CH. 7 ACCT II
The difference between absorption costing net operating income and variable costing net operating income can be explained by the way these two methods account for
Fixed overhead costs
When the units produced are less than the units sold, the net operating income computed using the variable costing method is ______ the net operating income using the absorption costing method.
Greater Than
Max, Incorporated, has two divisions, South Division and North Division. South Division's sales, contribution margin ratio, and traceable fixed expenses are $500,000, 60%, and $100,000, respectively. What is the segment margin for the South Division?
$200,000 (contribution margin = sales x % contribution margin) (Segment margin = contribution margin - traceable fixed expenses)
Bovine Corporation has two divisions: televisions and mobile phones. The mobile phone division has a contribution margin of $600,000. The company's common fixed costs and total traceable fixed costs are $100,000 and $500,000 respectively. Assuming the traceable fixed costs of the television division are $300,000, what is the segment margin of the mobile phone division?
$400,000
Absorption Cost Method
(Fixed manufacturing ÷ units produced) + direct materials + direct labor + variable manufacturing overhead = Absorption costing
What needs to be included in segmented income statements?
- A contribution format should be used because it separates fixed from variable costs, and it enables the calculation of a contribution margin - Traceable fixed costs should be separated from common fixed costs to enable the calculation of a segment margin
Traceable Fixed Costs
- It is important to realize that the traceable fixed cost of one segment may be a common fixed cost of another segment. (For example, the landing fee paid to land an airplane at an airport is traceable to the particular flight, but it is not traceable to first-class, business-class, and economy-class passengers.)
When preparing segmented income statements
- Use CM format - Identify traceable costs and deduct from segmented CM
Segment Margin =
Contribution Margin - Traceable fixed costs
Omission of Costs
Costs assigned to a segment should include all costs attributable to that segment from the company's entire value chain
Traceable costs
Costs easily traced to the revenue earned.
Failure to trace costs directly
Costs that can be traced directly to specific segments of a company should not be allocated to other segments.
When the units produced exceed the units sold, the net operating income computed using the variable costing method is ______ the net operating income using the absorption costing method.
Less Than
When the number of units produced is greater than the number of units sold, variable costing net operating income will be
Less than absorption costing net operating income
Fixed Manufacturing Overhead is a
Period Cost
Fixed Selling and Administrative Expenses are
Period Costs
Variable Selling and Administrative Expenses are
Period Costs
Direct Labor is a
Product Cost
Variable Manufacturing Overhead is a
Product Cost
Contribution Margin =
Sales x %
Inappropriate allocation base
Some companies allocate costs to segments using arbitrary bases. Costs should be allocated to segments only when the allocation base actually drives the cost being allocated.
What is a common mistake made by companies when assigning costs to segments?
They assign the cost of the corporate headquarters buildings to segments because the segments must cover those costs
Which costing approaches is best suited for cost-volume-profit analysis?
Variable
Absorption costing income statements ignore
Variable and Fixed Cost Distinctions
Segment
any part or activity of an organization about which a manager seeks cost, revenue, or profit data
Business segment's break-even point
computed by dividing its traceable fixed expenses by its contribution margin ratio.
Companywide break-even point
computed by dividing the sum of the company's traceable fixed expenses and common fixed expenses by the company's overall contribution ratio
Segment Margin
computed by subtracting the traceable fixed costs of a segment from its contribution margin, is the best gauge of the long-run profitability of a segment
Breakeven analysis for company and segment
o Divide common fixed + traceable fixed by CM margin ratio o Divide traceable fixed cost by segment CM margin ratio
Common Costs
should not be arbitrarily allocated to segments based on the rationale that "someone has to cover the common costs" for two reasons 1. This practice may make a profitable business segment appear to be unprofitable 2. Allocating common fixed costs forces managers to be held accountable for costs they cannot control
When the units produced are equal to the units sold, the net operating income computed using the variable costing method is ______ the net operating income using the absorption costing method.
Equal To
What is true about segment margin?
In preparing a segmented income statement, the variable expenses are deducted from sales to yield the contribution margin The segment margin represents the margin available after a segment has covered all of its own costs The segment margin is the best gauge of the long-run profitability of a segment because it includes only those costs that are caused by the segment