ACC 206 Entire Course
ACC 206 Week 1 Assignment Chapter
One Problems
Why are noncash transactions, such
as the exchange of common stock a building, included on a statement of cash
flows? How are these noncash transactions disclosed?
Chapter 1 Exercise 1:
1. Classification of activities
Classify each of the following transactions as arising from an operating (O), investing (I), financing (F), or noncash investing/financing (N) activity.
Classify each of the following transactions as arising from an operating (O), investing (I), financing (F), or noncash investing/financing (N) activity.
a.
________ Received $80,000 from the sale of land.
b.
________ Received $3,200 from cash sales.
c.
________ Paid a $5,000 dividend.
d.
________ Purchased $8,800 of merchandise for cash.
e.
________ Received $100,000 from the issuance of common stock.
f.
________ Paid $1,200 of interest on a note payable.
g.
________ Acquired a new laser printer by paying $650.
h. ________
Acquired a $400,000 building by signing a $400,000 mortgage note.
Chapter 1 Exercise 4:
4. Overview of direct and indirect methods
Evaluate the comments that follow as being True or False. If the comment is false, briefly explain why.
4. Overview of direct and indirect methods
Evaluate the comments that follow as being True or False. If the comment is false, briefly explain why.
a.
Both the direct and indirect methods will produce the same cash flow from
operating activities.
b.
Depreciation expense is added back to net income when the indirect method is
used.
c. One
of the advantages of using the direct method rather than the indirect method is
that larger cash flows from financing activities will be reported.
d. The
cash paid to suppliers is normally disclosed on the statement of cash flows
when the indirect method of statement preparation is employed.
e. The
dollar change in the Merchandise Inventory account appears on the statement of
cash flows only when the direct method of statement preparation is used.
Chapter 1 Exercise 6:
6. Equipment transaction and cash flow reporting
6. Equipment transaction and cash flow reporting
New equipment purchased during 20×4
totaled $280,000. The 20×4 income statement disclosed equipment depreciation
expense of $41,000 and a $9,000 loss on the sale of equipment.
a.
Determine the cost and accumulated depreciation of the equipment sold during
20X4.
b.
Determine the selling price of the equipment sold.
c.
Show how the sale of equipment would appear on a statement of cash flows
prepared by using the indirect method.
Chapter 1 Problem 3:
3. Cash flow information: Direct and
indirect methods
The comparative year-end balance sheets of Sign Graphics, Inc., revealed the following activity in the company’s current accounts:
The comparative year-end balance sheets of Sign Graphics, Inc., revealed the following activity in the company’s current accounts:
Related Tutorials
ACC 206 Week 1 DQ1 Cash Flows
Information
What information does the cash flow
statement provide that you cannot see in the other financial statements (income
statement, balance sheet, owner’s equity)? What elements of the cash flow
statement do you think are most important for company management to monitor and
why? Is this different for investors?
Guided Response:
Review your peers’ postings. Respond
to at least two of classmates, letting them know whether you agree with the use
of the cash flow statement and why. Additionally, share elements of the cash
flow statement that you see as being the greatest interest to investors (as
opposed to internal management) and why.
ACC 206 Week 1 DQ2 Apple’s Cash Flow
Go to http://finance.yahoo.com. Enter in “AAPL” and click on the “get quote” button, and it
will bring up information on Apple. On the left hand side you’ll see a section
on Financials. Within that section, click on the cash flow. Review the cash
flow statement for Apple. How would you summarize Apple’s cash flow position
and what does this statement tell you about where the money is coming from and
where it’s going? What would you suggest Apple’s do to improve its cash
position and why?
Guided Response:
Analyze several of your peers’
postings. Do you agree with the posting? Let at least two of your peers know
what you would add.
ACC 206 Week 2 Assignment Chapter
Two and Three Problems
Please complete the following 7
exercises below in either Excel or a word document (but must be single
document). You must show your work where appropriate (leaving the calculations
within Excel cells is acceptable). Save the document, and submit it in the
appropriate week using the Assignment Submission button.
