2015 Assignment Two
2015 Assignment Two
2015 Assignment Two
FALL 2015
ASSIGNMENT TWO
Assignment Two
Page 1 of 8
Question
One
Tofino
Furniture
is
an
elite
desk
manufacturer.
It
manufacturer
two
products:
The
budgeted
direct
cost
inputs
for
each
product
in
2016
are
as
follows:
Executive Line
Director Line
Direct
Materials:
Oak
top
1.5
square
metres
---
Red
oak
top
---
2.3
square
metres
Oak
legs
4
legs
----
Red
oak
legs
-----
4
legs
Direct
manufacturing
labour
3
hours
5
hours
Unit
data
pertaining
to
the
direct
materials
for
March
2016
are
as
follows:
Actual
Beginning
Direct
Materials
Inventory
(March
1,
2016)
Product
Product
Assignment Two
Page 2 of 8
Unit
cost
data
for
direct
cost
inputs
pertaining
to
February
2016
and
March
2016
are:
(Actual)
(Budgeted)
Oak
top
(per
square
metre)
$21.60
$24.00
Red
oak
top
(per
square
metre)
27.60
30.00
Oak
legs
(per
leg)
13.20
14.40
Red
oak
legs
(per
leg)
20.40
21.60
Manufacturing
labour
cost
per
hour
36.00
36.00
Manufacturing
overhead
(both
variable
and
fixed)
is
allocated
to
each
desk
based
on
budgeted
direct
manufacturing
labour-hours
per
desk.
The
budgeted
variable
manufacturing
overhead
rate
for
March
2016
is
$42
per
direct
manufacturing
labour-hour.
The
budgeted
fixed
manufacturing
overhead
for
March
2016
is
$51,000.
Both
variable
and
fixed
manufacturing
overhead
costs
are
allocated
to
each
unit
of
finished
goods.
Data
relating
to
finished
goods
inventory
for
March
2016
are:
Executive
Line
Director
Line
Beginning
inventory
20
units
5
units
Beginning
inventory
in
dollars
(cost)
$12,576
$5,820
Budgeted
ending
inventory
30
units
15
units
Budgeted
sales
for
March
2016
are
740
units
of
the
Executive
Line
and
390
units
of
the
Director
Line.
The
budgeted
selling
prices
per
unit
in
March
2016
are
$1,224
for
an
Executive
Line
desk
and
$1,920
for
a
Director
Line
desk.
Assume
the
following
in
your
answer:
A. Work-in-process
inventories
are
negligible
and
ignored.
B. Direct
materials
inventory
and
finished
goods
inventory
are
costed
using
the
FIFO
method.
C. Unit
costs
of
direct
materials
purchased
and
finished
goods
are
constant
in
March
2016.
Required:
Prepare
the
following
budgets
for
March
2016:
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
Revenue
budget
Production
budget
in
units
Direct
materials
usage
budget
and
direct
materials
purchases
budget
Direct
manufacturing
labour
budget
Manufacturing
overhead
budget
Ending
inventory
budget
Costs
of
goods
sold
budget
and
gross
margin
calculation
Assignment Two
Page 3 of 8
Question
Two
Coast
Finance
helps
prospective
homeowners
of
substantial
means
to
find
low-cost
financing
and
assists
existing
homeowners
in
refinancing
their
current
loans
at
lower
interest
rates.
Coast
works
only
for
customers
with
excellent
borrowing
capacity.
Hence,
Coast
is
able
to
obtain
a
loan
for
every
customer
with
whom
it
decides
to
work.
Coast
charges
clients
0.5%
of
the
loan
amount
it
arranges.
In
2013,
the
average
loan
amount
per
customer
was
$238,800.
In
2014,
the
average
loan
amount
was
$240,252.
In
its
2015
flexible-
budgeting
system,
Coast
assumes
the
average
loan
amount
will
be
$240,000.
Budgeted
cost
data
per
loan
application
for
2015
are:
Professional
labour:
6
budgeted
hours
at
a
budgeted
rate
of
$48
per
hour
Loan
filing
fees:
budgeted
at
$120
per
loan
application
Creditworthiness
checks:
budgeted
at
$144
per
loan
application
Courier
mailings:
budgeted
at
$60
per
loan
application
Office
support
(the
costs
of
leases,
administrative
staff,
and
others)
is
budgeted
to
be
$37,200
per
month.
