Chapter 4
Chapter 4
Chapter 4
Contribution Margin:
- The amount remaining from sales revenue after variable expenses have
been deducted.
- CM is used first to cover fixed expenses. Any remaining CM contributes to
net operating income.
If we develop equations to calculate break-even and net income, we will not have
to prepare an income statement to determine what net income will be at any
level of sales. Simply multiply the number of units sold above break-even by
the contribution margin per unit.
For example, we know that if Racing Bicycle sells 430 units, net operating
income will be $6,000. The company will sell 30 units above the break-even unit
sales and the contribution margin is $200 per unit, or $6,000.
Profit = (P × Q – V × Q) – Fixed
expenses
Part I:
We begin by gathering the information for the variables in the equation.
Part II:
Chapter 4
We have now entered all the known amounts into the equation and solve for the
unknown profit.
Part III:
As you can see, our net operating income or profit is once again determined to
be $200.
This equation can also be used to show the $200 profit RBC earns if it sells 401
bikes.
→ $200 = ($500 × 401 – $300 × 401) – $80,000
In terms of the unit contribution margin (Unit CM)
The CM ratio can also be calculated by dividing the contribution margin per unit
by the selling price per unit:
The variable expense ratio is the ratio of variable expenses to sales. It can be
computed by dividing the total variable expenses by the total sales, or in single
product analysis, it can be computed by dividing the variable expenses per unit
by the unit selling price.
4. Changes in
elements
- What is the profit impact if Racing Bicycle can increase unit sales from 500
to 540 by increasing the monthly advertising budget by $10,000?
- Would you recommend that the advertising campaign be undertaken?
- What is the profit impact if Racing Bicycle can use higher quality raw
materials, thus increasing variable costs per unit by $10, to generate an
increase in unit sales from 500 to 580?
- Would you recommend the use of higher-quality raw materials?
- What is the profit impact of RBC: (1) cuts its selling price by $20 per unit,
(2) increases its advertising budget by $15,000 per month, and (3)
increases sales from 500 to 650 units per month?
- What is the profit impact of RBC: (1) pays a $15 sales commission per bike
sold instead of paying salespersons flat salaries that currently total $6,000
per month, and (2) increases unit sales from 500 to 575 bikes?
LO2: Determine the break-even point, the number of sales required for
a target profit, the margin of safety, and the degree of operating
leverage
1. Break-even Analysis
The equation and formula methods can be used to determine the unit sales and
dollar sales needed to achieve
a target profit of zero
Chapter 4
- W
e
can calculate the dollar sales needed to attain a target profit (net
operating profit) of $100,000 at Racing Bicycle.
The break-even point is where the total revenue and total expenses
lines intersect. In the case of Racing Bicycle, break-even is 400 bikes sold
or sales revenue of $200,000.
The profit or loss at any given sales level is measured by the vertical
distance between the total revenue and the total expenses lines.
In terms of Dollars
- The margin of safety in dollars is the excess of budgeted (or actual) sales
over the break-even volume of sales.
In terms of Percentage
- The margin of safety at Racing is $50,000, and each bike sells for $500, so
the margin of safety in units is 100 bikes.
→ Racing Bicycle is selling 100 more bikes than are needed to break
even.
5. Operating Leverage
Verification
- A 10% increase in sales would increase bike sales from the current level
of 500 to 550. Look at the contribution margin income statement and
notice that income increased from $20,000 to $30,000. That $10,000
increase in net income is a 50% increase.
→ So it is true that a 10% increase in sales results in a 50% in net
income. This is powerful information for a manager to have.
There are multiple methods to calculate the breakeven points for different
products within a multi-product company:
- Using the Breakeven percentage to sales (BE%) method is straightforward
and simple. We only need to recall the MoS% equation being 1/DOL =
Net Operating Income/Contribution Margin
- Then calculate BE% by 1- MoS%
Chapter 4
- Use the BE% to multiply the original sales dollars and sales units to get
the break-even sales dollars and sales units respectively.
- When extending the RBC example to sell two different products, Bicycle,
and Carts, using the BE% method, we can calculate the MoS% by using its
relations with 1/DOL where DOL = Net Operating Income /
Contribution Margin. The calculation gives rise to MoS% as 35.85%,
implying BE% as 64.15%.
- Multiplying 64.15% to the existing sales dollars of the two products
provides the respective break-even sales dollars of two products
Bikes comprise 45% of RBC’s total sales revenue and the carts comprise the
remaining 55%. RBC provides the following information:
Chapter 4
EXERCISE
E7-60B(Braun):
Instruction
1.
Contribution margin per unit = Sale price per unit — Variable cost per unit
= $25.00 - $7.50 - $5.00 - $3.30 - $2.20
= $25.00 - $18.00
= $7
Contribution margin ratio = Contribution margin per unit / Sales price per unit x
100
= $7.00 / $25.00 x 100 = 28%
Total contribution margin = Sales revenue - Variable expenses
= 100,000 units x $25 per unit - 100,000 units x $18.00
per unit
3.
Contribution margin = Sales * CM ratio = 4,500,000 * 28%
= 1,260,000
Chapter 4
4.
Break-even point in unit = Fixed expense / CM per unit = 599,200/7 = 85,600
(units)
Break-even point in dollars = BE in unit * Sale price = 85,600 * 25 = 2,140,000
5.
Sell to earn the target profit = (fixed expense + operating income) / CM per unit
= (599,200 + 259,700)/7
= 122,700 (units)
6.
New BE in units = New fixed expense / New CM per unit
= (599,200 + 23,500) / (7 - 5*10%)
= 95,800 (units)
7.
Operating income = 700,000 - 599,200
= 100,800
Operating leverage factor = CM / Operating income
= 700,000/100,800
= 6.94
8.
Operating income increases in percentage = Increase in volume * Operating
leverage factor
= 7%*6.94
= 48.6%
9.
Margin of safety in sales dollars = Sales - Sales at BE
= 2,500,000 - 2,140,000
= 360,000
Margin of safety in percentage of sales = Margin of safety in sales dollars / Sales
* 100
= 360,000/2,500,000 * 100
= 14.4%
10.
Sales 25 50
Variable cost 18 28
Chapter 4
Contribution margin 7 22
Sales mix 4 1 5
Total CM 28 22 50
Needed to target sales = (Fixed expense + OI) / (Weighted average CM per unit)
= (599,200 + 259,700) / 10 = 85,890
E4-5(GNBCY):
Variable expenses 63 70
Fixed expenses are $30,000 per month and the company is selling 2,000 units
per month.
Instruction:
Increase in contribution = 9000 * CM ratio = 9000 * 30% = 2700
Increase in fixed expense = 5000
E4-10(GNBCY):
1.
The overall CM ratio = total CM / total sales = 30,000 / 100,000 = 30%
2.
Variable expenses:
Claimjumper variable expenses: ($24,000/$30,000) × $20,000 = $16,000
Makeover variable expenses: ($56,000/$70,000) × $50,000 = $40,000
E4-13(GNBCY):
Chapter 4
1.
Income statement
NOI 58,000
2.
Income statement
NOI 42,500
3.
Income statement
NOI 52,500
4.
Chapter 4
Income statement
NOI 59,600