What is computrons net operating profit after taxes nopat


Question 1

Chapter 2 Mini Case

Situation

"Jenny Cochran, a graduate of The University of OBO with 4 years of experience as an equities analyst, was recently brought in as assistant to the chairman of the board of Computron Industries, a manufacturer of computer components.

During the previous year, Computron had doubled its plant capacity, opened new sales offices outside its home territory, and launched an expensive advertising campaign. Cochran was assigned to evaluate the impact of the changes. She began by gathering financial statements and other data."

Computron's Income Statement        
             
          2015 2016
INCOME STATEMENT          
Net sales          $  3,432,000  $            5,834,400
Cost of Goods Sold Except Depr.          2,864,000                 4,980,000
Depreciation and amortization                 18,900                     116,960
Other Operating Expenses                340,000                     720,000
Total Operating Costs        $  3,222,900  $            5,816,960
Earnings before interest and taxes (EBIT)      $      209,100  $                   17,440
Less interest                      62,500                     176,000
Pre-tax earnings        $      146,600  $             (158,560)
Taxes (40%)                     58,640                     (63,424)
Net Income           $         87,960  $                (95,136)
             







Dividends



$22,000 $11,000
Tax rate



40% 40%

a. (1.) What effect did the expansion have on sales and net income?

a. (2.) What effect did the expansion have on the asset side of the balance sheet?

b. What do you conclude from the statement of cash flows?

c. What is free cash flow? Why is it important? What are the five uses of FCF?

d. What is Computron's net operating profit after taxes (NOPAT)? What are operating current assets? What are operating current liabilities? How much net operating working capital and total net operating capital does Computron have?

e. What is Computron's free cash flow (FCF)? What are Computron's "net uses" of its FCF?

f. Calculate Computron's return on invested capital. Computron has a 10% cost of capital (WACC). Do you think Computron's growth added value?

g. What is Computron's EVA? The after-tax cost of capital was 10 percent in both years.

h. What happened to Computron's market value added (MVA)?

i. Assume that a corporation has $100,000 of taxable income from operations plus $5,000 of interest income and $10,000 of dividend income. What is the company's tax liability?

Operating income = $100,000

Interest income = $5,000

Dividends = $10,000

Taxable dividends=

Taxable Income:

j. Assume that you are in the 25 percent marginal tax bracket and that you have $5,000 to invest. You have narrowed your investment choices down to California bonds with a yield of 7 percent or equally risky ExxonMobil bonds with a yield of 10 percent.

Which one should you choose and why? At what marginal tax rate would you be indifferent to the choice between California and ExxonMobil bonds?

Question 2

a. Using the financial statements shown below, calculate net operating working capital, total net operating capital, net operating profit after taxes, free cash flow, and return on invested capital for the most recent year.

Lan & Chen Technologies: Income Statements for Year Ending December 31 
 (Thousands of Dollars)

2016 2015
Sales


$945,000 $900,000
Expenses excluding depreciation and amortization 812,700 774,000
  EBITDA


$132,300 $126,000
Depreciation and amortization
33,100 31,500
  EBIT


$99,200 $94,500
Interest Expense

10,470 8,600
  EBT


$88,730 $85,900
Taxes (40%)


35,492 34,360
  Net income


$53,238 $51,540






Common dividends

$43,300 $41,230
Addition to retained earnings
$9,938 $10,310






Lan & Chen Technologies: December 31 Balance Sheets
(Thousands of Dollars)



Assets


2016 2015
Cash and cash equivalents

$47,250 $45,000
Short-term investments

3,800 3,600
Accounts Receivable

283,500 270,000
Inventories


141,750 135,000
  Total current assets

$476,300 $453,600
  Net fixed assets

330,750 315,000
Total assets


$807,050 $768,600






Liabilities and equity



Accounts payable

$94,500 $90,000
Accruals


47,250 45,000
Notes payable

26,262 9,000
  Total current liabilities

$168,012 $144,000
Long-term debt

94,500 90,000
  Total liabilities

$262,512 $234,000
Common stock

444,600 444,600
Retained Earnings

99,938 90,000
  Total common equity

$544,538 $534,600
Total liabilities and equity

$807,050 $768,600






Key Input Data



Tax rate


40%


b. Assume that there were 15 million shares outstanding at the end of the year, the year-end closing stock price was $65 per share, and the after-tax cost of capital was 8%. Calculate EVA and MVA for the most recent year.

Question 3

Joshua & White Technologies: December 31 Balance Sheets
(Thousands of Dollars)







Assets

2016 2015
Cash and cash equivalents $21,000 $20,000
Short-term investments
3,759 3,240
Accounts Receivable
52,500 48,000
Inventories

84,000 56,000
  Total current assets
$161,259 $127,240
  Net fixed assets
218,400 200,000
Total assets
$379,659 $327,240





Liabilities and equity


Accounts payable
$33,600 $32,000
Accruals

12,600 12,000
Notes payable
19,929 6,480
  Total current liabilities
$66,129 $50,480
Long-term debt
67,662 58,320
  Total liabilities
$133,791 $108,800
Common stock
183,793 178,440
Retained Earnings
62,075 40,000
  Total common equity
$245,868 $218,440
Total liabilities and equity $379,659 $327,240





Joshua & White Technologies December 31 Income Statements
(Thousands of Dollars)





2016 2015
Sales

$420,000 $400,000
COGS except excluding depr. and amort. 300,000 298,000
Depreciation and Amortization 19,660 18,000
Other operating expenses 27,600 22,000
  EBIT

