Joe and the Peanut Rack “Toto, something tells me we’re not in Kansas anymore.”

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Chapter 14 Measuring and Assigning Costs for Income Statements
Advertisements

Chapter 5. Merchandisers Cost of Goods Sold Manufacturers Direct Material, Direct Labor, and Variable Manufacturing Overhead Merchandisers and Manufacturers.
Cost – Volume – Profit Analysis
Breakeven Analysis A graphical view of the relationship between profit and sales volume By John C. Kelly.
November 16, Part 4 The Value Chain Job Costing and Overhead Rates Actual versus Budgeted Amounts Levi Strauss Factory Example Absorption Costing and Variable.
Cost-Volume-Profit Relationships Chapter 6. © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., 2000 Irwin/McGraw-Hill The Basics of Cost-Volume-Profit (CVP) Analysis.
Contemporary Engineering Economics, 4 th edition, © 2007 Estimating Profit from Production Lecture No. 31 Chapter 8 Contemporary Engineering Economics.
Prepared by Debby Bloom-Hill CMA, CFM
Variable Costing Chapter 21 Exercises.
Analyzing Cost, Volume, and Pricing to Increase Profitability Chapter 3.
© Business Studies Online “A firm Breaks Even if it doesn’t make a profit or a loss” In other words profit = 0 For this to happen the money coming into.
Section 5: Financial Strategy. The Business Plan 1)Executive Summary 2)Market Analysis 3)Resource Analysis 4)Operating Strategy 5)Financial Strategy 6)Contingency.
The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. 2008McGraw-Hill/Irwin CHAPTER 3 Analysis of Cost, Volume, and Pricing to Increase Profitability.
COST-VOLUME-PROFIT ANALYSIS
Cost Behavior Analysis
Variable Costing and Performance Reporting
Variable and Full Costing Managerial Accounting Prepared by Diane Tanner University of North Florida Chapter 3.
1. Describe and illustrate income reporting under variable costing and absorption costing. 2. Describe and illustrate income analysis under variable costing.
Chapter 10 The Use of Budgets for Cost Control and Performance Evaluation.
6 - 1 CHAPTER 6 Cost Allocation Chapter 5 discussed the classification of costs according to their relationship to volume. This chapter covers the relationship.
Factors that Makeup an Income Statement Analyzing Revenues, Costs, & Expenses.
Chapters 4 and 5. VariableFixed Mixed Copyright (c) 2009 Prentice Hall. All rights reserved3.
Chapter 15 Accounting Information for management decisions.
1 CHAPTER M5 Business Decisions Using Cost Behavior © 2007 Pearson Custom Publishing.
The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. 2008McGraw-Hill/Irwin CHAPTER 2 Cost Behavior, Operating Leverage, and Profitability Analysis.
Chapter 21 Variable Costing
Pricing products Cost Behaviour 1.Direct Labour and Direct Materials are Variable Costs: – Expenses that tend to change in direct proportion to the volume.
Chapter 18. Identify how changes in volume affect costs.
CENTURY 21 ACCOUNTING © Thomson/South-Western LESSON 15-3 Decisions That Affect Net Income.
Review:Variable Costing Break-Even Margin of Safety.
CENTURY 21 ACCOUNTING © Thomson/South-Western LESSON 15-3 Decisions That Affect Net Income.
Financial and Managerial Accounting Wild, Shaw, and Chiappetta Fifth Edition Wild, Shaw, and Chiappetta Fifth Edition Copyright © 2013 by The McGraw-Hill.
Lecture 3 Cost-Volume-Profit Analysis. Contribution Margin The Basic Profit Equation Break-even Analysis Solving for targeted profits.
Chapter 20 Cost-Volume-Profit Analysis
Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education CHAPTER 11. Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education Ch, 11: Creating a Successful Financial Plan  Common mistake.
Accounting for Executives Week 8 6/5/2010 (Fri) Lecture 8.
Multiple Product CVP Analysis The easy way. What is multiple product CVP Analysis? Sell multiple products Ratio of products sold is assumed constant Determine.
Cost Behavior, Operating Leverage, and Profitability Analysis Chapter 11 McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2012 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights.
Contemporary Engineering Economics, 6 th edition Park Copyright © 2016 by Pearson Education, Inc. All Rights Reserved Estimating Profit from Production.
Shahadat Hosan Faculty (Part time), MBA Program Stamford University Bangladesh Segment Reporting.
Review:Variable Costing Break-Even Margin of Safety.
@ 2012, Cengage Learning Cost Behavior and Cost-Volume-Profit Analysis LO 3a – Understanding Break-Even.
Contribution Margins. Cost-volume-profit Analysis: Calculating Contribution Margin Financial statements are used by managers to help make good business.
Cost-Volume-Profit Analysis
Chapter Eleven Cost Behavior, Operating Leverage, and Profitability Analysis © 2015 McGraw-Hill Education.
Welcome Back Atef Abuelaish1. Welcome Back Time for Any Question Atef Abuelaish2.
Department of Applied Economics and Management Cornell University Ithaca, NY Dr. Wen-fei Uva Senior Extension Associate What is Your Profitability?
© 2012 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. McGraw-Hill/Irwin.
Welcome Back Atef Abuelaish1. Welcome Back Time for Any Question Atef Abuelaish2.
DEVRY ACCT 505 W EEK 6 Q UIZ S EGMENT R EPORTING AND R ELEVANT C OSTS FOR D ECISIONS Check this A+ tutorial guideline at
Managerial Accounting
Variable versus Fixed Costs
Prepared by Debby Bloom-Hill CMA, CFM
Lesson 15-2 Determining Breakeven
Cost-Volume-Profit Relationships
Cost-Volume-Profit Analysis: A Managerial Planning Tool
Cost & Management Accounting
Lecture 08.
University of 6th of October, Egypt
AMIS 310 Foundations of Accounting
Breakeven.
Introduction to Decision Analysis & Modeling
Operating Leverage ACG Prepared by Diane Tanner
Segment Reporting and Performance Evaluation
AMIS 310 Foundations of Accounting
Lesson 15-2 Determining Breakeven
Presentation Chapter 4 Profit Planning.
Lesson 15-2 Determining Breakeven
Lesson 15-3 Decisions That Affect Net Income
Lesson 15-1 Cost Characteristics That Influence Decisions
Presentation transcript:

