HORGREN'S COST ACCOUNTING
LATEST Edition
ISBN: 9781323676714
Author: Datar
Publisher: PEARSON EDUCATION (COLLEGE)
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Textbook Question
Chapter 9, Problem 9.41P
Downward demand spiral. Market.com is about to enter the highly competitive personal electronics market with a new type of tablet. In anticipation of future growth, the company has leased a large manufacturing facility and has purchased several expensive pieces of equipment. In 2017, the company’s first year Market.com budgets for production and sales of 50,000 units, compared with its practical capacity of 78,000. The company’s cost data are as follows:
- 1. Assume that Market.com uses absorption costing and uses budgeted units produced as the denominator for calculating its fixed manufacturing overhead rate. Selling price is set at 140% of
manufacturing cost . Compute Market.com’s selling price.
Required
- 2. Market.com enters the market with the selling price computed previously. However, despite growth in the overall market, sales are not as robust as the company had expected, and a competitor has priced its product at $102.00. Mr. Samuel Buttons, the company’s president, insists that the competitor must be pricing its product at a loss and that the competitor will be unable to sustain that. In response, Market.com makes no price adjustments but budgets production and sales for 2018 at 43,800 tablets. Variable and fixed costs are not expected to change. Compute Market.com’s new selling price. Comment on how Market.com’s choice of budgeted production affected its selling price and competitive position.
- 3. Recompute the selling price using practical capacity as the denominator level of activity. How would this choice have affected Market.com’s position in the marketplace? Generally, how would this choice affect the production-volume variance?
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Downward demand spiral. Market.com is about to enter the highly competitive personal electronics market with a new type of tablet. In anticipation of future growth, the company has leased a large manufacturing facility and has purchased several expensive pieces of equipment. In 2017, the company’s rst year, Market.com budgets for production and sales of 50,000 units, compared with its practical capacity of 78,000. The company’s cost data are as follows:
Ethel Company manufactures and sells desk lamps for hotel and motel rooms. Last year, it sold 270,000 units of its model Y lamp for $60 per unit. The company estimates that this volume represents a 25 percent share of the current market. The market is expected to increase by 8 percent next year. Marketing specialists have determined that as a result of new competition, the company’s market share will fall to 20 percent (of this larger market). Due to changes in production costs and competitive models, the new price for the lamps will be $63 per unit. The revised volume estimates are based on the $63 price.
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Estimate Ethel Company’s sales revenues from model Y lamps for the coming year.
The Variable Speed Company manufactures a line of high quality tools. The company sold 1,130,000 hammers at a price of $5.3 per unit last year. The company estimates that this volume represents a 25% share of the current hammers market. The market is expected to increase by 5%. Marketing specialists have determined that, as a result of a new advertising campaign and packaging, the company will increase its share of this larger market to 30%. Due to changes in prices, the new price for the hammer will be $5.60 per unit. This new price is expected to be in line with the competition and have no effect on the volume estimates. What are the estimated sales revenues in the coming year?
Multiple Choice
$7,546,140.
$7,593,600.
$7,973,280.
$8,372,044.
Chapter 9 Solutions
HORGREN'S COST ACCOUNTING
Ch. 9 - Differences in operating income between variable...Ch. 9 - Why is the term direct costing a misnomer?Ch. 9 - Do companies in either the service sector or the...Ch. 9 - Explain the main conceptual issue under variable...Ch. 9 - Companies that make no variable-cost/fixed-cost...Ch. 9 - The main trouble with variable costing is that it...Ch. 9 - Give an example of how, under absorption costing,...Ch. 9 - What are the factors that affect the breakeven...Ch. 9 - Critics of absorption costing have increasingly...Ch. 9 - What are two ways of reducing the negative aspects...
Ch. 9 - Prob. 9.11QCh. 9 - Describe the downward demand spiral and its...Ch. 9 - Will the financial statements of a company always...Ch. 9 - Prob. 9.14QCh. 9 - The difference between practical capacity and...Ch. 9 - In comparing the absorption and variable cost...Ch. 9 - Queen Sales, Inc. has just completed its first...Ch. 9 - King Tooling has produced and sold the following...Ch. 9 - The following information relates to Drexler Inc.s...Ch. 9 - Prob. 9.20MCQCh. 9 - Variable and absorption costing, explaining...Ch. 9 - Throughput costing (continuation of 9-21). The...Ch. 9 - Variable and absorption costing, explaining...Ch. 9 - Throughput costing (continuation of 9-23). The...Ch. 9 - Variable versus absorption costing. The Tomlinson...Ch. 9 - Absorption and variable costing. (CMA) Miami,...Ch. 9 - Absorption versus variable costing. Horace Company...Ch. 9 - Candyland uses standard costing to produce a...Ch. 9 - Capacity management, denominator-level capacity...Ch. 9 - Denominator-level problem. Thunder Bolt Inc., is a...Ch. 9 - Variable and absorption costing and breakeven...Ch. 9 - Variable costing versus absorption costing. The...Ch. 9 - Throughput Costing (continuation of 9-32) 1....Ch. 9 - Variable costing and absorption costing, the Z-Var...Ch. 9 - Comparison of variable costing and absorption...Ch. 9 - Effects of differing production levels on...Ch. 9 - Alternative denominator-level capacity concepts,...Ch. 9 - Motivational considerations in denominator-level...Ch. 9 - Denominator-level choices, changes in inventory...Ch. 9 - Variable and absorption costing and breakeven...Ch. 9 - Downward demand spiral. Market.com is about to...Ch. 9 - Absorption costing and production-volume...Ch. 9 - Operating income effects of denominator-level...Ch. 9 - Variable and absorption costing, actual costing....Ch. 9 - Prob. 9.45PCh. 9 - Cost allocation, responsibility accounting, ethics...Ch. 9 - Absorption, variable, and throughput costing....Ch. 9 - Costing methods and variances, comprehensive. Rob...
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