Mr. Gold is in the widget business. He currently sells 1.5 million widgets a year at \(6 each. His variable cost to produce the widgets is \)4 per unit, and he has \(1,550,000 in fixed costs. His sales-to-assets ratio is six times, and 30 percent of his assets are financed with 10 percent debt, with the balance financed by common stock at \)10 par value per share. The tax rate is 35 percent. His brother-in-law, Mr. Silverman, says he is doing it all wrong. By reducing his price to \(5.00 a widget, he could increase his volume of units sold by 60 percent. Fixed costs would remain constant, and variable costs would remain \)4 per unit. His sales-to-assets ratio would be 7.5 times. Furthermore, he could increase his debt to-assets ratio to 50 percent, with the balance in common stock. It is assumed that the interest rate would go up by 1 percent and the price of stock would remain constant.

b. Compute earnings per share under the Silverman plan.

Short Answer

Expert verified

EPS of the company under the silverman plan is $0.62

Step by step solution

01

Sale under silver man plan

Sales=Existingsaleunit1+Increament%=1,500,0001+0.60=2,400,000

02

Total assets of the company

Totalassets=SalesSaletoassetratio=2,400,000×$57.50=$1,600,000

03

Interest on debt

Interestondebts=Debtamount×Interestrate=$1,600,000×50%×11%=$88,000

04

Number of shares

Numberofshares=SharecapitalParvalue=$1,600,000×50%$10=800,000

05

EPS

Particulars

Amount ($)

Sales (2,400,000 x $5)

12,000,000

Less: Variable cost (2,400,000 x $4)

9,600,000

Contribution

2,400,000

Less: fixed cost

1,550,000

EBIT

850,000

Less: Interest cost

88,000

EBT

762,000

Less: Tax @35%

266,700

EAT

495,300

Number of shares

800,000

EPS

0.62

Unlock Step-by-Step Solutions & Ace Your Exams!

  • Full Textbook Solutions

    Get detailed explanations and key concepts

  • Unlimited Al creation

    Al flashcards, explanations, exams and more...

  • Ads-free access

    To over 500 millions flashcards

  • Money-back guarantee

    We refund you if you fail your exam.

Over 30 million students worldwide already upgrade their learning with Vaia!

One App. One Place for Learning.

All the tools & learning materials you need for study success - in one app.

Get started for free

Most popular questions from this chapter

Is there any validity in rule-of-thumb ratios for all corporations, such asa current ratio of 2 to 1 or debt to assets of 50 percent?

Using the income statement for Times Mirror and Glass Co., compute the following ratios:

b. The fixed charge coverage.

Times mirror and glass company

Sales

\(126,000

Less: Cost of goods sold

93,000

Gross profit

\)33,000

Less: selling and administrative expenses

11,000

Lease Expenses

4,000

Operating profit*

\(18,000

Less: Interest expenses

3,000

Earning before taxes

\)15,000

Less: Taxes (30%)

4,500

Earning after taxes

$10,500

*equal income before interest and taxes

In January 2007, the Status Quo Company was formed. Total assets were \(544,000, of which \)306,000 consisted of depreciable fixed assets. Status

Quo uses straight-line depreciation of \(30,600 per year, and in 2007 it estimated its fixed assets to have useful lives of 10 years. Aftertax income has been \)29,000 per year each of the last 10 years. Other assets have not changed since 2007.

c. Now assume income increased by 10 percent each year. What effect would this have on your preceding answers? (A comment is all that is necessary.)

Network Communications has total assets of \(1,500,000 and current assets of \)612,000. It turns over its fixed assets three times a year. It has $319,000 of debt. Its return on sales is 8 percent. What is its return on stockholders’ equity?

A firm has net income before interest and taxes of \(193,000 and interest expense of \)28,100.

a. What is the times-interest-earned ratio?

See all solutions

Recommended explanations on Business Studies Textbooks

View all explanations

What do you think about this solution?

We value your feedback to improve our textbook solutions.

Study anywhere. Anytime. Across all devices.

Sign-up for free