managerial accounting ch 5, 5A, 6
advocates of absorption costing believe that
fixed costs are an essential part of product production
absorption and variable costing net income are usually different due to the accounting for
fixed manufacturing overhead
under variable costing the cost of a unit or inventory does NOT contain
fixed manufacturing overhead
a traceable fixed cost
is incurred because of the existence of a segment
when a segment cannot cover its own costs
it should probably be dropped
the segment margin is a valuable tool for assessing the:
long run profitability of a segment
allocating common fixed costs to a segment
may cause an otherwise profitable segment to appear unprofitable
to estimate the effect on profits for a planned increase in sales
multiply the increase in units sold by the unit cm
to calculate the degree of leverage
net operating income/cm
costs should be allocated to segments for internal decision-making purposes
only when the allocation base actually drives the cost being allocated
a measure of how sensitive net operating income is to a given percentage change in sales dollars is known as
operating leverage
under both variable costing and absorption costing, variable and fixed selling and administrative costs are treated as
period costs
Chrissy's cupcakes has $832,000 in sales and $265,000 in fixed expenses. given cm ratio of 72% Chrissy's profit loss is
profit= cm x sales - fe 72% x 832,000 - 265,000 = 334,040
the single point where the total revenue line crosses the total expense line on the CVP graph indicates
the break even point, profit equals zero
a company has reached its break even point when
the cm equals fixed expenses
the amount of by which sales can drop before losses are incurred
the margin of safety
the break even point is reached when the contribution margin is equal to:
total fixed expenses
company A has a cm ratio of 35% for each dollar in sales the cm will increase by
$.35
a company reports the following for a sales volume of 200 units: $100,000 in sales and $80,000 in variable costs. if the break-even point is 200 units and the company sells 201 units net profit will be:
$100- for each unit sold above break even, profit increases by the contribution margin per unit which is ($100,000-$80,000)/200
company A's product sells for $90 and has a variable cost of $35 per unit. fixed costs total $550,000. if company A sells 16,000 units the CM per unit is
$90-$35=$55
given sales of $1,452,000, variable expenses of $958,000 and fixed expenses of $354,000 the cm ratio is
(1,452,000-958,320)/1,452,000= 34%
a company's selling price is $90 per unit, variable cost per unit is $28 and total fixed expenses are $320,000. the number of unit sales needed to earn a target profit of $200,800 is
(320,000+200,800)/(90-28)= 8,400 units
run like the wind sells ceiling fans. target profit for the year is $470,000. if each fan's cm is $32 and fixed costs total $222,640, the number of fans required to meet the company goal is
(470,000+222,640)/32= 21,645 fans
blissful blankets target profit is $520,000. each blanket has a cm of $21. fixed costs are $320,000. the number of blankets blissful blankets needs to sell in order to achieve its target profit is:
(520,000+320,000)/21= 40,000 blankets
when a segment is eliminated
-a traceable fixed cost will disappear -common fixed costs will remain unchanged
scattergraphs
-a way to diagnose cost behavior -plotting data on a scattergraph is an important diagnostic step
advocates of variable costing believe fixed manufacturing costing
-are period expenses - are not caused by and cannot be meaningfully traced to specific units of production
Assumptions of Cost-Volume-Profit Analysis
-costs are linear and can be accurately divided into variable and fixed elements - in multi product companies, the sales mix is constant
a segment should be discontinued when
-it cannot cover its own costs -it has a CM that cannot cover traceable fixed costs
at the break-even point
-net operating income is zero -total revenue equals total cost
Terry's trees has reached its break even point and has calculated its cm ratio to be 70%. for each $1 increase
-net operating income will increase by $.70 -total cm will increase by $.70
common miscues made by companies when assigning costs to segments include:
-omit some costs -inappropriately assign traceable fixed costs -arbitrarily allocate common fixed costs
company A has sales of $500,000, variable costs of $350,000, and fixed costs of $150,000. company A has:
-reached break-even point -a contribution margin equal to fixed costs
income statements prepared under variable and absorption costing
-reported net income on statements differ -both income statements include product and period costs
GAAP and IFRS rules
