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Analysis for Financial Management, 10e

SUGGESTED ANSWERS TO EVEN-NUMBERED PROBLEMS


CHAPTER 3

2. Historical analysis helps decide for which financial statement items a percent-of-sales
forecast might be appropriate. For example, a stable trend in the collection period
would tell you that, unless you expect changes in the management of the accounts
receivable, future collection periods should continue along this trend.

4. a. If the collection period is 60 days, May cash receipts from March sales will equal
half of March sales or $70,000. In addition the company will receive cash from
half of May sales, which were for cash or $80,000. The total is $150,000.

b. With a 45-day collection period, cash collected on May 1 is from credit sales made
in mid-March, and collections on May 31 are from credit sales made in mid-April.
Therefore, cash receipts from credit sales are from the period mid-March through
mid-April, or (140,000/2 + 240,000/2)/2 = $95,000. Adding sales for cash of
$80,000, the total is $175,000.

c. If the collection period is 60 days, then the May Accounts Receivable balance
should be the last 60 days worth of credit sales. May credit sales were $80,000
and April’s were $120,000, thus the Accounts Receivable balance would be
$200,000. If the collection period is 45 days, then the balance would be May’s
credit sales and half of April’s credit sales, or 80,000 + 120,000/2 = $140,000.

6. New equity equation: = C37 + D28. New net sales equation: = C19 + C19*D4.

8. Pepperton Cash Budget for First Three Months of 2012

January February March


Cash receipts:
Sales for cash $120,000 $48,000 $48,000
Collections from credit sales 960,000 480,000 192,000
Total cash receipts 1,080,000 528,000 240,000

Cash disbursements:
Payment for purchases 540,000 1,200,000 300,000
Wages 180,000 180,000 180,000
Interest payments 0 0 90,000
Principal payments 0 0 210,000
Dividends 0 0 300,000
Tax payments 0 180,000 0
Total cash disbursements 720,000 1,560,000 1,080,000

© 2012 by McGraw-Hill Education. This is proprietary material solely for authorized instructor use. Not authorized for sale or
distribution in any manner. This document may not be copied, scanned, duplicated, forwarded, distributed, or posted on a website, in
whole or part.
Net cash receipts 360,000 -1,032,000 -840,000
(disbursements)

Determination of cash needs:


Beginning cash 300,000 660,000 -372,000
Net receipts (disbursements) 360,000 -1,032,000 -840,000
Ending cash 660,000 -372,000 -1,212,000
Minimum cash desired 150,000 150,000 150,000

Cash surplus (deficit) $510,000 ($522,000) ($1,362,000)

Obviously, the treasurer had better concern himself with where to borrow money.
Pepperton will need over $1.3 million by the end of March.

10.

Pepperton
Cash Flow Forecast
1st Quarter 2012
($ thousands)

Sources of cash
Cash from operations:
Profit after tax ($80)
Depreciation 30
Increase in liabilities or reduction in assets:
Bank loan 1,362
Cash 150
Accounts receivable 768
Inventory 0
Total sources $2,230

Uses of cash:
Dividends $300
Decreases in liabilities or increases in assets:
Accounts payable 1,500
Current portion long-term debt 210
Taxes payable 220
Total uses $2,230

© 2012 by McGraw-Hill Education. This is proprietary material solely for authorized instructor use. Not authorized for sale or
distribution in any manner. This document may not be copied, scanned, duplicated, forwarded, distributed, or posted on a website, in
whole or part.
12. a.

Toys-4-Kids

2012 Quarterly Pro Forma Forecast

Assuming Level Production

($000 thousands)

Qtr 1 Qtr 2 Qtr 3 Qtr 4


Net sales $300 $375 $3,200 $5,000
Cost of sales 195 244 2,080 3,250
Gross profit 105 131 1,120 1,750
Operating expenses 560 560 560 560
Profit before tax (455) (429) 560 1,190
Income taxes (182) (172) 224 476
Profit after tax (273) (257) 336 714

Cash $200 $200 $200 $200


Accounts receivable 225 281 2,400 3,750
Inventory 1,747 2,946 2,308 500
Current assets 2,172 3,427 4,908 4,450
Net plant & equipment 1,000 1,000 1,000 1,000
Total assets $3,172 $4,427 $5,908 $5,450

Accounts payable $222 $222 $222 $222


Accrued taxes (182) (172) 224 476
Current liabilities 40 50 446 698
Long-term debt 400 400 400 400
Shareholders' equity 2,727 2,470 2,806 3,520
Total liabilities & equity $3,167 $2,920 $3,652 $4,618

External financing required $5 $1,507 $2,256 $832

b. Profits more than double, from $253,000 to $520,000. (Remember, this ignores
the increase in interest expense due to increased borrowing.)

c. Level production causes ending inventory to rise from $500,000 each quarter to a
high of $2,946,000 in quarter 2. The external financing required jumps over
twofold, from $920,000 under seasonal production to $2,256,000 under level
production.

d. The company may be able to borrow the needed money, but the decision is not
obvious. The maximum loan need of $2.3 million occurs in quarter 3. Possible
collateral at that time includes $2.4 million in accounts receivable and $2.3

© 2012 by McGraw-Hill Education. This is proprietary material solely for authorized instructor use. Not authorized for sale or
distribution in any manner. This document may not be copied, scanned, duplicated, forwarded, distributed, or posted on a website, in
whole or part.
million in inventory. The accounts receivable are high quality collateral, but the
inventory is not. The toy business is subject to severe fads, and there is no
guarantee that finished goods inventory will find a buyer. From a lender’s
perspective, the situation is more problematic in the second quarter. The loan
need then is only $1.5 million, but accounts receivable are insignificant. The
principal collateral in quarter 2 is $2.9 million of speculative inventory. Shifting
to level production promises a major increase in profit. On the other side of the
ledger, borrowing needs are much larger, and the company incurs serious
obsolescence risks. The choice is not an easy one.

A possible intermediate strategy is to move to quasi-level production, producing


stable items for inventory early in the year and fad items for immediate sale later.
This enables the firm to capture much of the benefit of level production while
limiting obsolescence risk.

14. See C3_Answer_to_Problem_14.xlsx on this Web site for suggested answers.

© 2012 by McGraw-Hill Education. This is proprietary material solely for authorized instructor use. Not authorized for sale or
distribution in any manner. This document may not be copied, scanned, duplicated, forwarded, distributed, or posted on a website, in
whole or part.

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