Joe and the Peanut Rack “Toto, something tells me we’re not in Kansas anymore.”

#2. Analyze the consultant’s logic when he goes from the “fully allocated” cost of $13,130 per year to $15,630 per year by adding the $2,500. What type of cost is the $2,500? $150,000 ÷ 60 = $2,500 This is an opportunity cost (revenues from the “next best alternative”) But the space at the end of the counter is “just a dead spot.” Even if $2,500 were the opportunity cost, it doesn’t represent “general operating costs”

#3. Prepare a Contribution Margin income statement for the peanuts operation, without allocating any general overhead. Sales $1 x 50 x 52$2,600 Variable Costs $0.60 x 50 x 52 $1,560 Contribution Margin$1,040 Fixed Costs$ 250 Net Income$ 790

#4. Infer total overhead for the restaurant assuming the consultant is allocating overhead based on square feet of counter space. Total O/H $ ÷ 60 sq ft = O/H rate. O/H rate x 1 sq ft = $12,780 So total O/H is $12,780 x 60 = $766,800 Alternatively, you could calculate $13,130 x 60 = $787,800.

#5. Now infer total overhead for the restaurant assuming the consultant is allocating overhead based on revenue Total revenue is calculated as follows: $150,000 + $2,600 = $152,600 Total overhead ÷ $152,600 = O/H rate. O/H rate x $2,600 peanut revenue = $12,780 So O/H rate is $12,780 ÷ $2,600 = $4.92 per revenue dollar $4.92 x 152,600 = $750,792

#6. Prepare a contribution margin income statement for the restaurant, without the peanut operation, assuming the contribution margin per- centage is the same for the rest of the business as for the peanuts. Assume all overhead is fixed, and use your estimate of overhead costs from either #4 or #5 above. Sales $150,000 Variable Costs $150,000 x 60% $ 90,000 Contribution Margin$ 60,000 Fixed Costs (from 4)$787,800 Net Income (loss) ($727,800)

#1. In one sentence, what is the moral of the story? On one level, the moral of the story is that full costing is necessary for sound decision-making. But this assumes you believe the consultant. On another level, the moral of the story is that contribution margin analysis is the right way to approach this problem, and full costing is silly in this setting. But this assumes you believe the author of the problem.

#1. In one sentence, what is the moral of the story? After the analysis you conducted in questions #2 through #6, I would like you to view the moral of the story as the following: 1. If you don’t carefully analyze the numbers, it is difficult or impossible for you to fully understand the issues. 2. Approach everything you read with a critical eye.