Chapter 3: 1BP_b (page 249)
Compute the cost of not taking the following cash discounts
b. 2/15, net 30.
Short Answer
The cost of not taking the cash discount is 48.96%.
Chapter 3: 1BP_b (page 249)
Compute the cost of not taking the following cash discounts
b. 2/15, net 30.
The cost of not taking the cash discount is 48.96%.
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Get started for freeRoute Canal Shipping Company has the following schedule for aging of accounts receivable:
a. Fill in column (4) for each month.
Age of receivables April 30 20X1 | |||
1 | 2 | 3 | 4 |
Month of sales | Age of accounts | Amounts | Percent of amount due |
April | 0-30 | \(131,250 | ____ |
March | 31-60 | \)93,750 | ____ |
February | 61-90 | \(112,500 | ____ |
January | 91-120 | \)37,500 | ____ |
Total receivables | $375,000 | 100% |
Darla’s Cosmetics has annual credit sales of $1,440,000 and an average collection period of 45 days in 2008. Assume a 360-day year. What is the company’s average accounts receivable balance? Accounts receivable are equal to the average daily credit sales times the average collection period
Neon Light Company of Kansas City ships lamps and lighting appliances throughout the country. Ms. Neon has determined that through the establishment of local collection centers around the country, she can speed up the collection of payments by three days. Furthermore, the cash management department of her bank has indicated to her that she can defer her payments on her accounts by one-half day without affecting suppliers. The bank has a remote disbursement center in Florida.
c. If the total cost of the new system is $400,000, should it be implemented?
Assume that Hogan Surgical Instruments Co. has \(2,500,000 in assets. If it goes with a low-liquidity plan for the assets, it can earn a return of 18 percent, but with a high-liquidity plan, the return will be 14 percent. If the firm goes with a short-term financing plan, the financing costs on the \)2,500,000 will be 10 percent, and with a long-term financing plan, the financing costs on the $2,500,000 will be 12 percent. (Review Table 6-11 for parts a, b, and c of this problem.)
a. Compute the anticipated return after financing costs with the most aggressive asset financing mix.
b. Compute the anticipated return after financing costs with the most conservative asset financing mix.
c. Compute the anticipated return after financing costs with the two moderate approaches to the asset financing mix.
d. Would you necessarily accept the plan with the highest return after financing costs? Briefly explain.
Esquire Products Inc. expects the following monthly sales:
January | \(28,000 |
February | \)19,000 |
March | \(12,000 |
April | \)14,000 |
May | \(8,000 |
June | \)6,000 |
July | \(22,000 |
August | \)26,000 |
September | \(29,000 |
October | \)34,000 |
November | \(42,000 |
December | \)24,000 |
Total annual sales | \(264,000 |
Cash sales are 40 percent in a given month, with the remainder going into accounts receivable. All receivables are collected in the month following the sale. Esquire sells all of its goods for \)2 each and produces them for \(1 each. Esquire uses level production, and average monthly production is equal to annual production divided by 12.
c. Determine a cash payments schedule for January through December. The production costs (\)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.
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