PRIN.OF CORPORATE FINANCE >BI<
12th Edition
ISBN: 9781260431230
Author: BREALEY
Publisher: MCG CUSTOM
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Chapter 28, Problem 13PS
Summary Introduction
To compute: The average value of account receivables.
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Taylor Glass has annual sales of $1,790,000. Although it extends credit for 30 days (n30), the receivables are 20 days overdue. What is the average accounts receivable outstanding, and how much could the company save in interest expense if customers paid on time and if it costs Taylor Glass 9 percent to carry its receivables? Assume 360 days in a year. Round your answers to the nearest cent.
Accounts receivable: $
Interest saved: $
HAPPY Company makes credit sales of P1,800,000 annually. The average age of accounts receivable is 30 days. Management consider shortening credit terms to 20 days. Cost of money is 12%. How much will the company save from financing charges? Use 360-day year
MY ANSWER IS 6,000 AND 12,000. WHAT IS THE CORRECT ANSWER?
A firm has no cash sales (all sales are on credit and are collected 28 days after the sale). If the receivables are $167,000, what is the level of sales? Assume there are 365 days in a year. Round your answer to the nearest dollar.
$
Chapter 28 Solutions
PRIN.OF CORPORATE FINANCE >BI<
Ch. 28 - Prob. 1PSCh. 28 - Financial ratios Table 28.10 gives abbreviated...Ch. 28 - Performance measures Look again at Table 28.10. At...Ch. 28 - Prob. 5PSCh. 28 - Financial ratios True or false? a. A companys...Ch. 28 - Book rates of return Keller Cosmetics maintains an...Ch. 28 - Prob. 8PSCh. 28 - Prob. 9PSCh. 28 - Prob. 10PSCh. 28 - Prob. 11PS
Ch. 28 - Prob. 12PSCh. 28 - Prob. 13PSCh. 28 - Prob. 14PSCh. 28 - Performance measures Describe some alternative...Ch. 28 - Prob. 16PSCh. 28 - Prob. 17PSCh. 28 - Prob. 18PSCh. 28 - Financial ratios Sara Togas sells all its output...Ch. 28 - Prob. 20PSCh. 28 - Prob. 21PSCh. 28 - Prob. 22PSCh. 28 - Prob. 23PSCh. 28 - Prob. 25PSCh. 28 - Prob. 26PSCh. 28 - Prob. 27PS
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- Now assume that it is several years later. The brothers are concerned about the firm’s current credit terms of net 30, which means that contractors buying building products from the firm are not offered a discount and are supposed to pay the full amount in 30 days. Gross sales are now running $1,000,000 a year, and 80% (by dollar volume) of the firm’s paying customers generally pay the full amount on Day 30; the other 20% pay, on average, on Day 40. Of the firm’s gross sales, 2% ends up as bad-debt losses. The brothers are now considering a change in the firm’s credit policy. The change would entail: (1) changing the credit terms to 2/10, net 20, (2) employing stricter credit standards before granting credit, and (3) enforcing collections with greater vigor than in the past. Thus, cash customers and those paying within 10 days would receive a 2% discount, but all others would have to pay the full amount after only 20 days. The brothers believe the discount would both attract additional customers and encourage some existing customers to purchase more from the firm—after all, the discount amounts to a price reduction. Of course, these customers would take the discount and hence would pay in only 10 days. The net expected result is for sales to increase to $1,100,000; for 60% of the paying customers to take the discount and pay on the 10th day; for 30% to pay the full amount on Day 20; for 10% to pay late on Day 30; and for bad-debt losses to fall from 2% to 1% of gross sales. The firm’s operating cost ratio will remain unchanged at 75%, and its cost of carrying receivables will remain unchanged at 12%. To begin the analysis, describe the four variables that make up a firm’s credit policy and explain how each of them affects sales and collections.arrow_forwardJOKER Company makes credit sales of P1,800,000 annually. The average age of accounts receivable is 30 days. Management consider shortening credit terms to 20 days. Cost of money is 12%. How much will the company save from financing charges? Use 360-day yeararrow_forwardCompany XYZ has annual credit sales of $2,500,000. Collection of the credit sales are evenly spread out over the 250 working days per year. The company’s annual cost of borrowing is 7%. How much would XYZ save each year by improving its receivables process by one day?arrow_forward
- Receivables Investment Medwig Corporation has a DSO of 30 days. The company averages $7,750 in sales each day (all customers take credit). What is the company's average accounts receivable? Assume a 365-day year. Round your answer to the nearest dollar.arrow_forwardCSI Lumber Company has sales of $10 million per year. All sales are on credit, calling for payment within 30 days, but not all their customers pay on time. Accounts receivable are too high; they are $2 million. The receivables reflect money the firm can't use yet. The firm has to borrow $2 million to finance the receivables. How much is the firm's DSO?arrow_forwardNew-Markups Department Store has annual credit sales of $ 300 million. John Harris, the collection manager, has estimated that it takes 10 days for a mailed payment to be credited to Newman’s account and that this time can be cut to 5 days if Newman opens up a lockbox account with a local bank. The account in which the checks are placed earns 8.4% annually. The lockbox agreement calls for a monthly payment of $1,350 and, in addition, a monthly charge of $0.06 per check. Newman’s currently processes 120,000 checks monthly. (Treat these expenses as if they occur at the beginning of the year.) a) What are Newman’s daily sales (assuming a 360-day year) b) By how much will Newman’s average bank balance increase if it adopts the lockbox? c) Should Mr Harris adopt the lockbox ? d) Suppose Newman’s has found a regular 20% of its customers account for 80% of credit sales. Should Mr Harris open up the lockbox and use it only for this 20% of the customers?arrow_forward
- Lowe and Price Co has annual credit sales of $12,000,000, and three months are allowed for payment. The company decides to offer a 2% discount for payments made within ten days of the invoice being sent, and to reduce the maximum time allowed for payment to two months. It is estimated that 50% of customers will take the discount. The company requires a 20% return on investments. Assume that the volume of sales will be unaffected by the discount. What is the reduction in accounts receivable? What is the opportunity income from the reduction in accounts receivable? What is the discount allowed each year? What is the net benefit of new discount policy each year?arrow_forwardThe Jeremy Flores Club has annual revenue of EUR 7 million and all sales are on account. Good credit and collection performance in the club industry result in a 30-day ACP (Average Collection Period). Assume a year has 365 days. Determine the maximum receivables balance the club can tolerate and still receive a good rating for credit and collections. If the Jeremy Flores Club is currently collecting receivables in 35 days, by how much must the receivable balance be reduced.arrow_forwardALei Industries has credit sales of $146 million a year. ALei's management reviewed its credit policy and decided that it wants to maintain an average collection period of 35 days. a. What is the maximum level of accounts receivable that ALei can carry and have a 35-day average collection period? b. If ALei's current accounts receivable collection period is 55 days, how much would it have to reduce its level of accounts receivable in order to achieve its goal of 35 days?arrow_forward
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