A condensed income statement for the Water Sports Division of South Mountain Sports Inc. for the year

Question:

A condensed income statement for the Water Sports Division of South Mountain Sports
Inc. for the year ended January 31, 2010, is as follows:

Sales $ 600,000
Cost of goods sold 236,000
Gross profit $ 364,000
Operating expenses 274,000
Income from operations $ 90,000
Invested assets $ 500,000

Assume that the Water Sports Division received no charges from service departments. The president of South Mountain Sports Inc. has indicated that the division’s rate of return on a $500,000 investment must be increased to at least 22% by the end of the next year if operations are to continue. The division manager is considering the following three proposals:
Proposal 1: Transfer equipment with a book value of $100,000 to other divisions at no gain or loss and lease similar equipment. The annual lease payments would be less than the amount of depreciation expense on the old equipment by $18,000. This decrease in expense would be included as part of the cost of goods sold. Sales would remain unchanged.
Proposal 2: Reduce invested assets by discontinuing a product line. This action would eliminate sales of $75,000, cost of goods sold of $26,600, and operating expenses of $21,400. Assets of $150,000 would be transferred to other divisions at no gain or loss.
Proposal 3: Purchase new and more efficient machinery and thereby reduce the cost of goods sold by $30,000. Sales would remain unchanged, and the old machinery, which has no remaining book value, would be scrapped at no gain or loss. The new machinery would increase invested assets by $250,000 for the year.
Instructions
1. Using the DuPont formula for rate of return on investment, determine the profit margin, investment turnover, and rate of return on investment for the Water Sports Division for the past year.
2. Prepare condensed estimated income statements and compute the invested assets for each proposal.
3. Using the DuPont formula for rate of return on investment, determine the profit margin, investment turnover, and rate of return on investment for each proposal.
4. Which of the three proposals would meet the required 22% rate of return on investment?
5. If the Water Sports Division were in an industry where the profit margin could not be increased, how much would the investment turnover have to increase to meet the president’s required 22% rate of return on investment? Round to two decimal places.

Fantastic news! We've Found the answer you've been seeking!

Step by Step Answer:

Related Book For  book-img-for-question

Accounting

ISBN: 978-0324662962

23rd Edition

Authors: Jonathan E. Duchac, James M. Reeve, Carl S. Warren

Question Posted: