Assignment 5

Ch. 14 – Operations ACC E22 -17 Application Assignment #5 – Lesson 6 Please take note that there are multiple questions/topics covered in this assignment. You need to show all your work, where applicable, don’t just provide an answer. You will receive -0- credit if your calculations are not shown, where applicable, in the submitted assignment. 1. Stan was at his banker’s trying to get a short -term loan. “I need about $10,000 for three months, just until I get things straightened out. This is my situation: I got this nice order last Fe bruary from Baker Company. Their bill was due last month, but so far I haven’t seen anything. Now I have another big order, this time from Gisher Construction and I need to order raw materials, but I cannot since Baker has not paid. Even when they do pa y, it is only about 75% of what I will need to order to do the Gisher contract. Then, we are headed into our slow months; no one much does anything through the winter. And with the hurricane down in Florida, people are thinking twice before placing their orders.” Stan was experiencing a number of cash flow problems that small businesses (and often larger businesses) face. a. Identify five problems Stan is experiencing with Cash Flow? 2. Hal Carrier, of Bulltuff Stock Trailers, Inc., has asked for your help. In the last four months, he has had several checks written to suppliers that were refused by his bank because of nonsufficient funds. Now his main supplier, Alcoa Aluminum Supply Co., has cut off credit. “We are sorry Hal,” Alcoa credit officer said, “ but we simply cannot keep accepting your checks. Every time one bounces, it costs us at least $100 combined in processing fees and our internal accounting. You simply will have to pay cash or bring a cashier’s check for future purchases.” Hal simply cann ot understand why his checks keep bouncing. “We’ve plenty of sales,” he said, “and our customers pay pretty much as agreed. Right now I have only one customer who is as much as 60 days past due. My accountant, Bill Yant, assures me that our cash balance never goes negative. So why are my checks bouncing?  Cash sales are 10% of total assets.  Credit card sales are 10% of total sales and are collected the week following the sale. The credit card provider deducts 2.5% of the gross amount of each credit car d sale. (For example, on a sale of $100, $2.50 is deducted.)  Sales on credit are 80% of all sales. All credit sales are to dealers. Terms for dealers are “30 -30 -30,” that is, three equal payments made in each of the three months following the sale. Pay ments are considered late if they ar e not received by the 10 th of the month in which they are due.  Direct Materials, primarily aluminum, are 60% of the cost of building a trailer. Before credit was cut off, Bulltuff paid 30% on delivery and the remainder in 30 days. Now it must pay cash on delivery.  Total cost of direct labor is 15% of the costs of building a trailer. Workers are paid each Friday for work performed the previous week. Withholding and employment taxes are paid each Friday, also.  Variable costs combined (e.g.: materials and labor) are 50% of gross sales. Fixed costs are not allocated to the costs of trailers but are expensed evenly across the year.  All other costs combined are treated as fixed costs, and total $1 million per year. Ch. 14 – Operations ACC E22 -17  Bulltuff leases its building and equipment and has no depreciation.  Sales for the year were originally projected to be $2,450,000. However, given the current growth in sales. Hal now estimates that sales will be $5,000,000  Sales for the first four months of the year have been:  January $208,000  February $261,000  March $293,000  April $328,000 a. What is causing Hal’s cash flow problems? b. Develop a plan to address the problems. 3. Poll Auto Parts, a family -owned auto parts store, began January with $10,200 cash. Manag ement forecasts that collections from credit customers will be $11,700 in January and $15,000 in February. The store is scheduled to receive $7,000 cash on a business note receivable in January. Projected cash payments include inventory purchases ($14,50 0 in January and $13,900 in February) and operating expenses ($2,900 each month). Poll Auto Parts’ bank requires a $10,000 minimum balance in the store’s checking account. At the end of any month when the account balance dips below $10,000 the bank autom atically extends credit to the store in multiples of $1,000. Poll Auto Parts borrows as little as possible and pays back loans in quarterly installments of $2,500, plus 5% interest on the entire unpaid principal. The first payment occurs three months aft er the loan. a. Prepare Poll Auto Parts’ cash budget for January and February. b. How much cash will Poll Auto Parts borrow in February if collections from customers that month total $14,000 instead of $15,000 4. James Matola and his wife, Ivey, the second -generation owners of James Confectioners, a family -owned manufacturer of premium chocolates that was started by James’ father, Frank, in 1964 in Eau Claire, Wisconsin, have become increasingly concerned that turmoil in the b anking and financial industries could have a negative impact on their business. They have read the headlines about bank closures, and heightened government oversight of the banking industry. The company has $150,000 line of credit with Maple Leaf Bank, b ut the Mattola’s want to increase it to $250,000 as a precautionary move. Last week, they contacted Claudia Francis, their personal banker at Maple Leaf, about increasing the line of credit. In addition to reviewing James Confectioner’s most recent balan ce sheet and income statement, Francis said she would need a cash flow forecast for the upcoming year. They expect sales to increase 6.2% next year to $4,139,213. Credit sales account for 96% of total sales, and the company’s collection pattern for credi t sales is 8% in the same month in which the sale is generated, 54% in the first month after the sale is made, and 34% in the second month after the sale is generated. The Matola’s hav e gathered estimates from their budget for the upcoming year. You can find their budget in the 2 nd document attached to the assignment. Ch. 14 – Operations ACC E22 -17 Actual s ales for the last two months, November and December, were $459,913 and $553,454, respectively. The company’s cash balance as of January 1 is $22,565. The interest rate on James Confectioners’ current line of credit is 8.25%, and the Matola’s have establi shed a minimum cash balance of $10,000. a. Develop a monthly cash budget for James Confectioners for the upcoming year. b. What recommendations can you offer James and Ivey to improve their company’s cash flow? c. If you were Claudia Francis, the Matola’s banker, w ould you be willing to increase the company’s line of credit? Explain.