Chapter 6 Cost-Volume-Profit Relationships: True/False Questions
Chapter 6 Cost-Volume-Profit Relationships: True/False Questions
Chapter 6 Cost-Volume-Profit Relationships: True/False Questions
True/False Questions
1. To estimate what the profit will be at various levels of activity, a manager can simply
take the number of units to be sold over the break-even point and multiply that number
by the unit contribution margin.
2. Incremental analysis is generally the simplest and most direct approach to decision
making.
5. On a CVP graph for a profitable company, the total expense line will be steeper than
the total revenue line.
6. If sales volume increases, and all other factors remain unchanged, the contribution
margin ratio will decrease.
7. The break-even point for a capital intensive, automated company will tend to be
higher than for a less capital intensive company while the margin of safety will tend to
be lower.
8. An increase in the number of units sold will decrease a company's break-even point.
9. Assuming that the unit contribution margin is positive, a 10% decrease in selling price
will increase the break-even point in terms of unit sales more than will a 10% increase
in the variable expense.
10. The break-even point is the point where total contribution margin equals total variable
expenses.
11. The break-even point can usually be determined by simply adding together all of the
expenses from the income statement.
12. Two companies with the same margin of safety in dollars will also have the same total
contribution margin.
13. If a company has high operating leverage, then profits will be very sensitive to
changes in sales.
14. Operating leverage will decrease as the company's margin of safety increases.
15. The overall contribution margin ratio for a company producing three products may be
obtained by adding the contribution margin ratios for the three products and dividing
the total by three.
16. Which of the following is correct? The break-even point occurs on the CVP graph
where:
A) total profit equals total expenses.
B) total profit equals total fixed expenses.
C) total contribution margin equals total fixed expenses.
D) total variable expenses equal total contribution margin.
17. If a company decreases its total fixed expenses while increasing the variable expense
per unit, the total expense line relative to its previous position on a cost-volume-profit
graph will:
A) shift upward and have a steeper slope.
B) shift upward and have a flatter slope.
C) shift downward and have a steeper slope.
D) shift downward and have a flatter slope.
18. East Company manufactures and sells a single product with a positive contribution
margin. If the selling price and the variable expense per unit both increase 5% and
fixed expenses do not change, what is the effect on the contribution margin per unit
and the contribution margin ratio?
Contribution Contribution
margin per unit margin ratio
A) No change No change
B) Increase Increase
C) Increase No change
D) Increase Decrease
19. Mossfeet Shoe Company is a single product firm. Mossfeet is predicting that a price
increase next year will not cause unit sales to decrease. What effect would this price
increase have on the following items for next year?
Contribution Break-even
Margin Ratio Point
A) Increase Decrease
B) Decrease Decrease
C) Increase No effect
D) Decrease No effect
22. In the middle of the year, the price of Lake Corporation's major raw material increased
by 8%. How would this increase affect the company's break-even point and margin of
safety?
23. A $2.00 increase in a product's variable expense per unit accompanied by a $2.00
increase in its selling price per unit will:
A) decrease the degree of operating leverage.
B) decrease the contribution margin.
C) have no effect on the break-even volume.
D) have no effect on the contribution margin ratio.
24. The break-even point in unit sales is found by dividing total fixed expenses by:
A) the contribution margin ratio.
B) the variable expenses per unit.
C) the sales price per unit.
D) the contribution margin per unit.
25. Which of the following would not affect the break-even point?
A) number of units sold
B) variable expense per unit
C) total fixed expenses
D) selling price per unit
26. If a company increases its selling price by $2 per unit due to an increase in its variable
labor cost of $2 per unit, the break-even point in units will:
A) decrease.
B) increase.
C) not change.
D) change but direction cannot be determined.
27. To obtain the dollar sales volume necessary to attain a given target profit, which of the
following formulas should be used?
A) (Fixed expenses + Target net profit)/Total contribution margin
B) (Fixed expenses + Target net profit)/Contribution margin ratio
C) Fixed expenses/Contribution margin per unit
D) Target net profit/Contribution margin ratio
28. Salinas Corporation has a degree of operating leverage of 8. This means that a 1%
change in sales dollars at Salinas will generate an 8% change in:
A) variable expenses.
B) fixed expenses.
C) contribution margin.
D) net operating income.
29. In calculating the break-even point for a multi-product company, which of the
following assumptions are commonly made?
