901.90 =

= 177,631.58 177,631.58 unitsunits  Also, it wa

 Also, it was kind os kind of tricky to tf tricky to throw in nhrow in non-manuon-manufacturing facturing costs. costs. However, However, if you steif you stepped bpped backack and thought about the concept of the

and thought about the concept of the break-even point, and if we did not cover all of our costsbreak-even point, and if we did not cover all of our costs (i.e., exclude them fr

(i.e., exclude them from our analysis), then you woulom our analysis), then you would not truly be breaking even. d not truly be breaking even. The sameThe same could be said about

could be said about reaching a particular level of profit.reaching a particular level of profit.

Finally, the target information is “operating income” – this number is

Finally, the target information is “operating income” – this number is reported before taxes (i.e.,reported before taxes (i.e., is not “net income”)

is not “net income”). . Therefore, no adjustment for tTherefore, no adjustment for taxes is necessary.axes is necessary.

What is the breakeven point in

What is the breakeven point in (a) units sold and (b) sales d(a) units sold and (b) sales dollars?ollars? 6 points for this part of the question.

6 points for this part of the question.

In class, we talked about the propensity for students to mess this one

In class, we talked about the propensity for students to mess this one up a bit (i.e., it is aup a bit (i.e., it is a common mistake to watch out for)

common mistake to watch out for). . SpecificallSpecifically, given that the question is asking for ay, given that the question is asking for a “breakeven” point (in units and sales $), that implies that profit is zero.

“breakeven” point (in units and sales $), that implies that profit is zero. If profit is zero, then taxIf profit is zero, then tax expense must be zero.

expense must be zero. So, taxes do not play So, taxes do not play a role in thia role in this problem.s problem. We’ve considered them . . . and, they do

We’ve considered them . . . and, they do not apply here.not apply here. So, same formula as

So, same formula as above, with “0” replacing the target operating income:above, with “0” replacing the target operating income: ( 875m + 115m ) /

( 875m + 115m ) / (21 – 11.5 – 1.90) = (21 – 11.5 – 1.90) = 130,263.16 units130,263.16 units

130,263.16 units x $21 per unit = $2,735,526.32 in total revenue dollars 130,263.16 units x $21 per unit = $2,735,526.32 in total revenue dollars

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Question 3: Overhead and Related Issues

 Assume a standard costing system in the following.

The following total costs are budgeted for a pure manufacturing firm:

Direct materials $100,000

Direct labor $120,000

Indirect labor – paid hourly $106,000

Rent $129,000

The company has deemed machine hours to be a good estimator of overhead. In a perfect world, the company would use 1.6 machine hours for every output-unit

 produced. Other information:

Budgeted output for the year is 8,900 units  Actual output for the year is 9,000 units

 Actual number of machine hours used is 8,750 hours Other information:

 As of June 30th, the company actually used 6,950 machine hours to produce 4,750 units.

Required:

What is the predetermined overhead rate? _________________

(4)

Required:

What is the predetermined overhead rate? _________________

Budgeted overhead / (SI x SQ) = P/D OH Rate

(106,000 + 129,000) / (1.6 x 8,900) = $ 16.5028 per MH 5 points

Compute the applied overhead as of June 30th. _________________

 Applied OH = P/D OH Rate x SI x AQ = $16.5028 per MH x 1.6 MH/unit x 4,750 units = $125,421.28

(5)

Question 4: Relevant Costs

McDermott and Petra are currently manufacturing their own brand of playing cards. Given their connections at the major casinos, McDermott and Petra expect to have ample demand for the product in the years to come.

The manufacturing process consists of the printing of the design on specialized paper (rank and suit), the cutting of the specialized paper into individual cards, the specialized gloss applied to the cards, and the sorting of the cards into their respective order.

The cards are then packaged in cardboard boxes (also manufactured by McDermott and Petra and wrapped in purchased plastic.

Recently, they received an offer from Worm Incorporated. Worm offered to sell the cardboard boxes used in the packaging directly to McDermott and Petra for $1.69 per box. Boxes would be received, and the only remaining step required of McDermott and Petra would be to place the manufactured cards in the box and wrap the boxes in plastic.

