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elena-14-01-66 [18.8K]
2 years ago
14

Rogers' Rotors has debt with a market value of $250,000, preferred stock with a market value of $50,000, and common stock with a

market value of $750,000. If debt has a cost of 7%, preferred stock a cost of 9%, common stock a cost of 13%, and the firm has a tax rate of 30%, what is the WACC?
Business
1 answer:
Furkat [3]2 years ago
7 0

Answer:

10.88%

Explanation:

The computation of the weighted average cost of capital is shown below:

But before that first we have to determine the after tax cost of debt and the total value which is shown below:

After tax cost of debt is

=7% × (1 - tax rate)

= 7% × (1 - 0.3)

= 4.9%

And,

Total value is

= $250,000 + $50,000 + $750,000

= $1,050,000

Now WACC is

WACC = Respective costs × Respective weights

= ($250,000 ÷ 1050000 × 4.9%) + ($50,000 ÷ $1,050,000 × 9)+($750,000 ÷ $1,050,000 × 13%)

= 10.88%

We simply applied the above formula

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Prepare financial statements from an adjusted trial balance (LO3-5) [The following information applies to the questions displaye
Vlad1618 [11]

Answer:

Fightin' Blue Hens Corporation

Income Statement

For the year ended December 31, 2021

Service Revenue                                             $420,000

Operating expenses:

  • Salaries Expense $320,000
  • Rent Expense $16,000
  • Depreciation Expense $32,000           <u>($368,000)</u>

Operating income                                            $52,000

Other revenues and expenses:

  • Interest Expense $4,200                        <u> ($4,200)</u>

Net income before taxes                                 $47,800

*The totals of the trial balance sheet were added incorrectly, they both debit and credit total $876,600.

6 0
2 years ago
Fizzzle Inc. sold a piece of equipment during the period for $230,000 and recorded a gain of $45,000 on the sale. How should thi
saw5 [17]

Answer:

The gain is subtracted from net income in the operating activities section

Explanation:

Given that

Sale value of an equipment = $230,000

And, the gain on the sale = $45,000

So by considering the above information

We can say that the Sale value of an equipment is shown in the investing activities as a cash inflow while the gain on the sale is to be subtracted from the net income in the operating activities and if there is a loss than it would be added to the net income

4 0
2 years ago
The GoT cups are a fast seller and you need to ensure that you have enough rolls of paper to fulfill demand. The first stage in
jarptica [38.1K]

Answer:

EOQ = 414 rolls

Explanation:

In order to calculate the number of orders to minimize the cost, we should calculate that by using the Economic order quantity model.

DATA

Holding cost = $1.75/unit

Annual demand = 500 rolls x 12 = 6000 rolls

Ordering cost = $25

Formula

EOQ =\sqrt{\frac{2Cod}{Ch} }

Where

Co = ordering cost

D = Annual demand

Ch = Holding cost

Solution

EOQ = \sqrt{\frac{2(6000)(25)}{1.75} }

EOQ = \sqrt{\frac{300000}{1.75} }

EOQ = 414 rolls

They should order 414 rolls to minimize the cost.

4 0
2 years ago
Read 2 more answers
The following selected transactions were taken from the records of Shipway Company for the first year of its operations ending D
Damm [24]

Answer:

Shipway Company

Journal Entries:

a. Direct Method:

Apr. 13. Debit Bad Debts Expense $2,120

Credit Accounts Receivable (Dean Sheppard) $2,120

To write-off account deemed uncollectible.

May 15. Debit Cash $1,060

Debit Bad Debts Expense $1,760

Credit Accounts Receivable (Dan Pyle) $2,820

To record the receipt of cash and write-off of uncollectible balance.

July 27. Debit Accounts Receivable $2,120

Credit Bad Debts Expense $2,120

To reinstate the account.

Debit Cash $2,120

Credit Accounts Receivable $2,120

To record the receipt of cash.  