A) I and II
B) I and III
C) II and III
D) I, II, and III
30. The following information relates to the break-even point at Pezzo Corporation:
If Pezzo wants to generate net operating income of $12,000, what will its sales dollars
have to be?
A) $132,000
B) $136,000
C) $168,000
D) $176,000
32. The “Dog Hut” hot dog stand expects the following operating results for next year:
Sales............................................... $280,000
Net operating income .................... $21,000
Contribution margin ratio .............. 70%
33. The following information relates to Zinc Corporation for last year:
Sales........................................................... $500,000
Net operating income ................................ $25,000
Degree of operating leverage .................... 5
Sales at Zinc are expected to be $600,000 next year. Assuming no change in cost
structure, this means that net operating income for next year should be:
A) $30,000
B) $45,000
C) $50,000
D) $125,000
How much will be contributed to net operating income by the 1,001st unit sold?
A) $650
B) $500
C) $150
D) $0
35. Barnes Corporation expected to sell 150,000 games during the month of November.
The following budgeted data are based on that level of sales:
Barnes' actual sales during November were 180,000 games. What should the actual net
operating income during November have been?
A) $450,000
B) $270,000
C) $420,000
D) $510,000
36. Carver Company produces a product which sells for $40. Variable manufacturing
costs are $18 per unit. Fixed manufacturing costs are $5 per unit based on the current
level of activity, and fixed selling and administrative costs are $4 per unit. A selling
commission of 15% of the selling price is paid on each unit sold. The contribution
margin per unit is:
A) $7
B) $17
C) $22
D) $16
37. Tice Company is a medium-sized manufacturer of lamps. During the year a new line
called “Horolin” was made available to Tice's customers. The break-even point for
sales of Horolin is $200,000 with a contribution margin of 40%. Assuming that the
profit for the Horolin line during the year amounted to $100,000, total sales during the
year would have amounted to:
A) $300,000
B) $420,000
C) $450,000
D) $475,000
38. Black Company's sales are $600,000, its fixed expenses are $150,000, and its variable
expenses are 60% of sales. Based on this information, the margin of safety is:
A) $90,000
B) $190,000
C) $225,000
D) $240,000
39. Variable expenses for Alpha Company are 40% of sales. What are sales at the break-
even point, assuming that fixed expenses total $150,000 per year:
A) $250,000
B) $375,000
C) $600,000
D) $150,000
40. Minist Company sells a single product at a selling price of $15.00 per unit. Last year,
the company's sales revenue was $225,000 and its net operating income was $18,000.
If fixed expenses totaled $72,000 for the year, the break-even point in unit sales was
A) 15,000
B) 9,900
C) 14,100
D) 12,000
41. Winger Corp. sells a product for $5 per unit. The fixed expenses are $210,000 and the
unit variable expenses are 60% of the selling price. What sales would be necessary in
order for Winger Corp. to realize a profit of 10% of sales?
A) $700,000
B) $525,000
C) $472,500
D) $420,000
42. Sales in East Company declined from $100,000 per year to $80,000 per year, while net
operating income declined by 300 percent. Given these data, the company must have
had an operating leverage of:
A) 15
B) 2.7
C) 30
D) 12
43. Darth Company sells three products. Sales and contribution margin ratios for the three
products follow:
Product
X Y Z
Sales in dollars ............................... $20,000 $40,000 $100,000
contribution margin ratio ............... 45% 40% 15%
Given these data, the contribution margin ratio for the company as a whole would be:
A) 25%
B) 75%
C) 33.3%
D) it is impossible to determine from the given data
44. Sunnripe Company manufactures and sells two types of beach towels, standard and
deluxe. Sunnripe expects the following operating results next year for each type of
towel:
Standard Deluxe
Sales............................................... $450,000 $50,000
Variable expenses (total) ............... $360,000 $20,000
Sunnripe expects to have a total of $57,600 in fixed expenses next year. What is
Sunnripe's break-even point next year in sales dollars?
A) $72,000
B) $144,000
C) $192,000
D) $240,000
45. Cindy, Inc. sells a product for $10 per unit. The variable expenses are $6 per unit, and
the fixed expenses total $35,000 per period. By how much will net operating income
change if sales are expected to increase by $40,000?
