SINGH007 Ans Homework Lec 14 To 21
SINGH007 Ans Homework Lec 14 To 21
SINGH007 Ans Homework Lec 14 To 21
Question 1
Actual Overhead
Filling Sealing Maintenance Canteen
£ £ £ £
Allocated 74,260 38,115 25,050 24,375
Reallocation:
Canteen 14,265 7,800 1,950 (24,375)
Maintenance 18,900 7,290 (27,000)
Actual Overhead 107,785 54,015 0 0
Filing Sealing
£ £
Budgeted Overheads 110,040 53,300
Overhead absorbed
8.40 X 12,840 107,688
5.20 X 10,075 53,920
(b) Product W2
£
Direct cost 24.00
Overhead:
Filling 2 X8.40 16.80
Sealing 4 X5.20 20.80
61.60
Profit 20% 12.32
Selling price 73.91
Profit for the year
1,500 X 12.32 18,480
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Question 2
£
Direct materials 7.00
Direct labour 5.50
Variable overheads 2.00
Fixed overhead: Department 1 5.05
Fixed overhead: Department 2 6.11
Total Manufacturing cost 25.66
£
Sales 114,000 X 36 4,104,000
Cost of Sales 114,000 X 25.66 2,925,240
Add: Under-absorption of overheads
Department 1 (20,000+(4000X5.05) 40,200
Department 2 (4,000 units X6.11) 24,440
Total cost of Sales 2,989,880
Gross Profit 1,114,120
Less: Operating expense
Non manufacturing cost 875,000
Net Profit 239,120
Note that the under-recovery of fixed overheads consists of £20,000 arising from
actual overheads exceeding estimated overheads plus 4,000 times the fixed overhead
rate because actual volume was 4,000 units less than estimated volume.
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QUESTION 3
a.
Total Fabrication Finishing Canteen Maintenance
£ £ £ £ £
Indirect labour 340,000 120,000 140,000 30,000 50,000
Consumables 82,000 24,000 32,000 20,000 6,000
Heating &
Lighting 24,000 8,000 9,600 2,400 4,000
Rent & Rates 36,000 12,000 14,400 3,600 6,000
Depreciation 60,000 30,000 24,000 2,000 4,000
Supervision 48,000 24,000 18,000 3,000 4,000
Power 40,000 18,000 16,000 2,000 4,000
Total 630,000 236,000 254,000 63,000 77,000
Canteen(number
of employees) 33,600 25,200 (63,000) 4,200
Maintenance
(hours) 46,400 34,800 (81,200)
Total 630,000 316,000 314,000
b.
Fabrication labour hours = 12,640
c.
Batch cost £
Direct materials 3,000
Direct labour 1,040
Overheads
Fabrication 2,500
Finishing 1,600
Total 8,140
Cost per window 8,140/200 units 40.70
Mark up 16.28
Selling price 56.98
d.
Direct material cost percentage
This method is best used when the price of materials is constant and there is a direct
relationship between the materials and labour costs incurred to manufacture the
product. Consider the following example:
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Job A Job B Budget
£ £ £
Materials 250 100 15,000
Labour 100 100 92,000
The overheads charges to a job will be distorted. Job A is charged with a greater
proportion of overheads than Job B even thought the labour costs were the same.
In the case of Oriel the production uses a range of materials and this method would be
inappropriate.
Labour hours method could have been used in the Finishing department. But on the
basis of the labour hours and machine hours for this department it is obviously
machine-intensive and therefore, machine hours should be used.
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Question 4
Full cost
Direct material (20 X 2) 40,00
Direct labour (12 X 30,000) 60.00
128.80
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Answers to homework questions – Lecture 15
Question 1
Cost Volume profit analysis refers to break-even analysis and
the computation of the level of output to achieve target profits.
It is also used to quantify the effects of changing cost and selling price
on the business and for decision
making.