Chapter 2 Exercise 1
1. Issuance of stock
Prepare journal entries to record
the issuance of 100,000 shares of common stock at $20 per share for each of the
following independent cases:
a.
Jackson Corporation has common stock with a par value of $1 per share.
b.
Royal Corporation has no-par common with a stated value of $5 per share.
c.
French Corporation has no-par common; no stated value has been assigned
Chapter 2 Exercise 3
3. Analysis of stockholders’ equity
Star Corporation issued both common
and preferred stock during 20X6. The stockholders’ equity sections of the
company’s balance sheets at the end of 20X6 and 20X5 follow.
|
20X6
|
20X5
|
|
|
Preferred stock, $100 par value,
10%
|
$580,000
|
$500,000
|
|
Common stock, $10 par value
|
2,350,000
|
1,750,000
|
|
Paid-in capital in excess of par
value
|
||
|
Preferred
|
24,000
|
—
|
|
Common
|
4,620,000
|
3,600,000
|
|
Retained earnings
|
8,470,000
|
6,920,000
|
|
Total stockholders’ equity
|
$16,044,000
|
$12,770,000
|
a.
Compute the number of preferred shares that were issued during 20X6.
b.
Calculate the average issue price of the common stock sold in 20X6.
c. By
what amount did the company’s paid-in capital increase during 20X6?
d. Did
Star’s total legal capital increase or decrease during 20X6? By what amount?
Chapter 2 Problem 1
1. Bond computations:
Straight-line amortization
Southlake Corporation issued
$900,000 of 8% bonds on March 1, 20X1. The bonds pay interest on March 1 and
September 1 and mature in 10 years. Assume the independent cases that follow.
·Case A—The bonds
are issued at 100.
·Case B—The bonds
are issued at 96.
·Case C—The bonds
are issued at 105.
Southlake uses the straight-line
method of amortization.
Instructions:
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Complete the following table:
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Case
A
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Case
B
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Case
C
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_______
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_______
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_______
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_______
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_______
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_______
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_______
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_______
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_______
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_______
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_______
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_______
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_______
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_______
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_______
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_______
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_______
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_______
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_______
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_______
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_______
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_______
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_______
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Chapter 3 Exercise 1
1. Product costs and period costs
The costs that follow were extracted
from the accounting records of several different manufacturers:
1.
Weekly wages of an equipment maintenance worker
2.
Marketing costs of a soft drink bottler
3.
Cost of sheet metal in a Honda automobile
4.
Cost of president’s subscription to Fortune magazine
5.
Monthly operating costs of pollution control equipment used in a steel mill
6.
Weekly wages of a seamstress employed by a jeans maker
7.
Cost of compact discs (CDs) for newly recorded releases of Rush, Billy Joel,
and Bryan Adams
a.
Determine which of these costs are product costs and which are period costs.
b. For
the product costs only, determine those that are easily traced to the finished
product and those that are not.
Chapter 3 Exercise 2
2. Definitions of manufacturing
concepts
Interstate Manufacturing produces brass fasteners and incurred the following costs for the year just ended:
Interstate Manufacturing produces brass fasteners and incurred the following costs for the year just ended:
Materials and supplies used
Brass
$75,000
Repair
parts
16,000
Machine lubricants
9,000
Wages and salaries Machine operators
128,000
Production supervisors
64,000
Maintenance personnel
41,000
Other factory overhead Variable
35,000
Fixed
46,000
Sales
commissions
20,000
Compute:
a.
Total direct materials consumed
b.
Total direct labor
c.
Total prime cost
d.