A) $16,000 increase
B) $5,000 increase
C) $24,000 increase
D) $11,000 decrease
47. During last year, Thor Lab supplied hospitals with a comprehensive diagnostic kit for
$120. At a volume of 80,000 kits, Thor had fixed expenses of $1,000,000 and net
operating income of $200,000. Because of an adverse legal decision, Thor's liability
insurance expenses this year will be $1,200,000 more than they were last year.
Assuming that the volume and other costs are unchanged, what should be the sales
price this year if Thor is to make the same $200,000 net operating income?
A) $120
B) $135
C) $150
D) $240
48. How much will a company's net operating income change if it undertakes an
advertising campaign given the following data:
A) $200 increase
B) $25,200 increase
C) $15,000 increase
D) $9,800 increase
Sales........................................................... $600,000
Variable expenses ...................................... 360,000
Fixed expenses:
Manufacturing ........................................ 90,000
Selling and administrative ...................... 110,000
Net operating income ............................. $40,000
50. Last year, variable expenses were 60% of total sales and fixed expenses were 10% of
total sales. If the company increases its selling prices by 10%, but if fixed expenses,
variable costs per unit, and unit sales remain unchanged, the effect of the increase in
selling price on the company's total contribution margin would be:
A) a decrease of 2%
B) an increase of 5%
C) an increase of 10%
D) an increase of 25%
51. Moruzzi Corporation is a single-product company that expects the following operating
results for next year:
Sales........................................................... $320,000
Contribution margin per unit ..................... $0.20
Contribution margin ratio .......................... 25%
Degree of operating leverage .................... 8
How many units would Moruzzi have to sell next year to break-even?
A) 50,000
B) 200,000
C) 280,000
D) 350,000
52. Mason Company's selling price was $20.00 per unit. Fixed expenses totaled $54,000,
variable expenses were $14.00 per unit, and the company reported a profit of $9,000
for the year. The break-even point for Mason Company is:
A) 10,500 units
B) 4,500 units
C) 8,500 units
D) 9,000 units
54. Hollis Company sells a single product for $20 per unit. The company's fixed expenses
total $240,000 per year, and variable expenses are $12 per unit of product. The
company's break-even point is:
A) $400,000
B) $600,000
C) 20,000 units
D) 12,000 units
55. Darwin, Inc., sells a particular textbook for $20. Variable expenses are $14 per book.
At the current volume of 50,000 books sold per year the company is just breaking
even. Given these data, the annual fixed expenses associated with the textbook total:
A) $300,000
B) $1,000,000
C) $1,300,000
D) $700,000
56. Singapore Candy Cane Company is a single product firm with the following cost
structure for next year:
57. Garcia Veterinary Clinic expects the following operating results next year:
58. Frank Company manufacturers a single product that has a selling price of $20.00 per
unit. Fixed expenses total $45,000 per year, and the company must sell 5,000 units to
break even. If the company has a target profit of $13,500, sales in units must be:
A) 6,000
B) 5,750
C) 6,500
D) 7,925
59. Spencer Company expects to sell 60,000 units next year. Variable production costs are
$4 per unit, and variable selling costs are 10% of the selling price. Fixed expenses are
$115,000 per year, and the company has set a target profit of $50,000. Based on this
information, the unit selling price should be:
A) $7.00
B) $10.75
C) $7.50
D) $6.75
60. Company X sold 25,000 units of product last year. The contribution margin per unit
was $2, and fixed expenses totaled $40,000 for the year. This year fixed expenses are
expected to increase to $45,000, but the contribution margin per unit will remain
unchanged at $2. How many units must be sold this year to earn the same net
operating income as was earned last year:
A) 22,500
B) 27,500
C) 35,000
D) 2,500
61. A product sells for $10 per unit and has variable expenses of $6 per unit. Fixed
expenses total $45,000 per month. How many units of the product must be sold each
month to yield a monthly profit of $15,000?
A) 6,000 units
B) 3,750 units
C) 15,000 units
D) 10,000 units
62. The Breiden Company sells rodaks for $6.00 per unit. Fixed expenses total $37,500
per month and variable expenses are $2.00 per unit. How many rodaks must be sold
each month to realize a profit before income taxes of 15% of sales (to the nearest
whole unit):
A) 9,375 units
B) 11,029 units
C) 12,097 units
D) 9,740 units
63. Chibu Corporation is a single product firm with the following cost formula for all of
its costs for next year:
Y = $225,000 + $30X
Chibu sells its product for $120 per unit. What would Chibu's total sales dollars have
to be next year in order to generate $270,000 of net operating income?