Question 2
Proposal i: c Workings
Current Contribution per unit= 8 (20-7-4-1)
Revised unit contribution = 6 8-(10%*20)
Revised break-even point= 83,333 (200,000+300,000)/6
Proposal ii : a Workings
Revised unit contribution = 7 8-1
Increased sales=20%*50,000 units= 10,000 units
Additional contribution = £70,000
Additional fixed cost = £50,000
Additional profit £ 20,000
Proposal 2 will contributes additional profit of £20,000 which will reduce current loss to £80,000.
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Hence, proposal 2 is better provided the additional production capacity can
be achieved.
Question 3
(i) c
(ii) c
(iii) c
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Question 4
i) d
ii) a
iii) b
d) a
Revised Profit
iv)
CM Per Unit 124
280-156
X Units 60,000
Total CM 7,440,000
Less: Fixed Cost 7,480,000
Loss 40,000
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Question 5
i) d
Fixed costs
Direct labour £30,000 (usually variable but fixed in this question)
Machine lease costs 25,000
Other fixed costs 45,000
Total 100,000
ii) a
iii) d
Fixed costs
Direct labour £30,000
Machine lease costs 55,000
Other fixed costs 45,000
Total 130,000
iv)
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Answer to homework questions –lecture 16
Question 1
Incremental costs are those which will change with respect to the
decision being made. These will be relevant to the decision and
included in any computations of outcomes. Costs which will not
change whatever decision is made are not incremental and not
relevant.
(b)Sunk costs are costs which have been incurred prior to the decision
being made. They will not change whatever decision is made. They
are therefore not relevant and will not be included in computations of
outcomes
(c)Opportunity costs are defined as ‘the cost of the next best opportunity
foregone’. These costs may be incurred if certain decisions are made.
They may be relevant and included in computations of appropriate
outcomes.
Question 2
i) b
ii) a
iii) c
As shown below.
Hours to satisfy max demand 185000
(40000 X 1)+(30000 X 1.5)+(50000 X 2)
A B C
Selling Price 20 30 40
Variable cost 8 20 30
Contribution Margin 12 10 10
Hours per unit 1 1.5 2
Ranking 1 2 3
Optimal Mix
Satisfy
Products Demand Hrs per unit Total Hours
A 40000 1 40000
B 30000 1.5 45000
C 27500 2 55000
Total 140000
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Profit
Products Demand CM Per unit Total CM
A 40000 12 480,000
B 30000 10 300,000
C 27500 10 275,000
Total 1,055,000
Less: Fixed Cost -500,000
Profit 555,000
Question 3
i) d
ii) a
iii) c
As shown below.
A B C
Contribution per unit 30-VC 21 45- VC 34 20- VC 15
= 9 11 5
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Question 4
i) d
ii) c
iii) a
As shown below.
Conclusion:
Cheaper to make the cartons.
Assumptions
- Depreciation is a fixed cost of production
- Fixed production overheads remain unchanged regardless of the
decision made
-Direct Labour is a variable cost
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Question 5
Outflow
Material 4,000 0 4,000
Variable Overheads 400 0 400
Net cash Outflow 4,400
Net cash Outflow 5,400
a. The workers would be paid even If the contract is not undertaken. There is thus no
opportunity cost as the department is already working below capacity.
a. Depreciation is not a cash flow and is therefore not relevant. Depreciation Apportions
the original cost of the machine, a cost which was sunk eight ago. There is no
indication of the current resale value of the machine and so it is assumed that
there is no intention of selling it. It is also assumed that there is no opportunity cost
involved in its use for this contract, as it would not be needed elsewhere.
a. The foreman is already being paid. Therefore his salary is not an Incremental cost.
It is assumed that there is no opportunity cost associated with the use of his time
for this contract.
a. It is assumed that general fixed overhead will not increase a result of this contract,
therefore absorbed overhead is not relevant.
