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Tom Loper is an accounting major at a midwestern state university located approximately 60 miles from a major city. Many of the students attending the university are from the metropolitan area and visit their homes regularly on the weekends. Tom, an entrepreneur at heart, realizes that few good commuting alternatives are available for students doing weekend travel. He believes that a weekend commuting service could be organized and run profitably from several suburban and downtown shopping mall locations. Tom has gathered the following investment information. 1. Five used vans would cost a total of $74,300 to purchase and would have a 3-year useful life with negligible salvage value. Tom plans to use straight-line depreciation. 2. Ten drivers would have to be employed at a total payroll expense of $47,996. 3. Other annual out-of-pocket expenses associated with running the commuter service would include Gasoline $16,002, Maintenance $4,306, Repairs $5,006, Insurance $5,201, Advertising $2,496. 4. Tom has visited several financial institutions to discuss funding. The best interest rate he has been able to negotiate is 8%. Use this rate for cost of capital. 5. Tom expects each van to make 10 round trips weekly and carry an average of 6 students each trip. The service is expected to operate 30 weeks each year, and each student will be charged $11.97 for a round-trip ticket. A) Determine the annual (1) net income and (2) net annual cash flows for the commuter service. Net income= $ Net cash flow= $ B) Compute (1) the cash payback period and (2) the annual rate of return. (Round answers to 2 decimal places, e.g. 10.50.) Cash payback period= years Annual rate of return= % C) What should Tom conclude from these computations? Is the commuter service a wise investment?
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