A) $618,750
B) $660,000
C) $1,080,000
D) $1,980,000
64. Gamma Company has sales of $120,000, a contribution margin of $48,000, and a net
operating income of $12,000. The company's degree of operating leverage is:
A) 2.5
B) 4.0
C) 10.0
D) 4.8
65. Alpha Company reported the following data for its most recent year: sales, $500,000;
variable expenses, $300,000; and fixed expenses, $150,000. The company's degree of
operating leverage is:
A) 10
B) 2
C) 4
D) 2.5
66. Mason Enterprises has prepared the following budget for the month of July:
Assuming that total fixed expenses will be $150,000 and the sales mix remains
constant, the break-even point would be closest to:
A) $276,008
B) $235,292
C) $294,545
D) $141,278
67. The unit contribution margins of Product X and Product Y are $10 and $9,
respectively. Total fixed expenses will be the same regardless of which product is
produced and sold. Which of the following statements will always be true:
A) Product X has a higher contribution margin ratio than Product Y.
B) if total sales are $300,000 no matter which product is sold, it is more profitable to
sell Product X than Product Y.
C) less units would be required to break even if only Product X is sold than if only
Product Y is sold.
D) responses A, B, and C are all correct.
68. A company sells two products--J and K. The sales mix is expected to be $3.00 of sales
of Product K for every $1.00 of sales of Product J. Product J has a contribution margin
ratio of 40% whereas Product K has a contribution margin ratio of 50%. Annual fixed
expenses are expected to be $120,000. The overall break-even point for the company
in dollar sales is expected to be closest to:
A) $196,000
B) $200,000
C) $253,000
D) $255,000
71. If the company increases its unit sales volume by 5% without increasing its fixed
expenses, then total net operating income should be closest to:
A) $5,000
B) $123,100
C) $105,000
D) $102,500
74. If the company increases its unit sales volume by 5% without increasing its fixed
expenses, then total net operating income should be closest to:
A) $6,600
B) $184,200
C) $134,422
D) $138,600
Drake Company's income statement for the most recent year appears below:
77. If the company desires a net operating income of $20,000, the number of units needed
to be sold is:
A) 28,500
B) 31,000
C) 31,750
D) 26,500
78. The sales manager is convinced that a $60,000 expenditure on advertising will
increase unit sales by fifty percent without any other increase in fixed expenses. If the
sales manager is correct, the company's net operating income would increase by:
A) $44,000
B) $34,000
C) $30,000
D) $49,000
79. If the company wants to increase its total contribution margin by 40%, it will need to
increase its sales by about:
A) $48,840
B) $72,000
C) $50,400
D) $34,188
80. If the company wants its margin of safety to equal $40,000, it will need to sell about:
A) 1,158 units
B) 1,958 units
C) 2,300 units
D) 800 units
81. If the company's fixed expenses decrease by 20%, the break-even point will change
from its previous level by about a:
A) 232 unit increase
B) 510 unit decrease
C) 232 unit decrease
D) 510 unit increase
A company that makes organic fertilizer has supplied the following data:
Clarkson Industries produces an electronic calculator that sells for $75 per unit. Variable
expenses are $45 per unit and fixed expenses are $150,000.
103. The number of units needed to achieve a target net operating income of $20,000 is
closest to:
A) 1,404 units
B) 542 units
C) 1,898 units
D) 1,361 units
Mark Corporation produces two models of calculators. The Business model sells for $60, and
the Math model sells for $40. The variable expenses are given below:
Business Math
Model Model
Variable production costs per unit .................................. $15 $16
Variable selling and administrative expenses per unit .... $9 $6
The fixed expenses are $75,000 per month. The expected monthly sales of each model are:
Business, 1,000 units; Math, 500 units.
104. The contribution margin ratio for the Business model is:
A) 40 percent
B) 75 percent
C) 85 percent
D) 60 percent
105. The break-even point for the expected sales mix is (round to nearest whole unit):
A) 833 of each
B) 1,667 Business and 833 Math
C) 1,667 of each
D) 833 Business and 1,667 Math
Next year, Coma Paint Company expects to sell 18,000 gallons of paint. Coma is budgeting
the following operating results for next year:
107. How many gallons of paint would Coma have to sell next year in order to double its
projected net operating income of $72,000?