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Question 6
Calculation of BE price
Per
Copier
Components Y,Z 53
(75-22)
Component W 34
Direct Labour
1.5 X 0.75X 24 27
1.5 X0.25 X12 4.5
Total 11850
Add: Travelling time
10 hrs X 24 240
Extra Machine 800
• Labour costs need to reflect the lower number of hours and the
use of trainees
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(b)Factors to be considered in setting a
price.
• Will there be enough staff for the job and the introduction of new
copiers? Is it sensible to have trainees working on old types of
copier?
• If this is a large customer would we lose goodwill if we refused
The upgrade? Could this damage future relationships and other
sales possibilities?
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Question 7
540
£000
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ii) Dolphy could use the company to provide all units of R, and avoid
current separable production fixed costs.
990
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Question 8
Outcome 1 £000
• Contribution lost if Smallville closes:
Sales 500
Direct costs (400)
Factory fixed costs (80)
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Outcome 2
Direct contribution lost (75% u (500 – 400)) 75
Factory fixed cost 80
Increased corporate contribution 5
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Answers to Homework Questions – Lecture 17
Question 1
Eden Limited
(b)The difference in profits of £12,500 for the first quarter is due to the
inclusion in absorption cost of fixed overhead of £1.25 per unit in the
10,000 units in inventory at the end of the quarter. These costs have been
carried forward as part of closing inventory and not expensed. Under marginal
costing all of the fixed production costs are seen as a periodic cost and as
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an expense of the first quarter.
Question 2
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Question 3
a. £000
2007 2008 2009
Sales 64 64 80
Cost of Sales (40) (40) (50)
24 24 30
(under) over (4) 4 (8)
absorption
20 28 22
Fixed selling and 20 20 20
admin
Profit 0 8 2
c. £000
2007 2008 2009
Absorption profit 0 8 2
Less: Fixed
production -4 -16 -8
overhead in
closing inventory
Add: Fixed
production 0 +4 +16
overhead in
opening
inventory
Marginal costing
profit/loss (4) (4) 10
Fixed overhead absorption rate per unit = £40,000/1,000 units = £40 per unit.
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Question 4
£000
Production Production Service General Total
Depart 1 Dept 2 Dept Factory
Allocated 380.0 465.0 265 230 1,340
Allocation of
general factory 92.0(40%) 115.0(50%) 23(10%) (230)
Share of
service
department
Labour related
cost(60%) 76.8 96.0(10/18) (172.8)
Machine
related cost 57.6 57.6 (115.2)
(40%)
Total 606.4 733.6 0 0
Unit of output 120 120
Overhead rate 5.05 6.11
per unit
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fixed overhead rate because actual volume was 4,000 units less than estimated
volume.
£
Sales:114,000 units x £36 4,104,000
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Answers to homework Questions Lecture 18
Question 1
RECEIPTS
PAYMENTS
Payableschedule below)
Machine-deposit 1,300
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Schedule of collections of sales revenue from Accounts
Receivables
Total Sales May June July
March 200,000
April 230,000
May 195,000
June 250,000
July 210,000
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Schedule of payment of inventory purchases
Purchases
credit (40%)
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Question 2
Prepare for the months of October, November and December 1999:
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(d) In the absence of evidence to the contrary, it is assumed that a
business will continue to operate indefinitely into the future. Thus its
assets generally are assumed that they are not held for resale, nor
valued accordingly, but valued on the historical cost principle. If data
suggests that continued existence will be a problem, then the
accounting record has to indicate this fact. This means that financial
reports then are prepared based on expected sales or market values
of assets. Solvency refers to the capacity of a business to met it s
debts as they become due. Liquidity refers to the speed with which a
business’s assets can be turned into cash, without an appreciable
loss of value. The cash budget shows that the firm does not have
enough cash to satisfy its obligations and planned purchases for
December. As a result, it will not be able to conduct its normal
operations and may be forced into liquidation.