Total conversion cost
Chapter 3 Exercise 5
5. Schedule of cost of goods
manufactured, income statement
The following information was taken
from the ledger of Jefferson Industries, Inc.:
|
Direct labor
|
$85,000
|
Administrative expenses
|
$59,000
|
|
|
Selling expenses
|
34,000
|
Work in. process
|
||
|
Sales
|
300,000
|
Jan. 1
|
29,000
|
|
|
Finished goods
|
Dec. 31
|
21,000
|
||
|
Jan. 1
|
115,000
|
Direct material purchases
|
88,000
|
|
|
Dec. 31
|
131,000
|
Depreciation: factory
|
18,000
|
|
|
Raw (direct) materials on hand
|
Indirect materials used
|
10,000
|
||
|
Jan. 1
|
31,000
|
Indirect labor
|
24,000
|
|
|
Dec. 31
|
40,000
|
Factory taxes
|
8,000
|
|
|
Factory utilities
|
11,000
|
|||
Prepare the following:
a. A
schedule of cost of goods manufactured for the year ended December 31.
b. An
income statement for the year ended December 31.
Chapter 3 Problem 3
3. Manufacturing statements and cost behavior
3. Manufacturing statements and cost behavior
Tampa Foundry began operations
during the current year, manufacturing various products for industrial use. One
such product is light-gauge aluminum, which the company sells for $36 per roll.
Cost information for the year just ended follows.
|
Per Unit
|
Variable Cost
|
Fixed Cost
|
|
Direct
materials
|
$4.50
|
$ —
|
|
Direct
labor
|
6.5
|
—
|
|
Factory overhead
|
9
|
50,000
|
|
Selling
|
—
|
70,000
|
|
Administrative
|
—
|
135,000
|
Production and sales totaled 20,000
rolls and 17,000 rolls, respectively There is no work in process. Tampa carries
its finished goods inventory at the average unit cost of production.
Instructions:
a.
Determine the cost of the finished goods inventory of light-gauge aluminum.
b.
Prepare an income statement for the current year ended December 31
c. On
the basis of the information presented:
1.
Does it appear that the company pays commissions to its sales staff? Explain.
2.
What is the likely effect on the $4.50 unit cost of direct materials if next
year’s production increases? Why?
ACC 206 Week 2 DQ1 Stock Features
1. What is callable
preferred stock? Why do corporations issue such stock? Given the different
features that are associated with stock (callable, cumulative, preferred, etc.),
what type of stock would you want to buy personally and why?
Guided Response :
Review your peers’ posts. Respond to
at least two of your classmates, letting them know if you agree with their type
of desired stock and whether your answer would change (and why) based on:
a. Different economic
conditions
b. State of the company (if the company is in a growth phase versus a mature state).
b. State of the company (if the company is in a growth phase versus a mature state).
ACC 206 Week 2 DQ2 Role of
Management Accounting
Review the roles of management
accounting within a company. What is the most important role of management
accounting? How is that different than financial accounting?
Guided Response:
Review your peer’s responses.
Respond to at least two of your peers, adding at least two additional areas
that management accountants focus on that the author didn’t include
ACC 206 Week 2 Journal Institute of
Management Accounting
While there are many instances of
overlap between financial accounting and management accounting, each
group’s primary focus is different. Review the Institute of Management
Accounting’s (IMA) website, specifically the “About IMA” and the “Resources and
Publications” sections of the website. Are you surprised by the topics that
management accountants are focusing on? Why or why not? What interests you
more, financial accounting or management accounting?
Carefully review the Grading Rubric for the criteria that will be used to evaluate your journal
entry.
ACC 206 Week 3 Assignment Chapter
Four and Five Problems
Please complete the following 7
exercises below in either Excel or a word document (but must be single
document). You must show your work where appropriate (leaving the calculations
within Excel cells is acceptable). Save the document, and submit it in the appropriate
week using the Assignment Submission button.
Chapter 4 Exercise 3
3. Cost flows and overhead application
Cleveland Metals uses a job cost system and applies factory overhead to production at a predetermined rate of 180% of direct labor cost. Data pertaining to recent operations follow.
3. Cost flows and overhead application
Cleveland Metals uses a job cost system and applies factory overhead to production at a predetermined rate of 180% of direct labor cost. Data pertaining to recent operations follow.
Job no. 636 was the only job in
process on January 1 of the · current year. The Work in Process account contained a
$24,600 balance on this date.
Jobs no. 637, 638, and 639 were
started during January. ·
Total direct material requisitions
and directlabor incurred · during January amounted to $89,200 and $114,500,
respectively.
