Calculate taxable income and taxes payable assuming the


Suppose Sonics Inc. just started business this period. The firm purchased 400 units during the period at various prices as follows:

Date

Units

Unit Cost

Total

January

100

$10

$1,000

March

100

$12

$1,200

June

100

$14

$1,400

October

100

$15

$1,500

Total

400


$5,100

The firm sold 250 units at $30 each on the following dates:

Date

Units

Unit Price

Total Sales

February

75

$30

$2,250

May

90

$30

$2,700

August

75

$30

$2,250

December

10

$30

$300

Total

250

$30

$7,500

Required (assume the firm faces a marginal tax rate of 35%):

a. Calculate taxable income and taxes payable assuming the firm uses FIFO (first-in, first-out) for inventory costing purposes.

b. Calculate taxable income and taxes payable assuming the firm uses LIFO (last-in, first-out) for inventory costing purposes.

Discuss your results, including any nontax costs that might be associated with either inventory costing system.

Continued on next page

6. Assume Sonics Inc., from the prior exercise, uses LIFO with the periodic inventory system. Thus the LIFO cost of ending inventory at year 1 of 150 units is $1,600 (100 @ $10 + 50 @ $12). Suppose in year 2, Sonics reports the following purchases and sales:

Date

Units

Unit Cost/Price

Total

Purchases




June

100

$17

$1,700





Sales




July

200

$30

$6,000

Required:

a. Calculate taxable income and taxes payable (again assuming Sonics faces a marginal tax rate of 35%) for year 2. How many more units did Sonics sell than purchase? What is the difference in the unit cost and latest purchase price for each of these units?

b. Instead of purchasing 100 units in June, Sonics purchased 110 units. Recalculate taxable income and taxes payable.

c. Instead of purchasing 100 units in June, Sonics purchased 90 units. Recalculate taxable income and taxes payable.

d. How many units should Sonics have purchased to avoid dipping into earlier layers of inventory?

e. Do you notice any opportunities for Sonics Inc. to smooth reported net income (by varying the amount purchased relative to sales)? Are there any costs associated with this strategy? Does FIFO offer the same opportunities?

f. Suppose the top managers of Sonics are compensated, in part, by a bonus linked to reported net income. What inventory costing method might you expect the managers to favor? What costs to the firm arise from this choice?

Chapter 7

1. Suppose a firm is equally likely to earn $2 million this year or lose $3 million. The firm faces a tax rate of 40% on each dollar of taxable income, and the firm pays no taxes on losses. In this simple one-period scenario, ignore the carryback and carryforward rules. The firm's expected taxable income is thus a loss of $500,000 calculated as .50(-$3) + .50($2). What is the firm's expected marginal tax rate?

Suppose a second firm is equally likely to earn $3 million this year or lose $2 million. This firm also faces a tax rate of 40% on each dollar of taxable income (and the firm pays no taxes on losses). Again in this simple one-period scenario, ignore the carryback and carryforward rules. The firm's expected taxable income is thus a profit of $500,000 calculated as .50($3) + .50(-$2). What is the firm's expected marginal tax rate?

Explain and discuss your results.

4. Find the annual report for some publicly listed high-technology company that has losses. Refer to the tax footnote in the report to extract the NOL carryforward. Assume an after-tax discount rate of 10%.

Calculate the firm's marginal explicit tax rate using the Manzon (1994) market-value approach. Discuss and explain your result.

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Financial Management: Calculate taxable income and taxes payable assuming the
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