Assignment 221

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B123-Chapter12-Spring18.ppt

B123

Chapter 12

Finance

Accounting concepts & principles

  • Financial statements are prepared at the end of a period.
  • The form and content of such financial statements are often regulated by statute or regulations produced by accounting bodies(e.g. the International Accounting Standards Board).
  • There is often general requirement that these statement should give a true and fair view of the affairs of the organization.

Profit or not-for-profit

  • Organizations are often differentiated in terms of the sector of the economy to which they belong: pubic or private. They also are classified according to whether or not their primary motive is profit.

Assets & liabilities

  • Assets - it is something which the organization owns and which has a market value.
  • Liability – it is a debt that the organization owes to another person or organization.
  • Net worth – it is the value of the assets less the value of the liabilities as recorded in the books of accounts.

The balance sheet

  • It is the financial account that shows the book value of the organization's assets and its liabilities at a particular time, usually on a particular day.

Different types of costs

Fixed Cost , costs are not affected by changes of an organization’s activity ( Rent).

Variable cost , some costs increase or decrease as the level of activity rises or falls (Tel charges).

Direct cost , some times it is possible to attach or attribute a cost to particular activity.

Indirect cost , not all costs can be attributed to particular tasks

Break-even

  • Break-even (or break even) is the point of balance between making either a profit or a loss.
  • The accounting method of calculating break-even point does not include cost of working capital.
  • The financial method of calculating break-even, called value added break-even analysis, is used to assess the feasibility of a project. This method not only accounts for all costs, it also includes the opportunity costs of the capital required to develop a project.
  • Break even = Fixed Assets / contribution per unit.

Break-even example

  • A company is manufacturing product X and the selling price is $1,000, while the variable cost for each unit is $40, mean while the fixed cost of the operation will be $60,000. Calculate the break-even in units.
  • Answer:
  • BE= FC/contribution per unit sold
  • Contribution per unit sold= unit price – Variable cost
  • = $1000-$400=$600
  • BE in units= 60,000/600= 100 units

Return on capital employed

  • ROCE = operating profit / capital employed
  • (Expressed as a %)
  • ROCE is used to prove the value the business gains from its assets and liabilities. A business which owns lots of land but has little profit will have a smaller ROCE to a business which owns little land but makes the same profit.
  • It basically can be used to show how much a business is gaining for its assets, or how much it is losing for its liabilities.

Margins & mark-ups

  • Margins – it describes the profit earned as a percentage of the sales value.
  • Mark-up – it describes the amount added on to cost to arrive at the selling price as a percentage of cost.