A) 22,800 gallons
B) 25,200 gallons
C) 26,000 gallons
D) 36,000 gallons
108. Assume that Coma wants to sell 20,000 gallons next year. What minimum selling
price would Coma have to charge for each gallon in order to still obtain its projected
net operating income of $72,000?
A) $11.00
B) $13.50
C) $14.00
D) $14.10
110. What would the net operating income be if sales increase by 25%?
A) $3,125
B) $3,750
C) $4,000
D) $5,000
111. What would be the sales at the break-even point if fixed factory overhead increases by
$1,700?
A) $6,700
B) $8,400
C) $8,666
D) $9,200
113. The management of Barnes Corporation anticipates a 10 percent increase in total sales,
a 12 percent increase in total variable expenses, and a $45,000 increase in total fixed
expenses next year. The break-even point for next year is:
A) $729,027
B) $862,103
C) $214,018
D) $474,000
Holger Incorporated, which produces and sells a single product, has provided the following
data:
114. If the dollar contribution margin per unit is increased by 10% and if total fixed
expense is decreased by 20%, net operating income is expected to:
A) increase by $2,000
B) increase by $12,000
C) increase by $8,000
D) increase by $16,000
115. If the sales volume decreases by 25% and the variable expense per unit increases by
15%, net operating income is expected to:
A) decrease by $19,000
B) decrease by $1,000
C) increase by $1,750
D) decrease by $15,000
116. If the company's fixed expenses increased by $8,000, how many units must be sold to
reach a target net operating income of $36,000:
A) 1,400 units
B) 2,200 units
C) 2,400 units
D) 3,200 units
117. If the company's sales volume in units decreases by 30%, and if it desires a targeted
net operating income of $29,000, then the selling price should be:
A) $58.85
B) $60.75
C) $64.50
D) $75.00
118. If sales decrease by 500 units, by how much would fixed expenses have to be reduced
to maintain current net operating income?
A) $5,000
B) $3,000
C) $1,500
D) $2,000
119. The company has an opportunity to secure a special order of 800 units if it is willing to
drop the selling price on these units to $9. In addition to the usual variable expenses,
the costs of securing the special order would be $1,000. The company's regular sales
would not be affected by the special order. If the special order is accepted, the
company's overall net operating income will:
A) increase $2,400
B) increase $1,400
C) increase $2,200
D) decrease $2,200
121. How many units would the company have to sell in order to have a net operating
income of $40,000?
A) 20,000 units
B) 9,000 units
C) 11,000 units
D) 7,333 units
122. At the budgeted sales level of 10,000 units, what is the company's degree of operating
leverage?
A) 10.0
B) 6.0
C) 22.5
D) 5.0
125. If fixed selling and administrative expenses increase by $60,000 and sales remain at
the $2,000,000 level, what is the margin of safety in sales dollars:
A) $300,000
B) $200,000
C) $500,000
D) $400,000
127. How many units would the company have to sell in order to have a net operating
income equal to 5% of total sales dollars?
A) 18,000 units
B) 20,000 units
C) 15,333 units
D) 14,286 units
Douglas Corporation produces and sells two models of vacuum cleaners, Standard and
Deluxe. Company records show the following data relating to these two products:
Standard Deluxe
Selling price per unit ....................................................... $140 $155
Variable production costs per unit .................................. $110 $116
Variable selling and admin. expense per unit ................. $15 $12
Expected monthly sales in units ...................................... 600 1,200
128. The break-even in sales dollars for the expected sales mix is closest to:
A) $140,000
B) $85,000
C) $107,000
D) $98,000
129. If the expected monthly sales in units were divided equally between the two models
(900 Standard and 900 Deluxe), the break-even level of sales would be:
A) the same as with the expected sales mix.
B) higher than with the expected sales mix.
C) lower than with the expected sales mix.
D) cannot be determined with the available data.
Essay Questions
130. Baker Company has a product that sells for $20 per unit. The variable expenses are
$12 per unit, and fixed expenses total $30,000 per year.
Required:
a. What is the total contribution margin at the break-even point?
b. What is the contribution margin ratio for the product?
c. If total sales increase by $20,000 and fixed expenses remain unchanged, by how
much would net operating income be expected to increase?
d. The marketing manager wants to increase advertising by $6,000 per year. How
many additional units would have to be sold to increase overall net operating
income by $2,000?
Answer:
a. At the break-even, the total contribution margin equals total fixed expenses.
Therefore, the total contribution margin would be $30,000.