The only job that remained in
process on January 31 was job · no. 638, with costs of $15,000 for direct materials and
$20,000 for direct labor.
a.
Compute the total cost of the work in process inventory on January 31.
b.
Compute the cost of jobs completed during January, and present the proper
journal entry to reflect job completion.
Chapter 4 Exercise 7
7. Overhead application: Working backward
The Towson Manufacturing Corporation applies overhead on the basis of machine hours. The following divisional information is presented for your review:
7. Overhead application: Working backward
The Towson Manufacturing Corporation applies overhead on the basis of machine hours. The following divisional information is presented for your review:
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Division A
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Division B
|
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Actual machine hours
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22,500
|
?
|
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Estimated machine hours
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20,000
|
?
|
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Overhead application rate
|
$4.50
|
$5.00
|
|
Actual overhead
|
$110,000
|
?
|
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Estimated overhead
|
?
|
$90,000
|
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Applied overhead
|
?
|
$86,000
|
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Over- (under-) applied overhead
|
?
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$6,500
|
Find
the unknowns for each of the divisions.
Chapter 4 Problem 2
2. Computations using a job order system
General Corporation employs a job order cost system. On May 1 the following balances were extracted from the general ledger;
2. Computations using a job order system
General Corporation employs a job order cost system. On May 1 the following balances were extracted from the general ledger;
Work in process
$ 35,200
Finished goods
86,900
Cost of goods sold
128,700
Work in Process consisted of two
jobs, no. 101 ($20,400) and no. 103 ($14,800). During May, direct materials
requisitioned from the storeroom amounted to $96,500, and direct labor incurred
totaled $114,500. These figures are subdivided as follows:
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||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Job no. 115 was the only job in
process at the end of the month. Job no. 101 and three “other” jobs were sold
during May at a profit of 20% of cost. The “other” jobs contained material and
labor charges of $21,000 and $17,400, respectively.
General applies overhead daily at
the rate of 150% of direct labor cost as labor summaries are posted to job
orders. The firm’s fiscal year ends on May 31.
Instructions:
a.
Compute the total overhead applied to production during May.
b.
Compute the cost of the ending work in process inventory.
c.
Compute the cost of jobs completed during May.
d.
Compute the cost of goods sold for the year ended May 31.
Chapter 5 Exercise 1
1. High-low method
The following cost data pertain to 20X6 operations of Heritage Products:
1. High-low method
The following cost data pertain to 20X6 operations of Heritage Products:
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Quarter 1
|
Quarter 2
|
Quarter 3
|
Quarter 4
|
|
|
Shipping costs
|
$58,200
|
$58,620
|
$60,125
|
$59,400
|
|
Orders shipped
|
120
|
140
|
175
|
150
|
The company uses the high-low method
to analyze costs.
a.
Determine the variable cost per order shipped.
b.
Determine the fixed shipping costs per quarter.
c. If
present cost behavior patterns continue, determine total shipping costs for
20X7 if activity amounts to 570 orders.
Chapter 5 Exercise 2
The treasurer anticipates the
following costs for the event, which will be held at the Regency Hotel:
Room rental
$300
Dinner cost (per person) 25
Chartered buses 500
Favors and souvenirs (per person) 5
Band 900
Each person would pay $40 to attend; 200 attendees are expected.
Dinner cost (per person) 25
Chartered buses 500
Favors and souvenirs (per person) 5
Band 900
Each person would pay $40 to attend; 200 attendees are expected.
a.
Will the event be profitable for the sorority? Show computations.
b. How
many people must attend for the sorority to break even?
c.
Suppose the sorority encouraged its members to drive to the hotel and did not
charter the buses. Further, a planned menu change will reduce the cost per meal
by $2. If each member will still be charged $40, compute the contribution
margin per person.
Chapter 5 Exercise 3
3. Break-even and other CVP relationships
Cedars Hospital has average revenue of $180 per patient day. Variable costs are $45 per patient day; fixed costs total $4,320,000 per year.