Coast
Finance
views
this
amount
as
a
fixed
cost.
Required:
1. Prepare
a
static
budget
for
November
2015
assuming
90
loan
applications.
2. Actual
loan
applications
in
November
2015
were
120.
Other
actual
data
for
November
2015
were:
a. Professional
labour:
7.2
hours
per
loan
application
at
$50.40
per
hour
b. Loan
filing
fees:
$120
per
loan
application
c. Creditworthiness
checks:
$150
per
loan
application
d. Courier
mailings:
$64.80
per
loan
application
Office
support
costs
for
November
2015
were
$40,200.
The
average
loan
amount
for
November
2015
was
$268,800.
Coast
received
its
0.5%
fee
on
all
loans.
Prepare
a
Level
2
variance
analysis
of
Coast
Finance
for
November
2015.
Coasts
output
measure
in
its
flexible-budgeting
system
is
the
number
of
loan
applications.
Assignment Two
Page 4 of 8
Question
Three
CellOne
is
a
cellular
phone
service
reseller,
contracting
with
major
cellular
operators
for
airtime
in
bulk
and
then
reselling
service
to
retail
customers.
Having
adopted
an
ABC
system
last
year,
CellOne
has
defined
the
following
activity
areas-
contracting,
marketing,
technical
service,
and
customer
service.
The
technical
service
area
has
one
major
cost
driver-
technical
support-hours.
One
hour
of
technical
support
is
budgeted
for
every
5,000
minutes
of
airtime
sold.
For
the
month
ended
August
31,
2015,
CellOne
budgeted
to
sell
6,850,000
minutes;
however,
actual
minutes
sold
totaled
7,350,000.
During
August
2015,
1,500
actual
technical
support-hours
were
logged.
Some
additional
data
follows:
Actual
Budget
Variable
technical
service
activity
cost
$37,800
$39,456
Fixed
technical
service
activity
costs
81,
000
83,844
Budgeted
input
allowed
for
actual
output
achieved
totaled
1,470
hours
of
technical
support.
Required:
1. What
is
the
actual
variable
technical
service
activity
area
cost
per
technical
support-hour?
Budgeted
cost
per
hour?
2. What
is
the
allocated
fixed
technical
service
area
overhead?
3. Calculate
the
rate
variance,
the
efficiency
variance,
and
the
flexible-budget
variance
for
variable
overhead
costs.
Explain
these
variances
based
on
the
data
provided.
4. Has
CellOne
management
underallocated
or
overallocated
fixed
overhead
for
August
2015?
Show
how
you
calculate
the
underallocation
or
overallocation.
Assignment Two
Page 5 of 8
Question
Four
The
TechMech
Company
produces
and
sells
6,000
modular
computer
desks
per
year
at
a
selling
prices
of
$500
each.
Its
current
production
equipment,
purchased
for
$1,500,000
and
with
a
five-year
useful
life,
is
only
two
years
old.
It
has
a
terminal
disposal
value
of
$0
and
is
depreciated
on
a
straight-line
basis.
The
equipment
has
a
current
disposal
price
of
$600,000.
However,
the
emergence
of
a
new
moulding
technology
has
led
TechMech
to
consider
either
upgrading
or
replacing
the
production
equipment.
The
following
table
presents
data
for
the
two
alternatives:
A
1
2
3
4
5
One-time
equipment
costs
Variable
manufacturing
cost
per
desk
Remaining
useful
life
of
equipment
(years)
Terminal
disposal
value
of
equipment
B
Upgrade
$2,700,000
$
140
3
$
0
C
Replace
$4,200,000
$
80
3
$
0
All
equipment
costs
will
continue
to
be
depreciated
on
a
straight-line
basis.
For
simplicity,
ignore
income
taxes
and
time
value
of
money.
Required:
1. Should
TechMech
upgrade
its
production
line
or
replace
it?
Show
your
calculations.
2. Now
suppose
the
one-time
equipment
cost
to
replace
the
production
equipment
is
somewhat
negotiable.
All
other
data
are
as
given
previously.
What
is
the
maximum
one-time
equipment
cost
that
TechMech
would
be
willing
to
pay
to
replace
the
old
equipment
rather
than
upgrade
it?
