Use the high-low method to estimate the companys energy


I. Estimating Cost Behavior; High-Low Method

Jonathan Macintosh is a highly successful upstate New York orchardman who has formed his own company to produce and package applesauce. Apples can be stored for several months in cold storage, so applesauce production is relatively uniform throughout the year. The recently hired controller for the firm is about to apply the high-low method in estimating the company's energy cost behavior. The following costs were incurred during the past 12 months:

Month

Pints of Applesauce Produced

Energy Cost

January

35,000

$23,400

February

21,000

22,100

March

22,000

22,000

April

24,000

22,450

May

30,000

22,900

June

32,000

23,350

July

40,000

28,000

August

30,000

22,800

September

30,000

23,000

October

28,000

22,700

November

41,000

24,100

December

39,000

24,950

Required:

1. Use the high-low method to estimate the company's energy cost behavior and express it in equation form.
2. Predict the energy cost for a month in which 26,000 pints of applesauce are produced.

II. CVP Analysis; Ipact of operating changes

Houston-based Advanced Electronics manufactures audio speakers for desktop computers. The following data relates to the period just ended when the company produced and sold 42,000 speaker sets:

Sales $3,360,000
Variable Costs 840,000
Fixed Costs 2,280,000

Management is considering relocating its manufacturing facilities to Northern Mexico to reduce costs. Variable costs are expected to average $18 per set; annual fixed costs are anticipated to be $1,984,000. (Ingors income taxes)

1. Calculate the company's current income and determine the level of dollar sales needed to double that figure, assuming that manufacturing operations remain in the United States.

2. Determine the break even point in speaker sets if operations are shifted to Mexico

3. Assume that management desires to achieve the Mexican break even point; however, operations remain in the United States.

a) If variable costs remain constant, what must management do to fixed costs? By how much must fixed costs change?
b) If fixed costs remain constant, what must management do to the variable cost per unit? By how much must unit variable cost change?

4. Determine the impact (increase, decrease, or no effect) of the following operating changes.

a) Effect of an increase in direct material costs on the break-even point
b) Effect of an increase in fixed administration costs on the unit contribution margin.
c) Effect of an increase in the un it contribution margin on net income.
d) Effect of an decrease in the number of units sold on the break even point.

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Financial Accounting: Use the high-low method to estimate the companys energy
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