3. Break-even and other CVP relationships
Cedars Hospital has average revenue of $180 per patient day. Variable costs are $45 per patient day; fixed costs total $4,320,000 per year.
a. How
many patient days does the hospital need to break even?
b.
What level of revenue is needed to earn a target income of $540,000?
c. If
variable costs drop to $36 per patient day, what increase in fixed costs can be
tolerated without changing the break-even point as determined in part (a)?
Chapter 5 Problem 6
6. Direct and absorption costing
The information that follows pertains to Consumer Products for the year ended December 31, 20X6.
6. Direct and absorption costing
The information that follows pertains to Consumer Products for the year ended December 31, 20X6.
|
Inventory, 1/1/X6
|
24,000 units
|
|
Units manufactured
|
80,000
|
|
Units sold
|
82,000
|
|
Inventory, 12/31/X6
|
? units
|
|
Manufacturing costs:
|
|
|
Direct materials
|
$3 per unit
|
|
Direct labor
|
$5 per unit
|
|
Variable factory overhead
|
$9 per unit
|
|
Fixed factory overhead
|
$280,000
|
|
Selling & administrative
expenses:
|
|
|
Variable
|
$2 per unit
|
|
Fixed
|
$136,000
|
The unit selling price is $26.
Assume that costs have been stable in recent years.
Instructions:
a.
Compute the number of units in the ending inventory.
b.
Calculate the cost of a unit assuming use of:
1.
Direct costing.
2.
Absorption costing.
c.
Prepare an income statement for the year ended December 31, 20X6, by using
direct costing.
d.
Prepare an income statement for the year ended December 31, 20X6, by using
absorption costing.
ACC 206 Week 3 DQ1 Issues in Costing
ACC 206 Week 3 DQ2 CVP and the
Airline Industry
ACC 206 Week 3 Journal Hershey
Company
ACC 206 Week 4 Assignment Chapter
Six and Seven Problems
Please complete the following 8
exercises below in either Excel or a word document (but must be single
document). You must show your work where appropriate (leaving the calculations
within Excel cells is acceptable). Save the document, and submit it in the
appropriate week using the Assignment Submission button.
Chapter 6 Exercise 2
2. Schedule of cash collections
Sugarland Company sells a single product and anticipates opening a new facility in Charlotte on May 1 of the current year. Expected sales during the first three months of activity are: May, $60,000; June, $80,000; and July, $85,000. Thirty percent of all sales are for cash; the remaining 70% are on account. Credit sales have the following collection pattern:
Sugarland Company sells a single product and anticipates opening a new facility in Charlotte on May 1 of the current year. Expected sales during the first three months of activity are: May, $60,000; June, $80,000; and July, $85,000. Thirty percent of all sales are for cash; the remaining 70% are on account. Credit sales have the following collection pattern:
Chapter 6 Exercise 4
4. Production and cash-outlay
computations
RPR, Inc., anticipates that 120,000
units of product K will be sold during May. Each unit of product K requires
four units of raw material A. Actual inventories as of May 1 and budgeted
inventories as of May 31 follow.
Chapter 6 Exercise 5
5. Abbreviated cash budget;
financing emphasis
An abbreviated cash budget for Big
Chuck Enterprises follows.
Chapter 6 Problem 3
Chapter 6 Problem 3
3. Comprehensive budgeting
The balance sheet of Watson Company
as of December 31, 20X1, follows.
Chapter 7 Exercise 3
3. Variances for direct materials
and direct labor
Banner Company manufactures flags of
various countries. Each flag has a standard of eight square feet of fabric and
three hours of direct labor time. Information about recent production activity
follows.
Chapter 7 Exercise 5
5. Overhead variances
Nova Manufacturing applies factory
overhead to products on the basis of direct labor hours. At the beginning of
the current year, the company’s accountant made the following estimates for the
forthcoming period:
·
Estimated variable overhead: $500,000
·
Estimated fixed overhead: $400,000
·
Estimated direct labor hours: 40,000
It is now 12 months later. Actual
total overhead incurred in the manufacture of 7,900 units amounted to $895,100.
Actual labor hours totaled 39,800. Assuming a direct labor standard of five
hours per finished unit, calculate the following:
a.
