Accounting
27th Edition
ISBN: 9781337272094
Author: WARREN, Carl S., Reeve, James M., Duchac, Jonathan E.
Publisher: Cengage Learning,
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Question
Chapter 21, Problem 21.11EX
a.
To determine
Target Profit: It refers to the desired amount of profit that a company expects to achieve by the end of an accounting period after it reaches its break-even point. Thus, the company needs to compute the required sales to earn the target profit. The formula to calculate the required sales to earn the target profit is as follows:
To compute: the anticipated break-even point sales (units).
b.
To determine
To compute: the sales (units) required to realize income from operations of $1,400,000.
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Chapter 21 Solutions
Accounting
Ch. 21 - Describe how total variable costs and unit...Ch. 21 - How would the following costs be classified...Ch. 21 - Describe how total fixed costs and unit fixed...Ch. 21 - In applying the high-low method of cost estimation...Ch. 21 - If fixed costs Increase, what would be the impact...Ch. 21 - An examination of the accounting records of...Ch. 21 - Prob. 7DQCh. 21 - Both Austin Company and Hill Company had the same...Ch. 21 - How does the sales mix affect the calculation of...Ch. 21 - What does operating leverage measure, and how is...
Ch. 21 - High-low method The manufacturing costs of...Ch. 21 - High-low method The manufacturing costs of...Ch. 21 - Contribution margin Lanning Company sells 160,000...Ch. 21 - Contribution margin Weidner Company sells 22,000...Ch. 21 - Prob. 21.3APECh. 21 - Prob. 21.3BPECh. 21 - Prob. 21.4APECh. 21 - Prob. 21.4BPECh. 21 - Prob. 21.5APECh. 21 - Prob. 21.5BPECh. 21 - Operating leverage SungSam Enterprises reports the...Ch. 21 - Prob. 21.6BPECh. 21 - Margin of safety Liu Inc. has sales of 48,500,000,...Ch. 21 - Margin of safety Junck Company has sales of...Ch. 21 - Classify costs Following is a list of various...Ch. 21 - Identify cost graphs The following cost graphs...Ch. 21 - Prob. 21.3EXCh. 21 - Identify activity bases From the following list of...Ch. 21 - Identify fixed and variable costs Intuit Inc...Ch. 21 - Relevant range and fixed and variable costs Vogel...Ch. 21 - High-low method Ziegler Inc. has decided to use...Ch. 21 - High-low method for a service company Boston...Ch. 21 - Contribution margin ratio a. Yountz Company...Ch. 21 - Contribution margin and contribution margin ratio...Ch. 21 - Prob. 21.11EXCh. 21 - Break-even sales Anheuser-Busch InBev Companies,...Ch. 21 - Break even sales Currently, the unit .selling...Ch. 21 - Prob. 21.14EXCh. 21 - Prob. 21.15EXCh. 21 - Prob. 21.16EXCh. 21 - Prob. 21.17EXCh. 21 - Prob. 21.18EXCh. 21 - Prob. 21.19EXCh. 21 - Prob. 21.20EXCh. 21 - Prob. 21.21EXCh. 21 - Break-even sales and sales mix for a service...Ch. 21 - Margin of safety a. If Canace Company, with a...Ch. 21 - Prob. 21.24EXCh. 21 - Operating leverage Beck Inc. and Bryant Inc. have...Ch. 21 - Items on variable costing income statement In the...Ch. 21 - Variable costing income statement On July 31, the...Ch. 21 - Appendix Absorption costing income statement On...Ch. 21 - Classify costs Seymour Clothing Co. manufactures a...Ch. 21 - Prob. 21.2APRCh. 21 - Prob. 21.3APRCh. 21 - Prob. 21.4APRCh. 21 - Sales mix and break-even sales Data related to the...Ch. 21 - Contribution margin, break-even sales,...Ch. 21 - Classify costs Cromwell Furniture Company...Ch. 21 - Prob. 21.2BPRCh. 21 - Break-even sales and cost-volume-profit chart For...Ch. 21 - Prob. 21.4BPRCh. 21 - Prob. 21.5BPRCh. 21 - Contribution margin, break-even sales,...Ch. 21 - Prob. 21.1CPCh. 21 - Communication Sun Airlines is a commercial airline...Ch. 21 - Break-even analysis Somerset Inc. has finished a...Ch. 21 - Variable costs and activity bases in decision...Ch. 21 - Variable costs and activity bases in decision...
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- Break-even sales under present and proposed conditions Portmann Company, operating at full capacity, sold 1,000,000 units at a price of 188 per unit during the current year. Its income statement is as follows: The division of costs between variable and fixed is as follows: Management is considering a plant expansion program for the following year that will permit an increase of 11,280,000 in yearly sales. The expansion will increase fixed costs by 5,000,000 but will not affect the relationship between sales and variable costs. Instructions 1. Determine the total variable costs and the total fixed costs for the current year. 2. Determine (a) the unit variable cost and (b) the unit contribution margin for the current year. 3. Compute the break-even sales (units) for the current year. 4. Compute the break-even sales (units) under the proposed program for the following year. 5. Determine the amount of sales (units) that would be necessary under the proposed program to realize the 60,000,000 of operating income that was earned in the current year. 6. Determine the maximum operating income possible with the expanded plant. 7. If the proposal is accepted and sales remain at the current level, what will the operating income or loss be for the following year? 8. Based on the data given, would you recommend accepting the proposal? Explain.arrow_forwardStarling Co. manufactures one product with a selling price of 18 and variable cost of 12. Starlings total annual fixed costs are 38,400. If operating income last year was 28,800, what was the number of units Starling sold? a. 4,800 b. 6,400 c. 5,600 d. 11,200arrow_forwardKlamath Company produces a single product. The projected income statement for the coming year is as follows: Required: 1. Compute the unit contribution margin and the units that must be sold to break even. 2. Suppose 10,000 units are sold above break-even. What is the operating income? 3. Compute the contribution margin ratio. Use the contribution margin ratio to compute the break-even point in sales revenue. (Note: Round the contribution margin ratio to four decimal places, and round the sales revenue to the nearest dollar.) Suppose that revenues are 200,000 more than expected for the coming year. What would the total operating income be?arrow_forward
- A company produces two products. E and F in batches of 100 units. The production and cost data are: The company can only perform 12,000 set-ups each period yet there is unlimited demand for each product. What is the differential profit from producing product E instead of product F for the year? A. $216,000 B. $204,000 C. $12,000 D. $54,000arrow_forwardBolger and Co. manufactures large gaskets for the turbine industry. Bolgers per-unit sales price and variable costs for the current year are as follows: Bolgers total fixed costs aggregate to 360,000. Bolgers labor agreement is expiring at the end of the year, and management is concerned about the effects of a new labor agreement on its break-even point in units. The controller performed a sensitivity analysis to ascertain the estimated effect of a 10-per-unit direct labor increase and a 10,000 reduction in fixed costs. Based on these data, the break-even point would: a. decrease by 1,000 units. b. decrease by 125 units. c. increase by 375 units. d. increase by 500 units.arrow_forwardIncome Statements under Absorption and Variable Costing In the coming year, Kalling Company expects to sell 28,700 units at 32 each. Kallings controller provided the following information for the coming year: Required: 1. Calculate the cost of one unit of product under absorption costing. 2. Calculate the cost of one unit of product under variable costing. 3. Calculate operating income under absorption costing for next year. 4. Calculate operating income under variable costing for next year.arrow_forward
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