$72,740 $62,000
Interest Expense
5,740 4,460
  EBT

$67,000 $57,540
Taxes (40%)
26,800 23,016
  Net Income
$40,200 $34,524





Common dividends
$18,125 $17,262
Addition to retained earnings $22,075 $17,262





Other Data
2016 2015
Year-end Stock Price
$90.00 $96.00
# of shares (Thousands) 4,052 4,000
Lease payment (Thousands of Dollars) $20,000 $20,000
Sinking fund payment (Thousands of Dollars) $5,000 $5,000






a. Has Joshua & White's liquidity position improved or worsened? Explain.

b. Has Joshua & White's ability to manage its assets improved or worsened? Explain.

c. How has Joshua & White's profitability changed during the last year?

d. Perform an extended Du Pont analysis for Joshua & White for 2008 and 2009.

e. Perform a common size analysis. What has happened to the composition (that is, percentage in each category) of assets and liabilities?

f. Perform a percent change analysis. What does this tell you about the change in profitability and asset utilization?

Question 4

Chapter 3 Mini Case

The first part of the case, presented in Chapter 2, discussed the situation of Computron Industries after an expansion program. A large loss occurred in 2016, rather than the expected profit. As a result, its managers, directors, and investors are concerned about the firm's survival.

Input Data:







2015 2016 2017E
Year-end common stock price $8.50 $6.00 $12.17
Year-end shares outstanding  100,000 100,000 250,000
Tax rate

40% 40% 40%
Lease payments
$40,000 $40,000 $40,000


Jenny Cochran was brought in as assistant to Computron's chairman, who had the task of getting the company back into a sound financial position. Cochran must prepare an analysis of where the company is now, what it must do to regain its financial health, and what actions to take. Your assignment is to help her answer the following questions, using the recent and projected financial information shown next. Provide clear explanations, not yes or no answers.

Balance Sheets        
           
           
Assets     2015 2016 2017E
Cash and equivalents   $9,000 $7,282 $14,000
Short-term investments   $48,600 $20,000 $71,632
Accounts receivable   $351,200 $632,160 $878,000
Inventories   $715,200 $1,287,360 $1,716,480
Total current assets   $1,124,000 $1,946,802 $2,680,112
Gross Fixed Assets   $491,000 $1,202,950 $1,220,000
Less Accumulated Dep.   $146,200 $263,160 $383,160
Net Fixed Assets   $344,800 $939,790 $836,840
Total Assets   $1,468,800 $2,886,592 $3,516,952
           
Liabilities and equity        
Accounts payable   $145,600 $324,000 $359,800
Notes payable   $200,000 $720,000 $300,000
Accruals     $136,000 $284,960 $380,000
Total current liabilities   $481,600 $1,328,960 $1,039,800
Long-term bonds   $323,432 $1,000,000 $500,000
Total liabilities   $805,032 $2,328,960 $1,539,800
Common stock (100,000 shares) $460,000 $460,000 $1,680,936
Retained earnings   $203,768 $97,632 $296,216
Total common equity   $663,768 $557,632 $1,977,152
Total liabilities and equity $1,468,800 $2,886,592 $3,516,952






Income Statements        
           
      2015 2016 2017E
Net sales     $3,432,000 $5,834,400 $7,035,600
Costs of Goods Sold Except Depr. $2,864,000 $4,980,000 $5,800,000
Depreciation and amortization $18,900 $116,960 $120,000
Other Expenses   $340,000 $720,000 $612,960
Total Operating Cost   $3,222,900 $5,816,960 $6,532,960
Earnings before interest and taxes (EBIT) $209,100 $17,440 $502,640
Less interest    $62,500 $176,000 $80,000
Pre-tax earnings   $146,600 ($158,560) $422,640
Taxes (40%)   $58,640 ($63,424) $169,056
Net Income before preferred dividends $87,960 ($95,136) $253,584
EPS     $0.880 ($0.951) $1.014
DPS     $0.220 $0.110 $0.220
Book Value Per Share   $6.638 $5.576 $7.909
           

Cochran must prepare an analysis of where the company is now, what it must do to regain its financial health, and what actions should be taken. Your assignment is to help her answer the following questions. Provide clear explanations, not yes or no answers.

a. Why are ratios useful? What three groups use ratio analysis and for what reasons?

b. (1.) Calculate the current and quick ratios based on the projected balance sheet and income statement data.
(2.) What can you say about the company's liquidity position? We often think of ratios as being useful (1) to managers to help run the business, (2) to bankers for credit analysis, and (3) to stockholders for stock valuation. Would these different types of analysts have an equal interest in the liquidity ratios?

c. Calculate the inventory turnover, days sales outstanding (DSO), fixed assets turnover, operating capital requirement, and total assets turnover. How does Computron's utilization of assets stack up against other firms in its industry?

d. Calculate the debt ratio, liabilities-to-assets ratio, times-interest-earned, and EBITDA coverage ratios. How does Computron compare with the industry with respect to financial leverage? What can you conclude from these ratios?

e. Calculate the profit margin, basic earning power (BEP), return on assets (ROA), and return on equity (ROE). What can you say about these ratios?

f. Calculate the price/earnings ratio, price/cash flow ratio, and market/book ratio. Do these ratios indicate that investors are expected to have a high or low opinion of the company?

g. Perform a common size analysis and percent change analysis. What do these analyses tell you about Computron?

h. Use the extended DuPont equation to provide a summary and overview of Computron's projected financial condition. What are the firm's major strengths and weaknesses?

i. What are some potential problems and limitations of financial ratio analysis?

j. What are some qualitative factors analysts should consider when evaluating a company's likely future financial performance?

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