Variable overhead efficiency variance
b.
Fixed overhead volume variance
c.
Overhead spending variance
Chapter 7 Problem 1
1. P26-A1 Basic flexible
budgeting (L.O. 2)
Centron, Inc., has the following budgeted production costs:
Centron, Inc., has the following budgeted production costs:
|
Direct materials
|
$0.40 per unit
|
|
Direct labor
|
1.80 per unit
|
|
Variable factory overhead
|
2.20 per unit
|
|
Fixed factory overhead
|
|
|
Supervision
|
$24,000
|
|
Maintenance
|
18,000
|
|
Other
|
12,000
|
The company normally manufactures
between 20,000 and 25,000 units each quarter. Should output exceed 25,000
units, maintenance and other fixed costs are expected to increase by $6,000 and
$4,500, respectively.
During the recent quarter ended
March 31, Centron produced 25,500 units and incurred the following costs:
|
Direct
Materials
|
$10,710
|
||
|
Direct
Labor
|
47,175
|
||
|
Variable
factory overhead
|
51,940
|
||
|
Fixed
factory overhead
|
|||
|
Supervision
|
24,500
|
||
|
Maintenance
|
23,700
|
||
|
Other
|
16,800
|
||
|
Total
production costs
|
$174,825
|
||
Instructions:
a.
Prepare a flexible budget for 20,000, 22,500, and 25,000 units of activity.
b. Was
Centron’s experience in the quarter cited better or worse than anticipated?
Prepare an appropriate performance report and explain your answer.
c.
Explain the benefit of using flexible budgets (as opposed to static budgets) in
the measurement of performance.
Chapter 7 Problem 5
5. P26-B3 Straightforward
variance analysis (L.O. 5)
Arrow Enterprises uses a standard
costing system. The standard cost sheet for product no. 549 follows.
ACC 206 Week 4 DQ1 Issues in
Standard Costs and Budgeting
ACC 206 Week 4 DQ2 Flexible Budgets
ACC 206 Week 5 Assignment Chapter
Eight Problems
Please complete the following 5
exercises below in either Excel or a word document (but must be single
document). You must show your work where appropriate (leaving the calculations within
Excel cells is acceptable). Save the document, and submit it in the appropriate
week using the Assignment Submission button.
Chapter 8 Exercise 1:
1. Basic present value
calculations
Calculate the present value of the
following cash flows, rounding to the nearest dollar:
a. A
single cash inflow of $12,000 in five years, discounted at a 12% rate of
return.
b. An
annual receipt of $16,000 over the next 12 years, discounted at a 12% rate of
return.
c. A
single receipt of $15,000 at the end of Year 1 followed by a single receipt of
$10,000 at the end of Year 3. The company has a 10% rate of return.
d. An
annual receipt of $8,000 for three years followed by a single receipt of
$10,000 at the end of Year 4. The company has a 12% rate of return.
Chapter 8 Exercise 4:
4. Cash flow calculationsand net
present value
On January 2, 20X1, Bruce Greene
invested $10,000 in the stock market and purchased 500 shares of Heartland
Development, Inc. Heartland paid cash dividends of $2.60 per share in 20X1 and
20X2; the dividend was raised to $3.10 per share in 20X3. On December 31, 20X3,
Greene sold his holdings and generated proceeds of $13,000. Greene uses the
net-present- value method and desires a 16% return on investments.
a.
Prepare a chronological list of the investment’s cash flows. Note: Greene
is entitled to the 20X3 dividend.
b.
Compute the investment’s net present value, rounding calculations to the
nearest dollar.
c.
Given the results of part (b), should Greene have acquired the Heartland stock?
Briefly explain.
Chapter 8 exercise 5:
5. Straightforwardnet present
value and internal rate of return
The City of Bedford is studying a
600-acre site on Route 356 for a new landfill. The startup cost has been
calculated as follows:
Purchase cost: $450 per acre
Site preparation: $175,000
The site can be used for 20 years
before it reaches capacity. Bedford, which shares a facility in Bath Township
with other municipalities, estimates that the new location will save $40,000 in
annual operating costs.
a.
