Concept explainers
CASH BUDGETING Helen Bowers, owner of Helen’s Fashion Designs, is planning to request a line of credit from her bank. She has estimated the following sales
May 2016 | $180,000 |
June | 180,000 |
July | 360,000 |
August | 540,000 |
September | 720,000 |
October | 360,000 |
November | 360,000 |
December | 90,000 |
January 2017 | 180,000 |
Estimates regarding payments obtained from the credit department are as follows: collected within the month of sale, 10%; collected the month following the sale. 75%; collected the second month following the sale, 15%. Payments for labor and raw materials are made the month after these services were provided. Here are the estimated costs of labor plus raw materials:
May 2016 | $90,000 |
June | 90,000 |
July | 126,000 |
August | 882,000 |
September | 306,000 |
October | 234,000 |
November | 162,000 |
December | 90,000 |
General and administrative salaries are approximately $27,000 a month. Lease payments under long-term leases are $9,000 a month. Depredation charges are $36,000 a month. Miscellaneous expenses are $2,700 a month. Income tax payments of $63,000 are due in September and December. A progress payment of $180,000 on a new design studio must be paid in October. Cash on hand on July 1 will be $132,000, and a minimum cash balance of $90,000 should be maintained throughout the cash budget period.
- a. Prepare a monthly cash budget for the last 6 months of 2016.
- b. Prepare monthly estimates of the required financing or excess funds—that is, the amount of money Bowers will need to borrow or will have available to invest.
- c. Now suppose receipts from sales come in uniformly during the month (that is, cash receipts come in at the rate of 1/30 each day), but all outflows must be paid on the 5th. Will this affect the cash budget? That is, will the cash budget you prepared be valid under these assumptions? If not, what could be done to make a valid estimate of the peak financing requirements? No calculations are required, although if you prefer, you can use calculations to illustrate the effects.
- d. Bowers’ sales are seasonal; and her company produces on a seasonal basis, just ahead of sales. Without making any calculations, discuss how the company’s current and debt ratios would vary during the year if ail financial requirements were met with short-term bank loans. Could changes in these ratios affect the firm’s ability to obtain bank credit? Explain.
Want to see the full answer?
Check out a sample textbook solutionChapter 15 Solutions
FUND. OF FINANCIAL MGMT (LL)--W/ACCESS
- General Financearrow_forwardAs CFO for Everything.Com, you are shopping for 6,000 square feet of usable office space for 25 of your employees in Center City, USA. A leasing broker shows you space in Apex Atrium, a 10-story multitenanted office building. This building contains 360,000 square feet of gross building area. A total of 54,000 square feet is interior space and is nonrentable. The nonrentable space consists of areas contained in the basement, elevator core, and other mechanical and structural components. An additional 36,000 square feet of common area is the lobby area usable by all tenants. The 6,000 square feet of usable area that you are looking for is on the seventh floor, which contains 33,600 square feet of rentable area, and is leased by other tenants who occupy a combined total of 24,000 square feet of usable space. The leasing broker indicated that base rents will be $30 per square foot of rentable area Required: a. Calculate total rentable area in the building as though it would be rented to…arrow_forwardDon't used Ai solutionarrow_forward
- General Finance Questionarrow_forwardConsider the following simplified financial statements for the Yoo Corporation (assuming no income taxes): Income Statement Balance Sheet Sales Costs $ 40,000 Assets 34,160 $26,000 Debt Equity $ 7,000 19,000 Net income $ 5,840 Total $26,000 Total $26,000 The company has predicted a sales increase of 20 percent. Assume Yoo pays out half of net income in the form of a cash dividend. Costs and assets vary with sales, but debt and equity do not. Prepare the pro forma statements. (Input all amounts as positive values. Do not round intermediate calculations and round your answers to the nearest whole dollar amount.) Pro forma income statement Sales Costs $ 48000 40992 Assets $ 31200 Pro forma balance sheet Debt 7000 Equity 19000 Net income $ 7008 Total $ 31200 Total 30304 What is the external financing needed? (Do not round intermediate calculations. Negative amount should be indicated by a minus sign.) External financing needed $ 896arrow_forwardAn insurance company has liabilities of £7 million due in 10 years' time and £9 million due in 17 years' time. The assets of the company consist of two zero-coupon bonds, one paying £X million in 7 years' time and the other paying £Y million in 20 years' time. The current interest rate is 6% per annum effective. Find the nominal value of X (i.e. the amount, IN MILLIONS, that bond X pays in 7 year's time) such that the first two conditions for Redington's theory of immunisation are satisfied. Express your answer to THREE DECIMAL PLACES.arrow_forward
- An individual is investing in a market where spot rates and forward rates apply. In this market, if at time t=0 he agrees to invest £5.3 for two years, he will receive £7.4 at time t=2 years. Alternatively, if at time t=0 he agrees to invest £5.3 at time t=1 for either one year or two years, he will receive £7.5 or £7.3 at times t=2 and t=3, respectively. Calculate the price per £5,000 nominal that the individual should pay for a fixed-interest bond bearing annual interest of 6.6% and is redeemable after 3 years at 110%. State your answer at 2 decimal places.arrow_forwardThe one-year forward rates of interest, f+, are given by: . fo = 5.06%, f₁ = 6.38%, and f2 = 5.73%. Calculate, to 4 decimal places (in percentages), the three-year par yield.arrow_forward1. Give one new distribution channels for Virtual Assistance (freelance business) that is not commonly used. - show a chart/diagram to illustrate the flow of the distribution channels. - explain the rationale behind it. (e.g., increased market reach, improved customer experience, cost-efficiency). - connect the given distribution channel to the marketing mix: (How does it align with the overall marketing strategy? Consider product, price, promotion, and place.). - define the target audience: (Age, gender, location, interests, etc.). - lastly, identify potential participants: (Wholesalers, retailers, online platforms, etc.)arrow_forward
- Fundamentals Of Financial Management, Concise Edi...FinanceISBN:9781337902571Author:Eugene F. Brigham, Joel F. HoustonPublisher:Cengage LearningEBK CONTEMPORARY FINANCIAL MANAGEMENTFinanceISBN:9781337514835Author:MOYERPublisher:CENGAGE LEARNING - CONSIGNMENT