Business
Business, 03.07.2020 19:01, meliac

Fun & Games Company was founded by Avery Rinehart to produce a novelty item marketed under the name "Puzzler." Each Puzzler cost the company $14 to produce. In addition to these production costs that varied in direct proportion to volume (so called variable costs), the company also incurred $4,000 in monthly "being in business " costs (so called fixed costs) irrespective of the month’s volume. The company sold the product for $22 each As of December 31, 2017 Rinehart had been producing the Puzzler for 3 months using rented facilities. The balance sheet on December 31 was as follows:
Fun & Games Company
Balance Sheet
As of December 31
Assets
Cash…..….………………………………….$58,500
Accounts receivable.….…………….$27,500
Inventory………………………………….$14,000
$100,000
Equity
Common stock…………………….…$100,000
Retained earnings…………… $0
$100,000
Rinehart was very pleased to be operating at a profit in such a short time. December sales had been 750 units, up from 500 units in November, and enough to report a profit for the month and to eliminate a deficit accumulated in October and November. Sales were expected to be 1,000 units in January and Rinehart’s projections showed sales increases of 500 units per month after that. Thus ,by May, monthly sales were expected to be 3,000 units. By December that figure would be 6,500 units.
Rinehart was very conscious of developing good sales channel relationships in order to increase sales, so Puzzler deliveries were always prompt. This required production schedules 30 days in advance of predicted sales. For example, Fun & Games had produced 1000 Puzzlers in December for January sales, and would produce 1500 in January for February ‘s demand. The company billed its customer with stated terms of 30 days net, but did not strictly enforce these credit terms with the result that customers seemed to be taking an additional month to pay. All of the company’s costs were paid in cash in the month in which they were incurred.
Rinehart’s projections came true. By March sales had reached 2000 Puzzlers and 2500 units were produced in March for April sale. Income before taxes year to date had reached $24,000 by March 31. In order to get a respite from the increasingly hectic activities of running the business, in mid-April Rinehart went on a family vacation.
Within the week, the company’s book-keeper called. Fun& Games bank balance was almost zero, so necessary materials could not be purchased. Unless Rinehart returned immediately to raise more cash, the entire operation would have to shut down within a few days.
Assignment:
1) You have been provided with a financial forecast spreadsheet through October. The spreadsheet contains the initial forecast numbers that you will use as your baseline forecast. The template does not have formulas in it so you should populate the spreadsheet with formulas so that you can perform the "what if" modeling required in the assignment. Use the template as it is designed to provide all the financial information needed for the assignment. The spreadsheet should include the twelve months from January through December.
2) Note that the original forecast had cash flow shortfalls in most months. A business cannot operate if it has overdrawn on its bank account, just like you cannot overdraw on your bank account/credit card for an extended period. So when you are addressing the cash deficits discussed below, remember you need to eliminate deficits in all months.
2) Revise the projections as suggested below and answer the related questions (remember you are in March:
A) How much would you have to raise prices to eliminate the cash deficit projected in the information supplied? Rerun budget to determine this.
B) How much slower would Fun & Games have to grow to avoid a cash deficit? (What is their internal sustainable rate of growth?)
C) In an effort to quickly build the company size, sell it and take a one-year vacation in Tahiti, you decide to increase sales to 8000 units per month by September. How much cash will be needed and can this be raised by a combination of faster customer collections, slower vendor payments, negotiating a lower product cost, and reduced inventory levels? Suggest one specific scenario that will finance this growth without borrowing or obtaining equity financing.

answer
Answers: 1

Other questions on the subject: Business

image
Business, 22.06.2019 00:00, Bigbabybrudis
1tanner invested $135,000 cash along with office equipment valued at $32,400 in the company in exchange for common stock. 2 the company prepaid $7,200 cash for 12 months’ rent for office space. (hint: debit prepaid rent for $7,200.) 3 the company made credit purchases for $16,200 in office equipment and $3,240 in office supplies. payment is due within 10 days. 6 the company completed services for a client and immediately received $2,000 cash. 9 the company completed a $10,800 project for a client, who must pay within 30 days. 13 the company paid $19,440 cash to settle the account payable created on april 3. 19 the company paid $6,000 cash for the premium on a 12-month insurance policy. (hint: debit prepaid insurance for $6,000.) 22 the company received $8,640 cash as partial payment for the work completed on april 9. 25 the company completed work for another client for $2,640 on credit. 28 the company paid $6,200 cash in dividends. 29 the company purchased $1,080 of additional office supplies on credit. 30 the company paid $700 cash for this month’s utility bill. prepare general journal entries to record these transactions. 2. post the journal entries from part 1 to the ledger accounts.
Answers: 2
image
Business, 22.06.2019 00:10, wolfycatsz74
Which of the following is a problem for the production of public goods?
Answers: 2
image
Business, 22.06.2019 12:10, ghari112345
In year 1, the bennetts' 25-year-old daughter, jane, is a full-time student at an out-of-state university but she plans to return home after the school year ends. in previous years, jane has never worked and her parents have always been able to claim her as a dependent. in year 1, a kind neighbor offers to pay for all of jane's educational and living expenses. which of the following statements is most accurate regarding whether jane's parents would be allowed to claim an exemption for jane in year 1 assuming the neighbor pays for all of jane's support? a. no, jane must include her neighbor's gift as income and thus fails the gross income test for a qualifying relative. b.yes, because she is a full-time student and does not provide more than half of her own support, jane is considered her parent's qualifying child. c.no, jane is too old to be considered a qualifying child and fails the support test of a qualifying relative. d.yes, because she is a student, her absence is considered as "temporary." consequently she meets the residence test and is a considered a qualifying child of the bennetts.
Answers: 2
image
Business, 22.06.2019 13:00, ksteele1
Apopular low-cost airline, parson corp., has gone out of business. although the service and price provided by the airline was what customers wanted, the larger airlines were able to drive the low-cost airline out of business through an aggressive price war. which component of the competitive environment does this illustrate? a) threat of new entrants b)competitors c) economic factors d) customers d) regulators
Answers: 1
Do you know the correct answer?
Fun & Games Company was founded by Avery Rinehart to produce a novelty item marketed under the n...

Questions in other subjects:

Konu
Geography, 17.01.2020 19:31
Konu
Mathematics, 17.01.2020 19:31