3. Assume
the
capital
expenditures
to
replace
and
upgrade
the
production
equipment
are
as
given
in
the
original
exercise,
but
that
the
production
and
sales
quantity
is
not
known.
For
what
production
and
sales
quantity
would
TechMech
(a)
upgrade
the
equipment
or
(b)
replace
the
equipment?
4. Assume
that
all
data
are
as
given
in
the
original
exercise.
Dan
Doria
is
TechMechs
manager,
and
his
bonus
is
based
on
operating
income.
Because
he
is
likely
to
relocate
after
about
a
year,
his
current
bonus
is
his
primary
concern.
Which
alternative
would
Doria
choose?
Explain.
Assignment Two
Page 6 of 8
Question
Five
Clover,
Inc.
manufactures
and
sells
television
sets.
Its
assembly
division
(AD)
buys
television
screens
from
the
screen
division
(SD)
and
assembles
the
TV
sets.
The
SD,
which
is
operating
at
capacity,
incurs
an
incremental
manufacturing
cost
of
$80
per
screen.
The
SD
can
sell
all
its
output
to
the
outside
market
at
a
prices
of
$120
per
screen,
after
incurring
a
variable
marketing
and
distribution
cost
of
$5
per
screen.
If
the
AD
purchases
screens
from
outside
suppliers
at
a
price
of
$120
per
screen,
it
will
incur
a
variable
purchasing
cost
of
$3
per
screen.
Clovers
division
managers
can
act
autonomously
to
maximize
their
own
divisions
operating
income.
Required:
1. What
is
the
minimum
transfer
price
at
which
the
SD
manager
would
be
willing
to
sell
screens
to
the
AD?
2. What
is
the
maximum
transfer
price
at
which
the
AD
manager
would
be
willing
to
purchase
screens
from
the
SD?
3. Now
suppose
that
the
SD
can
sell
only
80%
of
its
output
capacity
of
10,000
screens
per
month
on
the
open
market.
Capacity
cannot
be
reduced
in
the
short
run.
The
AD
can
assemble
and
sell
more
than
10,000
sets
per
month.
a. What
is
the
minimum
transfer
price
at
which
the
SD
manager
would
be
willing
to
sell
screens
to
the
AD?
b. From
the
point
of
view
of
Clovers
management,
how
much
of
the
SD
output
should
be
transferred
to
the
AD?
c. What
transfer-pricing
policy
will
achieve
the
outcome
desired
in
requirement
3b?
Assignment Two
Page 7 of 8
Question
Six
Community
Credit
Union
(CCU)
recently
introduced
a
new
bonus
plan
for
its
business
unit
executives.
The
company
believes
that
current
profitability
and
customer
satisfaction
levels
are
equally
important
to
the
banks
long-term
success.
As
a
result,
the
new
plan
awards
a
bonus
equal
to
1%
of
salary
for
a
1%
increase
in
net
income
or
a
1%
increase
in
the
companys
customer
satisfaction
index.
For
example,
increasing
net
income
from
$3
million
to
$3.3
million
(or
10%
from
its
initial
value)
leads
to
a
bonus
of
10%
of
salary,
while
increasing
the
banks
customer
satisfaction
index
from
70
to
73.5
(or
5%
from
its
initial
value)
leads
to
a
bonus
of
5%
of
salary.
There
is
no
bonus
penalty
when
net
income
or
customer
satisfaction
declines.
In
2014
and
2015,
CCUs
three
business
units
reported
the
following
performance
results:
Credit Cards
2014 2015
$2,750,000 $2,722,000
Required:
1. Compute
the
bonus
as
a
percent
of
salary
earned
by
each
business
unit
executive
in
2015.
2. What
factors
might
explain
the
different
improvement
rates
for
net
income
and
customer
satisfaction
in
the
three
units?
3. CCUs
board
of
directors
is
concerned
that
the
2015
bonus
awards
may
not
actually
reflect
the
executives
overall
performance.
In
particular,
it
is
concerned
that
executives
can
earn
large
bonuses
by
doing
well
on
one
performance
dimension
but
underperforming
on
the
other.
What
changes
can
it
make
to
the
bonus
plan
to
prevent
this
from
happening
in
the
future?
Explain
briefly.
Assignment Two
Page 8 of 8