Dec. 31 Debit Bad Debts Expense $13,375

Credit Accounts Receivable $13,375

To write-off the following uncollectible accounts: Paul Chapman $2,120 Duane DeRosa 3,590 Teresa Galloway 4,640 Ernie Klatt 1,310 Marty Richey 1,715.

b. Allowance Method:

Apr. 13. Debit Allowance for Uncollectibles $2,120

Credit Accounts Receivable (Dean Sheppard) $2,120

To write-off account deemed uncollectible.

May 15. Debit Cash $1,060

Debit Allowance for Uncollectibles $1,760

Credit Accounts Receivable (Dan Pyle) $2,820

To record the receipt of cash and write-off of uncollectible balance.

July 27. Debit Accounts Receivable $2,120

Credit Allowance for Uncollectibles $2,120

To reinstate a previously written-off account.

Debit Cash $2,120

Credit Accounts Receivable $2,120

To record the receipt of cash on account.

Dec. 31 Debit Allowance for Uncollectibles $13,375

Credit Accounts Receivable $13,375

To write-off of uncollectible accounts.

c. The amount by which Shipway Company’s net income would have been higher (lower) under the direct write-off method than under the allowance method is:

= $0

Explanation:

a) Data and Analysis:

Direct Method:

Apr. 13. Bad Debts Expense $2,120 Accounts Receivable (Dean Sheppard) $2,120

May 15. Cash $1,060 Bad Debts Expense $1,760 Accounts Receivable (Dan Pyle) $2,820

July 27. Accounts Receivable $2,120 Bad Debts Expense $2,120 Cash $2,120 Accounts Receivable $2,120  

Dec. 31 Bad Debts Expense $13,375 Accounts Receivable $13,375

Uncollectible accounts: Paul Chapman $2,120 Duane DeRosa 3,590 Teresa Galloway 4,640 Ernie Klatt 1,310 Marty Richey 1,715

Allowance Method:

Apr. 13. Allowance for Uncollectibles $2,120 Accounts Receivable (Dean Sheppard) $2,120

May 15. Cash $1,060 Allowance for Uncollectibles $1,760 Accounts Receivable (Dan Pyle) $2,820

July 27. Accounts Receivable $2,120 Allowance for Uncollectibles $2,120 Cash $2,120 Accounts Receivable $2,120

Dec. 31 Allowance for Uncollectibles $13,375 Accounts Receivable $13,375

Uncollectible accounts: Paul Chapman $2,120 Duane DeRosa 3,590 Teresa Galloway 4,640 Ernie Klatt 1,310 Marty Richey 1,715

6 0
1 year ago
(6) Erik receives an eight-year annuity-immediate with monthly payments. The first payment is $300 and payments increase by $6 e
Tamiku [17]

Answer:

  • <u>$70,264.03</u>

Explanation:

You need to calculate the value of 8 × 12 = 96 different cash flows.

There is not a formula to calculate that, because the<em> $6 dollar increase</em> does not represent growing with a constant rate.

The monthly payments are:

Month            payment ($)

0 (today)             300

1                           306

2                          312

3                          318

n                          306 + 6 (n-1)

96 (last)               876

Then you must create a spreadsheet with these features:

  • Five columns
  • First column is the month, and starts with month 0 (today)
  • Second column is the initial balance, the first balance is 0
  • Third column is the interest: it is calculated as the monthly interest by the initial balance. The monthly interest is 6%/12 = 0.06/12 = 0.005
  • Fourth column is the amount deposited: for month zero it is $300, and every month you add $6.
  • Fith column is the final balance: it is the sum of the initial balance (second column) + interest (third column) + deposit (fourth colum)
  • 96 rows: 8 years × 12months/year = 96 months.
  • The initial balance of each row is equal to the final balance of the previous row.

Here a sample of the first three rows:

Month  Initial balance  Interest                    Deposit     Final balance

 0                  0                   0                          300          300

 1                 300             300×0.005 = 1.5    306          607.5

 2                607.5          607.5×0.005           312          922.54

When you do it up to the row 96, the final balance is <em>the balance in the acccount at the end of the eight years</em>.

The last row of your spreadsheet will show:

96           69,042.81      345.21                    876         70,264.03

Thus, <em>the balance at the end of eight years will be $70,264.03</em>

7 0
2 years ago
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