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Question 3
Cash Budget for the first 3 months of the 2006/2007 financial year
Cash receipts
Receipts from sales (W1) 510,000 432,000 518,400
Cash payments
Purchases (W2) 216,000 252,000 360,000
Fixed and variable expenses 160,620 118,800 158,400
Cash dividends 0 0 40,000
Advertising 0 0 15,000
Equipment replacements 3,000 3,000 3,000
Tax 0 0 60,000
Repayment of bank loan 0 0 280,000
Interest expense (12%*100k*3/12) 0 0 8,400
379,620 373,800 924,800
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Question 4
Payments: 40,000
Purchases 62,000 50,000 36,000
Labour 34,000 34,000 26,000
Capital Expenditure 180,000 – 20,000
Production Expenses 8,500 5,500 4,500 5,500
Administration Expenses 9,200 7,200 7,200 7,200
Selling and Distribution 7,500 8,500 7,000 9,500
B) There are three main points to be made in answer to this part of the
question.
• The cash budget identifies shortfalls of cash and enables the company to find
appropriate financing for the project.
• The cash budget enables the company to determine the ongoing working
capital implications of the project.
• The cash budget can be used to avoid over-trading and liquidity crises.
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Question 5
Week 1 2 3 4 5 6
(£)
(£) (£) (£) (£)
(£)
Receiptfrom 24,000 24,000 28,200 25,800 19,800 5,400
Accounts
Payments:
Receivables
Materials 8,000 12,500 6,000 nil nil nil
Wages 3,200 4,200 2.800 nil nil nil
Variable overheads 4,800 3,200 nil nil nil nil
Fixed overheads 8,300 8,300 6,800 6,80 6,80 6,800
0 0
Total payments 24,300 28,200 15,600 6,800 6,800 6,800
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b. Finance will be required to meet the cash deficit in week 2, but a lowering of the
budgeted material Inventory at the end of week 1 would reduce the amount of cash
to be borrowed at the end of week 2.
1. The surplus cash after the end of week 2 should be
invested on a short-term basis.
2. After week 6, there will be no cash receipts, but cash outflows
will be £6,800 per week. The closing balance of £39,700 at
the end of week 6 will be sufficient to finance outflows for a
further five or six weeks (39,700/£6,800 per week).
3. Assumptions underlying the cash flows budget may be
subject to significant uncertainty.
4. There may be additional costs of plant closure and reopening
due to strike.
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Answer to Homework Questions – Lecture 19
Question 1
Usage Variance
(6,960 - 7150)X 0.4 76 (U) (b)
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Question 2
Formula
Price Variance = (Budgeted Price - Actual Price) X actual Quantity Purchased/Used
Computation
Possible Reasons:
1) Price variance- more expensive materials used causing lower
spoilage and hence favourable efficiency variance.
Question 3
Benefits of budgeting
1) Forces planning and improves co-ordination.
Limitations:
Dyfunctional behaviour may result if:
1) Budgets may not be taken seriously if they are deemed unrealistic.
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Question 4
Examples:
- labour, material, equipment and factory space may be in short supply.
- firms cannot sell unlimited quantities of output without reducing price
Master budgets are the budgeted profit and loss account, Statement of
Financial Position and the cash budget.
Purposes of budgeting:
- Allow regular examination of organisation’s goals & basic policies
- strengthen cohesiveness of management
- Forces management to plan ahead
- Optimises utilization of resources
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Question 5
36
Flexible
(i) (540-500)*36 budget
@540
(ii) 540*(126-(64800/540)) units
Price Eff
Actual var AQ*SP var SQ*SP
Materials 20,900 (iii) (1,100) 22,000 (iv) 400 21,600
Labour 9,200 (v) 400 8,800 (vi) 160 8,640
(b)
Question 6
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Question 7
Cost variances
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Answers to Homework Questions – Lecture 20 & 21
Question 1
a)
Depreciation (100000-20000)/5 year = 16,000
Payback Period
Project P
Year Cash Flow Cumulative
Cash Flow
0 (100,000) (100,000)
1 50,000 (50,000)
2 40,000 (10,000)
3 30,000 +20,000
4 20,000
Payback period = 2 1/3 = 2.33 years
Project Q
Year Cash Flow Cumulative
Cash Flow
0 (100,000) (100,000)
1 20,000 (80,000)
2 20,000 (60,000)
3 28,000 (32,000)
4 32,000 0
Payback period 4 years
b)
Disadvantages : –
-Ignores Time Value of Money.