Should the landfill be acquired if Bedford desires an 8% return on its
investment? Use the net-present-value method to determine your answer.
Chapter 8 Problem 1:
1. Straightforward
net-present-value and payback computations
STL Entertainment is considering the
acquisition of a sight-seeing boat for summer tours along the Mississippi
River. The following information is available:
|
Cost of boat
|
$500,000
|
|
Service life
|
10 summer seasons
|
|
Disposal value at the end of 10
seasons
|
$100,000
|
|
Capacity per trip
|
300 passengers
|
|
Fixed operating costs per season
(including straight-line depreciation)
|
$160,000
|
|
Variable operating costs per trip
|
$1,000
|
|
Ticket price
|
$5 per passenger
|
All operating costs, except
depreciation, require cash outlays. On the basis of similar operations in other
parts of the country, management anticipates that each trip will be sold out
and that 120,000 passengers will be carried each season. Ignore income taxes.
Instructions:
By using the net-present-value
method, determine whether STL Entertainment should acquire the boat. Assume a
14% desired return on all investments,- round calculations to the nearest
dollar.
Chapter 8 Problem 4:
4. Equipment replacement decision
Columbia Enterprises is studying the
replacement of some equipment that originally cost $74,000. The equipment is
expected to provide six more years of service if $8,700 of major repairs are
performed in two years. Annual cash operating costs total $27,200. Columbia can
sell the equipment now for $36,000; the estimated residual value in six years
is $5,000.
New equipment is available that will
reduce annual cash operating costs to $21,000. The equipment costs $103,000,
has a service life of six years, and has an estimated residual value of
$13,000. Company sales will total $430,000 per year with either the existing or
the new equipment. Columbia has a minimum desired return of 12% and depreciates
all equipment by the straight-line method.
Instructions:
a. By
using the net-present-value method, determine whether Columbia should keep its
present equipment or acquire the new equipment. Round all calculations to the
nearest dollar, and ignore income taxes.
b.
Columbia’s management feels that the time value of money should be considered
in all long-term decisions. Briefly discuss the rationale that underlies
management’s belief.
ACC 206 Week 5 DQ1 Long-term
Decision Making
ACC 206 Week 5 DQ2 Responsibilities
in Management Accounting
ACC 206 Week 5 Final paper
Focus of the Final Paper
You’ve just been hired onto ABC
Company as the corporate controller. ABC Company is a manufacturing firm that
specializes in making cedar roofing and siding shingles. The company currently
has annual sales of around $1.2 million, a 25% increase from the previous year.
The company has an aggressive growth target of reaching $3 million annual
sales within the next 3 years. The CEO has been trying to find additional
products that can leverage the current ABC employee skillset as well as the
manufacturing facilities.
As the controller of ABC Company,
the CEO has come to you with a new opportunity that he’s been working on. The
CEO would like to use the some of the shingle scrap materials to build cedar
dollhouses. While this new product line would add additional raw materials and
be more time-intensive to manufacture than the cedar shingles, this new product
line will be able to leverage ABC’s existing manufacturing facilities as well
as the current staff. Although this product line will require added expenses,
it will provide additional revenue and gross profit to help reach the growth
targets. The CEO is relying on you to help decide how this project can be
afforded Provide details about the estimated product costs, what is
needed to break even on the project, and what level of return this product is
expected to provide.
In order to help out the CEO, you
need to prepare a six- to eight-page report that will contain the following
information (including exhibits, but excluding your references and title page).
Refer to the accompanying Excel spreadsheet (available through your online
course) for some specific cost and profit information to complete the
calculations.
I. An overall risk profile of the
company based on current economic and industry issues that it may be
facing.