131. Candice Corporation has decided to introduce a new product. The product can be
manufactured using either a capital-intensive or labor-intensive method. The
manufacturing method will not affect the quality or sales of the product. The estimated
manufacturing costs of the two methods are as follows:
Capital Labor
-intensive -intensive
Variable manufacturing cost per unit..................... $14.00 $17.60
Fixed manufacturing cost per year......................... $2,440,000 $1,320,000
Required:
a. Calculate the break-even point in units if Candice Corporation uses the:
1. capital-intensive manufacturing method.
2. labor-intensive manufacturing method.
b. Determine the unit sales volume at which the net operating income is the same for
the two manufacturing methods.
c. Assuming sales of 250,000 units, what is the degree of operating leverage if the
company uses the:
1. capital-intensive manufacturing method.
2. labor-intensive manufacturing method.
d. What is your recommendation to management concerning which manufacturing
method should be used?
Answer:
a.
1. Capital-intensive:
Break-even in units = Fixed expenses ÷ Unit contribution margin
= ($2,440,000 + $500,000) ÷ ($30 - $14 – $2)
= $2,940,000 ÷ $14 per unit
= 210,000 units
2. Labor-intensive:
Break-even in units = Fixed expenses ÷ Unit contribution margin
= ($1,320,000 + $500,000) ÷ ($30 – $17.60 – $2)
= $1,820,000 ÷ $10.40 per unit
= 175,000 units
c.
1. Capital-intensive:
Sales (250,000 × $30) ................................ $7,500,000
Variable expenses (250,000 × $16) ........... 4,000,000
Contribution margin ................................... 3,500,000
Fixed expenses ........................................... 2,940,000
Net operating income ................................. $ 560,000
2. Labor-intensive:
Sales (250,000 × $30) ................................ $7,500,000
Variable expenses (250,000 × $19.60) ...... 4,900,000
Contribution margin ................................... 2,600,000
Fixed expenses ........................................... 1,820,000
Net operating income ................................. $ 780,000
d. The decision hinges upon the expected sales of the new product. If management is
confident that sales will be in excess of 311,111 units, then the capital-intensive
method should be used. If sales are likely to fall below this number, then the labor-
intensive method should be used. Management should also be aware that net
operating income will be more volatile with the capital-intensive method since it
has higher operating leverage.
132. Delphi Company has developed a new product that will be marketed for the first time
during the next fiscal year. Although the Marketing Department estimates that 35,000
units could be sold at $36 per unit, Delphi's management has allocated only enough
manufacturing capacity to produce a maximum of 25,000 units of the new product
annually. The fixed expenses associated with the new product are budgeted at
$450,000 for the year. The variable expenses of the new product are $16 per unit.
Required:
a. How many units of the new product must Delphi sell during the next fiscal year in
order to break even on the product?
b. What is the profit Delphi would earn on the new product if all of the
manufacturing capacity allocated by management is used and the product is sold
for $36 per unit?
c. What is the degree of operating leverage for the new product if 25,000 units are
sold for $36 per unit?
d. The Marketing Department would like more manufacturing capacity to be devoted
to the new product. What would be the percentage increase in net operating
income for the new product if its unit sales could be expanded by 10% without any
increase in fixed expenses and without any change in the unit selling price and unit
variable expense?
e. Delphi's management has stipulated that the new product must earn a profit of at
least $125,000 in the next fiscal year. What unit selling price would achieve this
target profit if all of the manufacturing capacity allocated by management is used
and all of the output can be sold at that selling price?
Answer:
a. Break-even in units = Fixed expenses ÷ Unit contribution margin
= $450,000 ÷ $20 = 22,500
b.
Sales (25,000 × $36) .................................. $900,000
Variable expenses (25,000 × $16) ............. 400,000
Contribution margin ................................... 500,000
Fixed expenses ........................................... 450,000
Net operating income ................................. $ 50,000
Or,
133. Parkins Company produces and sells a single product. The company's income
statement for the most recent month is given below:
Required:
a. Compute the company's monthly break-even point in units of product.
b. What would the company's monthly net operating income be if sales increased by
25% and there is no change in total fixed expenses?
c. What dollar sales must the company achieve in order to earn a net operating
income of $50,000 per month?
d. The company has decided to automate a portion of its operations. The change will
reduce direct labor costs per unit by 40 percent, but it will double the costs for
fixed factory overhead. Compute the new break-even point in units.