–Ignores Cash Flows after Payback Therefore Bias Against Long Term
Projects –
Question 2
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Question 3
NPV = (48,900)
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Question 4
Accounting Rate of Return is the ratio of the average annual profit to the
investment amount for a project.
Advantages:
1) Relatively simple to use as data readily available.
Disadvantages:
1) Does not account for time value of money.
Question 5
Payback Period
140000/45000 3.11 Years
Total -920
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Project B
Present Value of inflows
45000 X PVIFA 6% 5
years 189,540.00
-
Less: Initial Investment 140,000.00
Payback Period
140000/45000 3.11 Years
Total -920
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Project B
Present Value of inflows
45000 X PVIFA 6% 5
years 189,540.00
-
Less: Initial Investment 140,000.00
b. Notes
Payback Method
1) Refers to the number of years it takes to recover initial investment. The shorter
the payback, the better.
2) Disadvantage is that it does not account for the time value of money and
ignores cash flows after payback period.
1) Refers to the absolute increase in shareholder's wealth and is the most conceptually
sound technique.
IRR
1) Refers to the minimum return for the project to be acceptable.
2) Gives the same accept/reject decision as the NPV for individual project.
Recommendation:
Company should use the NPV method as is the most conceptually
sound technique.
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Question 6
The payback period of investment appraisal focus on the payback
period.
The payback period refers to the number of years it takes to recover
the initial investment. Objective is to select the project with the shortest
payback period.
Advantages of payback
1) Simple to use
Disadvantages:
1) Ignores the time value of money.
QUESTION 7
a) NPV YEARS
Description 0 1 2
Initial Investment -900,000
Building Cost -1,000,000 -600,000
Apartment sales 1,800,000
300000 X 6
300000X3 900,000
Net Cash Flow -900,000 800,000 300,000
X PVF @12% 1 0.893 0.797
NPV 53,500
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Present value of sales Price =
(1,800,000X
.893)+(900000X0.797)
=2324700
% reduction = 53500/2324700
= 2.3% X300,0000 =6,900
a) NPV YEARS
Description 0 1 2
Initial Investment -900,000
Building Cost -1,000,000 -600,000
Apartment sales 1,800,000
300000 X 6
300000X3 900,000
Net Cash Flow -900,000 800,000 300,000
X PVF @12% 1 0.855 0.731
NPV 3,300
Hence the major risk factor is the fall in the price of the
house as it will only take a 2.3% (small) decrease to cause
NPV to be negative.
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Question 8
(a) Payback period A B C
(years) 2 2 3
Workings – Alpha
Average profit = (cash flows – depreciable amount) ÷ 4
= (60,000 – 40,000) ÷ 4
= 5,000
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5
Question 9
(a) Discounted cash flow computations
Equipment (1,650) 50
(b) When making any decision about the future, managers have to rely on their
expectations of future events. As no one can perfectly predict the future, investment
decisions are affected by uncertainty (whatever method of investment appraisal is used).
Long-term decisions are affected more than short-term decisions, as it is easier to make
accurate predictions over a shorter time period.
Uncertainty can affect the amount or timing of future cash flows, as well as deciding which
discount rate is appropriate (when using DCF techniques). However, managers can assess
how sensitive their decisions are to errors in their estimates and forecasts. This is called
sensitivity analysis.
In respect of the recycling project, considerations might be:
• the amount by which sales reductions give an NPV less than £(500)K
• the amount by which labour costs might increase to give an NPV less than £(500)K.
THE END
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