-require the the same method be used for both internal and external segment reporting - require segmented financial data be included in annual reports -create problems in reconciling internal and external reports
Petes putters sells each putter for $125. the variable cost is $60 per putter and fixed costs total $400,000. based on this information:
-the contribution per putter is $65 -the sale of 12,000 putters results in net operating income of $380,000 12,000x $65 cm= 780,000-400,000=380,000
the profit graph allows users to easily identify
-the profit at any given sales volume. -the sales volume required to reach the break-even point
absorption costing is
-used by most companies for external and internal reports -required by GAAP and IFRS
order of CM formal income statement
1) sales 2) variable expenses 3) cm 4) fixed expenses 5) net operating income
cakes by Jackie has $144,000 of fixed costs per year. the cm ratio is 59%. the sales dollars to break-even rounded to the nearest dollar equals
144,000/59%= 244,068
Vivian's violins has sales of $326,000, CM of $184,000 and fixed costs total $85,000. Vivian's violins net operating income is
184,000-85,000 = 99,000
company A sold 200,000 units. selling price is $7 per unit, contribution margin is $4 per unit, and the fixed expenses total $632,000. company A's profit (loss) is:
200,000x4-632,000 = 168,000
majorie's mugs sold 300 mugs last year for $20 each. variable costs were $7 per mug and total fixed costs were $1,700. Marjorie's mugs' profit was
300x20=6,000 300x7=2,100 3,900-1700= 2200
a company has a target profit of $204,000. the company's fixed costs are $305,000. the cm per unit is $40, what is the break even point in sales
305,000/40= 7,625
company A sells its product for $10 per unit if company A has variable expenses of $5 per unit and fixed expenses of 200,000, the break even point in units and dollars is
40,000 units and 400,000 dollars $200,000/5=40,000 40,000 x $10 = 400,000
Shonda's shoes sell for $95 per pair. if Shonda must sell a total of 284 pairs of shoes to break even , and a total of 450 pairs to achieve her target profit, sales dollars need to earn the target profit equals
450 x 95 = 42,750
plush and cushy sells high end desk chairs. the variable expense per chair is $85.05 and the chairs sell for $189 each. the variable expense ratio is
85.05/189= .45
a companys break-even point is 17,000 units. if the contribution margin is $22 per unit and 26,000 units are sold, net operating profit will be
9,000x22=198,000
lance inc. has sales of 9,000 units the cm is $32 and fixed costs total $120,000 lance's profit is
9,000x32=288,000-120,000= $168,000
sniffles inc produces facial tissues the company's cm ratio is 77% fixed expenses are $240,000. to achieve a target profit of $930,000 sniffles sales rounded to the nearest dollar must be:
930,000 + 240,000/ .77 = $1,520,000
if a segment is entirely eliminated
a fixed cost will not change
if the total cm is less than the total fixed expenses then
a net loss will occur
High-low or least squares regression analysis should only be done if
a scattergraph plot predicts linear cost behavior
cost behavior is considered linear whenever
a straight line approximates the relationship between cost and activity
selling and administrative expenses
are always treated as period costs
under absorption costing product costs consist of
both variable and fixed manufacturing costs
the calculation of CM ratio is
cm/sales
when constructing a CVP graph, the vertical axis represents:
dollars
a company with 3 segments has $10,000 in common fixed expenses. all 3 segments are at the break-even point. as a result the company
has an overall net operating loss of $10,000
the cm statement is primarily used for
internal decision making
the CM equals
sales minus all variable costs
to convert the margin of safety in dollars to the margin of Saftey in term of the number of units sold divide the margin of safety in dollars by the
sales price per unit
the cm income statement allows users to easily judge the impact of a change in
selling price, cost, volume
CVP analysis focuses on how profits are affected by
selling prices, sales volume, unit variable costs, total fixed costs, mix of products sold
to convert the formula for sales dollars required to attain a target profit to sales dollars required to break-even
set the target profit to 0
costs that can be directly traced to a segment
should not be allocated to other segments
arbot co. manufactures appliances at 3 manufacturing facilities in the US. each location has a plant manager who oversees the manufacturing process for that location. segmented income statements are prepared for each plant. the salary of each plant manager is a:
traceable fixed cost to the plant and a common fixed cost for the individual product lines made in the plant
the two general costing approaches used by manufacturing companies to prepare income statements are
variable costing and absorption costing