If the firm paid common stock dividends of 080 per share


Assignment

P3-5 Calculation of EPS and retained earnings  Everdeen Mining, Inc., ended 2015 with a net profit before taxes of $436,000. The company is subject to a 40% tax rate and must pay $64,000 in preferred stock dividends before distributing any earnings on the 170,000 shares of common stock currently outstanding.

a. Calculate Everdeen's 2015 earnings per share (EPS).

b. If the firm paid common stock dividends of $0.80 per share, how many dollars would go to retained earnings?

P3-13 Liquidity management  Bauman Company's total current assets, total current liabilities, and inventory for each of the past 4 years follow:

Item

2012

2013

2014

2015

Total current assets

$16,950

$21,900

$22,500

$27,000

Total current liabilities

9,000

12,600

12,600

17,400

Inventory

6,000

6,900

6,900

7,200

  1. Calculate the firm's current and quick ratios for each year. Compare the resulting time series for these measures of liquidity.
  2. Comment on the firm's liquidity over the 2012-2013 period.
  3. If you were told that Bauman Company's inventory turnover for each year in the 2012-2015 period and the industry averages were as follows, would this information support or conflict with your evaluation in part b? Why?

Inventory turnover

2012

2013

2014

2015

Bauman Company

6.3

6.8

7.0

6.4

Industry average

10.6

11.2

10.8

11.0

P4-3 MACRS depreciation expense and accounting cash flow Pavlovich Instruments, Inc., a maker of precision telescopes, expects to report pretax income of $430,000 this year. The company's financial manager is considering the timing of a purchase of new computerized lens grinders. The grinders will have an installed cost of $80,000 and a cost recovery period of 5 years. They will be depreciated using the MACRS schedule.

  1.  If the firm purchases the grinders before year-end, what depreciation expense will it be able to claim this year? (Use Table 4.2 on page 120.)
  2. If the firm reduces its reported income by the amount of the depreciation expense calculated in part a, what tax savings will result?

Table 4.2 Rounded Depreciation Percentages by Recovery Year Using MACRS for First Four Property Classes

 

Percentage by recovery year a

Recovery year

3 years

5 years

7 years

10 years

1

33%

20%

14%

10%

2

45

32

25

18

3

15

19

18

14

4

7

12

12

12

5

 

12

9

9

6

 

5

9

8

7

 

 

9

7

8

 

 

4

6

9

 

 

 

6

10

 

 

 

6

11

             

             

             

   4

Totals

100%

100%

100%

100%

a These percentages have been rounded to the nearest whole percent to simplify calculations while retaining realism. To calculate the actualdepreciation for tax purposes, be sure to apply the actual unrounded percentages or directly apply double-declining balance depreciation using the half-year convention.

Year

Cost (1)

Percentages (from Table 4.2) (2)

Depreciation [(1) × (2)] (3)

1

$40,000

20%

$ 8,000

2

40,000

32

12,800

3

40,000

19

7,600

4

40,000

12

4,800

5

40,000

12

4,800

6

40,000

  5

 2,000

Totals

 

100%

$40,000








P4-5  Classifying inflows and outflows of cash Classify each of the following items as an inflow (I) or an outflow (O) of cash, or as neither (N).

Item

Change ($)

Item

Change ($)

Cash

+100

Accounts receivable

-700

Accounts payable

-1,000

Net profits

+600

Notes payable

+500

Depreciation

+100

Long-term debt

-2,000

Repurchase of stock

+600

Inventory

+200

Cash dividends

+800

Fixed assets

+400

Sale of stock

+1,000

P4-7 Cash receipts A firm has actual sales of $65,000 in April and $60,000 in May. It expects sales of $70,000 in June and $100,000 in July and in August. Assuming that sales are the only source of cash inflows and that half of them are for cash and the remainder are collected evenly over the following 2 months, what are the firm's expected cash receipts for June, July, and August?

P4-12 Cash flow concepts The following represent financial transactions that Johnsfield& Co. will be undertaking in the next planning period. For each transaction, check the statement or statements that will be affected immediately.

 

Statement

 

 

Pro forma income

Pro forma balance

Transaction

Cash budget

statement

sheet

Cash sale

 

 

 

Credit sale

 

 

 

Accounts receivable are collected

 

 

 

Asset with 5-year life is purchased

 

 

 

Depreciation is taken

 

 

 

Amortization of goodwill is taken

 

 

 

Sale of common stock

 

 

 

Retirement of outstanding bonds

 

 

 

Fire insurance premium is paid for the next 3 years

 

 

 

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