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ivolga24 [154]
2 years ago
12

Mel’s Meals 2 Go purchases cookies that it includes in the 10,000 box lunches it prepares and sells annually. Mel’s kitchen and

adjoining meeting room operate at 70 percent of capacity. Mel’s purchases the cookies for $0.60 each but is considering making them instead. Mel’s can bake each cookie for $0.20 for materials, $0.15 for direct labor, and $0.45 for overhead without increasing its capacity. The $0.45 for overhead includes an allocation of $0.30 per cookie for fixed overhead. However, total fixed overhead for the company would not increase if Mel’s makes the cookies.Mel himself has come to you for advice. "It would cost me $0.80 to make the cookies, but only $0.60 to buy. Should I continue buying them?" Materials and labor are variable costs, but variable overhead would be only $0.15 per cookie. Two cookies are put into every lunch.How would you advise Mel? Prepare a schedule to show the differential costs.
Business
2 answers:
kicyunya [14]2 years ago
7 0

Answer: The total cost of Mel Buying the cookies is $7,500, the total cost of Mel making the cookies is $11,500, the differential cost is $4,000, I will advise Mel to continue buying the cookies

Explanation:

Comparative cost statements for two alternatives

Mel Make. Mel Buy

$ $

Direct materials (0.20 × 10,000) 2,000. -

Direct Labour ($0.15 × 10,000) 1,500. 1,500

Variable overhead ($0.15 × 10,000) 1,500. 1,500

Fixed overhead ($0.30 × 10,000) 3,000. -

Cost price. 8,000. 6,000

----------- -------------

Total Cost. 16,000. 9,000

------------- ------------

The fixed overhead apportioned to the cookies will still be incurred whether or not Mel purchase the cookies from outside supplier. Fixed overhead and direct labour are therefore irrelevant in deciding which alternative to choose.if the cookies were purchased from outside supplier. Since it will be different for each alternative, we can compute the cost statement for the two alternative using only relevant cost as follows

Mel Make. Mel Buy

$ $

Direct materials. 2,000. -

Variable overhead. 1,500. 1,500

Cost price. 8,000. 6,000

------------ ------------

Total Cost. 11,500. 7,500

------------- ----------------

The Differential cost is (11,500 - 7,500) = 4,000

Based on the cost statement I will advise Mel to continue buying the cookies

Irina18 [472]2 years ago
5 0

Answer:

Current Operation (purchase of cookies) - $0.60

Alternative - $0.2 materials

$0.15 direct labor

$0.45 without increasing capacity of which $0.3 is fixed - meaning it would still be incurred at current capacity

                        <u> Mel's Meals Evaluation of Alternatives</u>

                                       Purchase                                Produce

                                            $                                              $

Cost to Buy                        0.6                                             -

Materials                               -                                             0.2

Direct Labor                         -                                             0.15

Overhead (Variable)            -                                             0.15

Total Cost                            0.6                                          0.5

Decision: Mel should not continue buying them as she would be saving $0.1 for every lunch meal.

Since there would not be an increase in the total fixed overhead if Mel's makes the cookies in-house, then the $0.3 fixed overhead is not significant in calculating the cost of producing.

Explanation:

The differential cost in this instance is $0.1 as Mel's saves that for every cookie made which multiplied by the number included in the box and by the total box prepared and sold gives = 0.1 * 2 * 10000 = $2,000 saved for making

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Imagine that you are holding 7,000 shares of stock, currently selling at $70 per share. You are ready to sell the shares but wou
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Call option

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Price of the option = $ 2

Put Option

Strike Price = 65

Price of the option = $ 4

Amount received on sale of Call option = 7000 * 2 = 14,000

Amount paid on buying a put option = 7000 * 4 = 28,000

Value of the Portfolio = 7000 * 70 + 14000 – 28000 = 490,000 +14000 – 28000 = 476,000

If the stock price in January is 57

As the strike price 75 is higher than the current market price of 57, the call option buyer will allow the option to expire

As the strike price of 65 is higher than the current price of 57, the investor will utilise the put option

Profit from Put option can be obtained by buying shares from market and selling the same under the put option

Profit from put option =7000 * (65-57) = 7000 * 8 = 56000

Value of the portfolio   = Holding Value at current price + premium received – premium paid+ profit from put option

                                        = 7000 * 57 + 14000 – 28000 + 56000

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                                       = 441,000

If the stock price in January is 70

As the strike price 75 is higher than the market price of 70, the call option buyer will allow the option to expire

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If the market price in January is 77

As the strike price of 75 is lower than market price of 77, the buyer of call option will enforce the call option

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As the strike price of 65 is lower than market price of 77, the investor will allow the put option to expire

Portfolio Value = Holding value at current market price + premium received – premium paid – loss on call option

Portfolio value = 7000 * 77 + 14000 – 28000 – 14000

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Download xlsx
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