II. Current company cash flow
a. You need to complete a cash flow
statement for the company using the direct method.
b. Once you’ve completed the cash flow statement, answer the following questions:
b. Once you’ve completed the cash flow statement, answer the following questions:
i. What does this statement of cash
flow tell you about the sources and uses of the company?
ii. Is there anything ABC Company can do to improve the cash flow?
iii. Can this project be financed with current cash flow from the company? Why or why not?
iv. If the company needs additional financing beyond what ABC Company can provide internally (either now or sometime throughout the life of the project), how would you suggest the company obtain the additional financing, equity or corporate debt, and why?
ii. Is there anything ABC Company can do to improve the cash flow?
iii. Can this project be financed with current cash flow from the company? Why or why not?
iv. If the company needs additional financing beyond what ABC Company can provide internally (either now or sometime throughout the life of the project), how would you suggest the company obtain the additional financing, equity or corporate debt, and why?
III. Product cost: ABC Company
believes that it has an additional 5,000 machine hours available in the current
facility before it would need to expand. ABC Company uses machine hours to allocate
the fixed factory overhead, and units sold to allocate the fixed sales
expenses. ABC Company expects that it will take twice as long to produce the
expansion product as it currently takes to produce its existing product.
a. What is the product cost for the
expansion product?
b. By adding this new expansion product, it helps to absorb the fixed factory and sales expenses. How much cheaper does this expansion make the existing product?
c. Assuming ABC Company wants a 40% gross margin for the new product, what selling price should it set for the expansion product?
d. Assuming the same sales mix of these two products, what are the contribution margins and break-even points by product?
b. By adding this new expansion product, it helps to absorb the fixed factory and sales expenses. How much cheaper does this expansion make the existing product?
c. Assuming ABC Company wants a 40% gross margin for the new product, what selling price should it set for the expansion product?
d. Assuming the same sales mix of these two products, what are the contribution margins and break-even points by product?
IV. Potential investments to
accelerate profit: ABC company has the option to purchase additional equipment
that will cost about $42,000, and this new equipment will produce the following
savings in factory overhead costs over the next five years:
Year 1, $15,000
Year 2, $13,000
Year 3, $10,000
Year 4, $10,000
Year 5, $6,000
Year 2, $13,000
Year 3, $10,000
Year 4, $10,000
Year 5, $6,000
ABC Company uses the
net-present-value method to analyze investments and desires a minimum rate of
return of 12% on the equipment.
a. What is the net present value of
the proposed investment ignore income taxes and depreciation?
b. Assuming a 5-year straight-line depreciation, how will this impact the factory’s fixed costs for each of the 5 years (and the implied product costs)? What about cash flow?
c. Considering the cash flow impact of the equipment as well as the time-value of money, would you recommend that ABC Company purchases the equipment? Why or why not?
b. Assuming a 5-year straight-line depreciation, how will this impact the factory’s fixed costs for each of the 5 years (and the implied product costs)? What about cash flow?
c. Considering the cash flow impact of the equipment as well as the time-value of money, would you recommend that ABC Company purchases the equipment? Why or why not?
V. Conclusion:
a. What are the major risk factors
that you see in this project?
b. As the controller and a management accountant, what is your responsibility to this project?
c. What do you recommend the CEO do?
b. As the controller and a management accountant, what is your responsibility to this project?
c. What do you recommend the CEO do?
Writing the Final Paper
1. Must be six to
eight double-spaced pages in length, and formatted according to APA style as
outlined in the Ashford Writing Center.
2. Must include a title page with the following:
2. Must include a title page with the following:
a. Title of paper
b. Student’s name
c. Course name and number
d. Instructor’s name
e. Date submitted
b. Student’s name
c. Course name and number
d. Instructor’s name
e. Date submitted
3. Must begin with
an introductory paragraph that has a succinct thesis statement.
4. Must address the topic of the paper with critical thought.
5. Must end with a conclusion that reaffirms your thesis.
6. Must document all sources in APA style, as outlined in the Ashford Writing Center.
7. Must include a separate reference page, formatted according to APA style as outlined in the Ashford Writing Center.
4. Must address the topic of the paper with critical thought.
5. Must end with a conclusion that reaffirms your thesis.
6. Must document all sources in APA style, as outlined in the Ashford Writing Center.
7. Must include a separate reference page, formatted according to APA style as outlined in the Ashford Writing Center.
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