Reference no: EM13920752
John Randazzo is the owner of a successful shop that produces automotive brake components for national auto parts chain. These auto store sell "after-market" parts to replace those made y the original equipment manufacturers such as General Motor, Ford and Toyota. A great deal of volume diversity exists across the products manufactured by Randazzo's shop. For example, Randazzo may produce 80,000 brake components per year for vehicles such as the Chevrolet Lumina, Ford Taurus, or Toyota Corolla; however, he may produce only 5000 for the corvette market. Selling prices vary greatly across the product line as a result of market supply and demand.
The machine shop is highly automated and uses the most current computer-numerically controlled (CNC) equipment. By changing cutting tools and entering different measurements in the system, a variety of products can be manufactured. Thus, machine costs are not traceable to a single product line, but are common to all products. Alternatively, many production costs are variable and can be traced to the individual products. For example, energy, material, and supply costs among the products.
Randazzo's cost accountant recently completed a study that associated cost and revenue data with each product listed in the company's catalog. Exhibit A identifies sales volume, selling prices per unit, and variable costs for a sample of the ten products representing the mix manufactured by Randazzo. In addition to the variable cost identified in Exhibit A, the accountant estimated $600,000 of fixed costs would be associated with the production of these ten products
Product A B C D E F G H I J
Sales volume in units (X 1,000) 50 80 10 20 70 25 5 12 11 15
Selling price per unit $12 $15 $2 $10 $15 $10 $2 $5 $5 $8
Variable cost $10 $11 $3 $8 $10 $8 $4 $4 $5 $6
The study produced startling results; two of the ten products in the sample had variable cost exceeding their selling prices. Upon analyzing the cost report, Randazzo's marketing vice president immediately defended the current strategy of manufacturing a full product line. She argued that even though some product had costs in excess of their selling prices, Randazzo should consider the big picture. Many of their customers were controlling costs by reducing the number of vendors from their purchased merchandise. She argued that if Randazzo longer produce product G (Corvette brake components), retail chains would likely turn to Randazzo's competitors for other products as well.
Randazzo knew that dropping products from the line would necessitate lay-offs of some salaried and hourly employees. In the short run, lost of production volume could not be made up by increases in production of other products. Over the years, he had worked hard to achieve a culture of trust and cooperation within the company and the community. He wondered about the options available to him.
Required
A. What financial and nonfinancial considerations are relevant to the management team's decision to keep or drop a product line?
B. Assume $70,000 of the $600,000 in fixed costs can be saved if product C and G are dropped. What is the total benefit to the company of dropping the two products?
C. Do you agree with the marketing vice president's concern about carrying a full product line?
D. As a consultant to Randazzo, What would you recommend to:
1. Ensure each product in the line is profitable or
2. Ensure the entire line is profitable?
How do improvements show up in toyota financial statements
: After the change, 30% less paint is used per car, process time per car dropped from ten hours to eight hours, and the factory dismantled one of the three heated booths used in the paint process. How do these improvements show up in Toyota's financ..
|
Engineering drop in centre and the mathematics continuous
: The number of attempts available for each question is noted beside the question. If you are having trouble figuring out your error, you should consult the textbook, or ask a fellow student, one of the TA's or your professor for help. There are als..
|
Major forces behind urban growth in early united states
: What were the major forces behind urban growth in early United States history? What influence did urban growth have on urban concentration and population density?
|
Andrew jackson presidency
: Many historians have labeled the 1820s and 1830s as the "Age of Jackson" because Andrew Jackson's presidency greatly altered America's political landscape.
|
What is total benefit to company of dropping two products
: Assume $70,000 of the $600,000 in fixed costs can be saved if product C and G are dropped. What is the total benefit to the company of dropping the two products?
|
Probability histograms that can be approximated
: Assume that these 28 apartments can be treated as a random sample of size 28 with replacement from the population of comparable two-bedroom apartments for rent in the area, and the distribution of rents for comparable apartments in the area is app..
|
How were fish fed in relation to osprey feeding
: what factors are being analyzed or tested and how will they be analyzed eg which statistical tests - The effect of the presence of predator on the prey is to be analyzed
|
What is organizational power and where does it come from
: What is organizational power, and where does it come from? The PPP Company recently purchased a large chain of supermarkets (over 1,000 stores).
|
Calculate what proportion of variance is shared
: For each correlation coefficient below, calculate what proportion of variance is shared by the two correlated variables:
|