Answer:
a. The company's income statement in contribution format would be:
d. Direct labor costs are presently $10 per unit ($60,000 ÷ 6,000 units) and will
decrease by $4 per unit ($10 × 40%). Therefore, the company’s new cost structure
will be:
134. Zoran Corporation manufactures and sells a single product; cordless telephones. Zoran
is considering upgrading its current manufacturing facilities with more modern
equipment. Relevant cost data under the current facility and the upgraded facility is
provided below:
Current Upgraded
Manufacturing costs:
Direct materials cost per unit ................. $20.00 $20.00
Direct labor cost per unit ........................ $18.00 $10.00
Variable overhead cost per unit .............. $34.00 $24.00
Fixed overhead cost in total ................... $43,000 $160,000
Selling and administrative expenses:
Variable expense per unit ....................... $5.00 $5.00
Fixed expense in total ............................. $12,000 $12,000
Under either system, Zoran will sell the cordless phones for $125 per phone.
Required:
a. What is the break-even point (in number of phones) of each option?
b. At what level of sales (in number of phones) will it start being more profitable for
Zoran to have the upgraded facilities?
Answer:
a.
Current:
($43,000 + $12,000) ÷ ($125 – $20 – $18 – $34 – $5) = 1,146 phones (rounded)
Upgraded:
($160,000 + $12,000) ÷ ($125 – $20 – $10 – $24 – $5) = 2,606 phones (rounded)
135. Penury Company offers two products. At present, the following represents the usual
results of a month's operations:
Product K Product L
Per Per Combined
Amount Unit Amount Unit Amount
Sales revenue ..................... $120,000 $1.20 $80,000 $0.80 $200,000
Variable expenses .............. 60,000 0.60 60,000 0.60 120,000
Contribution margin .......... $ 60,000 $0.60 $20,000 $0.20 80,000
Fixed expenses .................. 50,000
Net operating income ........ $ 30,000
Required:
a. Find the break-even point in terms of dollars.
b. Find the margin of safety in terms of dollars.
c. The company is considering decreasing product K's unit sales to 80,000 and
increasing product L's unit sales to 180,000, leaving unchanged the selling price
per unit, variable expense per unit, and total fixed expenses. Would you advise
adopting this plan?
d. Refer to (c) above. Under the new plan, find the break-even point in terms of
dollars.
e. Under the new plan in (c) above, find the margin of safety in terms of dollars.
Answer:
a. CM ratio = Contribution margin ÷ Sales revenue
= $80,000 ÷ $200,000 = 40%
c. Product K Product L
Units ................................ 80,000 180,000
Per Per Combined
Amount Unit Amount Unit Amount
Sales revenue ................... $96,000 $1.20 $144,000 $0.80 $240,000
Variable expense ............. 48,000 0.60 108,000 0.60 156,000
Contribution margin ........ $48,000 $0.60 $ 36,000 $0.20 84,000
Fixed expense .................. 50,000
Net operating income ...... $ 38,000
136. Lobo, International has two divisions, Manufacturing and Retail which had the
following operating results over the last two years:
Assume that the cost structure in each division above did not change over the two
years. Use the high-low method as needed to estimate variable and fixed expenses.
Required:
a. Calculate the break-even point in sales dollars for each division.
b. Calculate the degree of operating leverage for the Manufacturing Division for each
year.
Answer:
a. Total expenses, Year 1, Manuf. = $290,000 + $50,000 = $340,000
Total expenses, Year 2, Manuf. = $353,000 + $59,000 = $412,000
Manufacturing:
Variable expenses per unit using the high-low method:
($412,000 – $340,000) ÷ (6,500 – 5,000) = $48 per unit
Variable expenses = $48 × 5,000 = $240,000
Fixed expenses = $340,000 – $240,000 = $100,000
CM ratio = ($400,000 – $240,000) ÷ $400,000 = 40%
Break-even sales = $100,000 ÷ 0.40 = $250,000
Retail:
Variable expenses per unit using the high-low method:
($248,000 – $212,000) ÷ (2,400 – 2,000) = $90 per unit;
Variable expenses = $90 × 2,000 = $180,000
Fixed expenses = $212,000 – $180,000 = $32,000
CM ratio = ($250,000 – $180,000) ÷ $250,000 = 28%
Break-even sales = $32,000 ÷ 0.28 = $114,286