Foundations of Financial Management
Foundations of Financial Management
16th Edition
ISBN: 9781259277160
Author: Stanley B. Block, Geoffrey A. Hirt, Bartley Danielsen
Publisher: McGraw-Hill Education
bartleby

Concept explainers

bartleby

Videos

Textbook Question
Book Icon
Chapter 6, Problem 22P

Esquire Products Inc. expects the following monthly sales:

Chapter 6, Problem 22P, Esquire Products Inc. expects the following monthly sales: Cash sales are 40 percent in a given

Cash sales are 40 percent in a given month, with the remainder going into accounts receivable. All receivables are collected in the month following the sale. Esquire sells all of its goods for $2 each and produces them for $1 each. Esquire uses level production, and average monthly production is equal to annual production divided by 12.

a. Generate a monthly production and inventory schedule in units. Beginning inventory in January is 12,000 units. (Note: To do part a, you should work in terms of units of production and units of sales.)

b. Determine a cash receipts schedule for January through December. Assume that dollar sales in the prior December were $20,000 . Work part b using dollars.

c. Determine a cash payments schedule for January through December. The production costs ( $1 per unit produced) are paid for in the month in which they occur. Other cash payments (besides those for production costs) are $7,400 per month.

d. Construct a cash budget for January through December using the cash receipts schedule from part b and the cash payments schedule from part c. The beginning cash balance is $3,000 , which is also the minimum desired.

e. Determine total current assets for each month. Include cash, accounts receivable, and inventory. Accounts receivable equal sales minus 40 percent of sales for a given month. Inventory is equal to ending inventory (part a) times the cost of $1 per unit.

Blurred answer
Students have asked these similar questions
A store sells a product that has the annual demand of 16,156 units. It purchases the product from supplier A for $74.4 per unit. The unit inventory carrying cost per year is 14 percent of the unit purchase cost. The cost to place and process an order from the supplier is $107 per order. Supplier A has a delivery lead time of 7 days. The store operates 300 days a year. Assume EOQ model is appropriate. What is the optimal total annual inventory and purchase cost for the store? Use at least 4 decimal places.
Croy Inc. has the following projected sales for the next five months:     Month Sales in Units April 3,540 May 3,865 June 4,540 July 4,155 August 3,920   Croy’s finished goods inventory policy is to have 60 percent of the next month’s sales on hand at the end of each month. Direct material costs $2.80 per pound, and each unit requires 2 pounds. Raw materials inventory policy is to have 50 percent of the next month’s production needs on hand at the end of each month. Raw materials on hand at March 31 totaled 3,735 pounds.     Required:1. Determine budgeted production for April, May, and June. (Do not round your intermediate calculations and round your final answer to the nearest whole number.)     2. Determine the budgeted cost of materials purchased for April, May, and June. (Use rounded Budgeted Production units in intermediate calculations. Round your answers to 2 decimal places.)
Graham Potato Company has projected sales of $12,000 in September, $15,000 in October, $22,000 in November, and $18,000 in December. Of the company's sales, 30 percent are paid for by cash and 70 percent are sold on credit. Experience shows that 40 percent of accounts receivable are paid in the month after the sale, while the remaining 60 percent are paid two months after. Determine collections for November and December. Also assume Graham's cash payments for November and December are $18,500 and $11,000, respectively. The beginning cash balance in November is $5,000, which is the desired minimum balance. a. Prepare a cash receipts schedule for November and December. Graham Potato Company Cash Receipts Schedule Sales Credit sales Cash sales One month after sale Two months after sale Total cash receipts September October November December
Knowledge Booster
Background pattern image
Finance
Learn more about
Need a deep-dive on the concept behind this application? Look no further. Learn more about this topic, finance and related others by exploring similar questions and additional content below.
Similar questions
SEE MORE QUESTIONS
Recommended textbooks for you
Text book image
Principles of Accounting Volume 2
Accounting
ISBN:9781947172609
Author:OpenStax
Publisher:OpenStax College
Text book image
Intermediate Financial Management (MindTap Course...
Finance
ISBN:9781337395083
Author:Eugene F. Brigham, Phillip R. Daves
Publisher:Cengage Learning
Text book image
Cornerstones of Cost Management (Cornerstones Ser...
Accounting
ISBN:9781305970663
Author:Don R. Hansen, Maryanne M. Mowen
Publisher:Cengage Learning
Text book image
Excel Applications for Accounting Principles
Accounting
ISBN:9781111581565
Author:Gaylord N. Smith
Publisher:Cengage Learning
Text book image
Principles of Cost Accounting
Accounting
ISBN:9781305087408
Author:Edward J. Vanderbeck, Maria R. Mitchell
Publisher:Cengage Learning
Responsibility Accounting| Responsibility Centers and Segments| US CMA Part 1| US CMA course; Master Budget and Responsibility Accounting-Intro to Managerial Accounting- Su. 2013-Prof. Gershberg; Author: Mera Skill; Rutgers Accounting Web;https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SYQ4u1BP24g;License: Standard YouTube License, CC-BY