The following represent costs of the complete process of manufacturing and packaging a deck of cards:

Specialized paper for cards $ 1.04

Gloss used as coating 1.00

Cost of electricity used to

power machines used in sorting and cutting .46 Plastic used in wrapping the deck .12

Cardboard 1.32

Rent allocated to space used for box mftg .24 Rent allocated to space used for plastic wrapping .22 Cost of electricity used to power machines

used in cutting and folding cardboard .19

Based on the information given above, should McDermott and Petra accept Worm's offer regarding the boxes? Support your answer with calculations and a brief reasoning statement.

(6)

There were a variety of ways to solve this problem. I gave full credit as long as you treated the cost information appropriately. The only costs that are associated with making the cardboard boxes were the cardboard itself ($1.32), the rent allocated to the space used for manufacturing boxes ($.24), and the electricity for machines used to cut and fold the cardboard.

Given that the cost of the rent was described as “allocated,” the appropriate approach was to treat this information as “irrelevant” (i.e., regardless of choice to make or b uy, company will incur the rent cost). If you did not treat the cost as “allocated” (as described), I took off 2 points.

So, the only thing to compare is the cost to buy ($1.69) and the (relevant) cost to make ($1.32 + $.19 = $1.51), which suggests that the McDermott and Petra should continue to make the

cardboard boxes.

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(20)

Performance Evaluation of Investment Centers

When the Coronet Company formed three divisions a year ago, the president told the division managers that an annual bonus would be paid to the most profitable division. However,

absolute division operating income as conventionally computed would not be used. Instead, the ranking would be affected by the relative investments in the three divisions. Options available include ROI and residual income, and variations of each. Investment can be measured using gross book value or net (of straight-line depreciation) book value. Each manager has now written a memorandum claiming entitlement to the bonus. The following data are available:

Gross Book Division

Value of Operating

Division Division Assets Income

Mastex 400,000 47,500

Banjo 380,000 46,000

Randal 250,000 30,800

 All the assets are fixed assets that were purchased 10 years ago and have 10 years of useful life remaining. A zero terminal disposal price is predicted. Coronet's cost of capital for

computing residual income is 10% of investment.

Required: Which method for computing profitability did each manager choose? Make your description specific and brief. Calculations must be used to support your answer.

The issue here is that each of the division managers perceives they are the top-ranked division based on their measure.

This problem is designed to allow you to demonstrate your understanding of the ambiguity associated even with “objective,” financial performance measures.

ROI ordering (based on gross or book value of investment) – Randal, Banjo, Mastex RI ordering (based on gross value of investment) – Banjo, Mastex, Randal

RI ordering (based on net book value of investment) – Mastex, Banjo, Randal

So, Randal used ROI, Banjo used RI based on gross value of investment, and Mastex used RI based on net book value of investment

(21)

Materials and Manufacturing Labor Variances

Consider the following selected data regarding the manufacture of a line of upholstered chairs: Standards Per Chair

Direct materials 2 square yards of input at $10 per square yard Direct manufacturing labor 0.5 hour of input at $20 per hour

The following data were compiled regarding actual performance: actual output units (chairs)  produced, 20,000; square yards of input purchased and used, 37,000; price per square yard,

$10.20; direct manufacturing labor costs, $176,400; actual hours of input, 9,000; labor price per hour, $19.60.

Required:

1. Show your computations of spending and efficiency variances for direct materials. Give a plausible explanation of why the variances occurred.

Materials spending variance: $7,400 U Materials efficiency variance: $30,000 F

2. Show your computations of price and efficiency variances for direct materials. Give a  plausible explanation of why the variances occurred.

Direct labor spending variance: $3,600 F Direct labor efficiency variance: $20,000 F

(22)

Production Cost Variance Calculations

The following standard costs per unit have been established by Baldwin Company:

Material (6 pounds @ $.50 per pound) $ 3.00

Direct labor (1 hour @ $8 per hour) 8.00

Factory overhead (1 hour @ $5.50 per hour) 5.50

Total Standard Cost per Unit $16.50

The $5.50 per direct labor hour overhead rate is based on normal capacity of 95 percent of  practical capacity. The following flexible budget information is provided:

Operating Levels

85% 95% 100%

Units of production 4,250 4,750 5,000

Standard direct labor hours 4,250 4,750 5,000

Variable factor overhead 8,500 9,500 10,000

Fixed factory overhead 16,625 16,625 16,625

During March the company operated at 85% capacity, producing 4,250 units of product which were charged with the following standard costs:

Material (25,500 pounds @ $.50 per pound) $12,750

Direct labor (4,250 hours @ $8 per hour) 34,000

Factory overhead (4,250 hours @ $5.50 per hour) 23,375

Total Standard Cost $70,125

Actual costs incurred during March were:

Material (26,100 pounds) $11,745

Direct labor (4,150 hours) 34,445

Fixed factory overhead costs 16,625

Variable factory overhead costs 7,650

Total Actual Costs $70,465

Assume all the direct material purchased was used during the period.

Use the table on the following page to support your answers if you find it useful, or show your work in another clearly labeled format.

(23)

a. Determine the following variances:

Price Efficiency Activity

direct material $1305 F $300 U $1500 F

direct labor $1245 U $800 F $4000 F

variable overhead $650 F $200 F $1000 F

fixed overhead $0 X X

Make sure you record a number in each blank space. Indicate "favorable" or "unfavorable" for each variance.

(24)

Standard Costing

Swan is a specialty chemical produced in batches. Normal denominator volume is 100 batches  per week. The weekly flexible budget for indirect costs (i.e., overhead) is $1600 plus $5 per

standard hour of direct labor. The company considers direct labor hours to be a reasonable cost driver in this scenario.

Data for the week just ended are:

(1) Production amounted to 103 batches

(2) There were 315 hours of direct labor used, costing $2,472. (3) The standards allow 3 hours of direct labor per batch (4) Actual variable overhead for the week was $1,550 (5) Actual fixed overhead for the week was $3,700

Computations are shown first using tables, then formulas on the following page.

Actual Activity Standard Input Flexible Budget Master Budget Overhead Applied Variable Overhead $1550 315x$5 = $1575 103x3x$5 = $1545 100x3x$5 = $1500 Same as flex  budget under standard costing system $25 F activity efficiency spending $30 U $45 U $50 U

(25)

Actual Activity Standard Input Flexible Budget Master Budget Overhead Applied Fixed Overhead $3700  NA NA $1600 103x ($1600/100) = $1648

a. Calculate the following variances:

Variance Variable Overhead Fixed Overhead

Price/Spending $25 F $2100 U

Efficiency $30 U X

Activity $45 U X

Production

Volume X $48 F

 Note that this problem shows a production volume variance – which we didn’t cover in class, so you are not responsible for that information.

Variable overhead spending variance: $1550 – (315x $5) = $25 F

Variable overhead efficiency variance: (315 – 3 x 103)x$5 = $30 U

Variable overhead activity variance: (103 – 100) x (3 x$5) - $45 U

$2100 U

Fixed overhead budget variance Production

volume variance

(PVV) $48 F

(26)

Fixed overhead budget variance:

$3700 - $1600 = $2100 U (just actual minus budgeted) Fixed overhead production volume variance:

(27)

Illawarra Office Equipment

The production report of Illawaarra Office Equipment for April 1999 included the following information pertaining to the manufacture of a line of tables:

Direct Direct Manufacturing Materials Labor Budgeted spending $540,000 $360,000 Actual spending 672,000 396,000 Variance $132,000 U $ 36,000 F

Actual price per unit of input (bd. ft., hr.) $14 $18

Standard price per unit of input $12 $20

Standard inputs allow per unit of output 5 2

Actual units of input 48,000 22,000

Budgeted units of output (product) 9,000 9,000

Actual units of output (product) 10,000 10,000

1. How much of the Direct Material and Direct Labor Variances are due to (a) price changes, (b) usage efficiencies or inefficiencies, (c) activity level changes.

Materials Price: $96,000 U Labor Price: $44,000 F Materials Efficiency: $24,000F Labor Efficiency: $40,000 U Materials Activity: $60,000 U Labor Activity: $40,000 U

2. Give a plausible explanation for the performance.

 As we discussed in class, there exist a number of plausible explanations for each of the above variances.

References

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