Chap007 Profit Planning
Chap007 Profit Planning
Chap007 Profit Planning
Chapter 07
PowerPoint Authors:
Susan Coomer Galbreath, Ph.D., CPA
Charles W. Caldwell, D.B.A., CMA
Jon A. Booker, Ph.D., CPA, CIA
Cynthia J. Rooney, Ph.D., CPA
McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2013 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
Learning Objective 1
Understand why
organizations budget
and the processes they
use to create budgets.
7-2
The Basic Framework of Budgeting
A budget is a detailed quantitative plan for
acquiring and using financial and other resources
over a specified forthcoming time period.
1. The act of preparing a budget is called
budgeting.
2. The use of budgets to control an
organization’s activities is known
as budgetary control.
7-3
Planning and Control
Planning – Control –
involves developing involves the steps taken by
objectives and management to increase
preparing various the likelihood that the
budgets to achieve objectives set down while
those objectives. planning are attained and
that all parts of the
organization are working
together toward that goal.
7-4
Advantages of Budgeting
Define goals
and objectives
Communicate Think about and
plans plan for the future
Coordinate
Advantages Means of allocating
activities resources
Uncover potential
bottlenecks
7-5
Responsibility Accounting
Managers should be
held responsible for
those items - and only
those items - that they
can actually control
to a significant extent.
7-6
Choosing the Budget Period
Operating Budget
7-7
Self-Imposed Budget
Top Management
Middle Middle
Management Management
7-10
Human Factors in Budgeting
The success of a budget program depends on three
important factors:
1.Top management must be enthusiastic and
committed to the budget process.
2.Top management must not use the budget to
pressure employees or blame them when
something goes wrong.
3.Highly achievable budget targets are usually
preferred when managers are rewarded based on
meeting budget targets.
7-11
The Master Budget: An Overview
Sales budget
Selling and
Ending inventory administrative
Production budget
budget budget
Cash budget
Budgeted
Budgeted
income
balance sheet
statement
7-12
Learning Objective 2
7-13
Budgeting Example
Royal Company is preparing budgets for the
quarter ending June 30th.
Budgeted sales for the next five months are:
April 20,000 units
May 50,000 units
June 30,000 units
July 25,000 units
August 15,000 units
The selling price is $10 per unit.
7-14
The Sales Budget
The individual months of April, May, and June are
summed to obtain the total budgeted sales in units
and dollars for the quarter ended June 30th
7-15
Expected Cash Collections
•All sales are on account.
•Royal’s collection pattern is:
70% collected in the month of sale,
25% collected in the month following sale,
5% uncollectible.
•In April, the March 31st accounts receivable
balance of $30,000 will be collected in full.
7-16
Expected Cash Collections
7-17
Expected Cash Collections
7-18
Expected Cash Collections
7-19
Quick Check
What will be the total cash collections for
the quarter?
a. $700,000
b. $220,000
c. $190,000
d. $905,000
7-20
Quick Check
What will be the total cash collections for
the quarter?
a. $700,000
b. $220,000
c. $190,000
d. $905,000
7-21
Expected Cash Collections
7-22
Learning Objective 3
Prepare a production
budget.
7-23
The Production Budget
Sales Production
Budget Budget
and
Expected
Cash
Collections
7-25
The Production Budget
7-26
The Production Budget
7-28
Quick Check
What is the required production for May?
a. 56,000 units
b. 46,000 units
c. 62,000 units
d. 52,000 units
7-29
The Production Budget
7-30
The Production Budget
Prepare a direct
materials budget,
including a schedule of
expected cash
disbursements for
purchases of materials.
7-32
The Direct Materials Budget
• At Royal Company, five pounds of material are
required per unit of product.
• Management wants materials on hand at the
end of each month equal to 10% of the
following month’s production.
• On March 31, 13,000 pounds of material are
on hand. Material cost is $0.40 per pound.
7-33
The Direct Materials Budget
7-34
The Direct Materials Budget
7-35
The Direct Materials Budget
March 31 inventory.
7-37
Quick Check
How much materials should be purchased in
May?
a. 221,500 pounds
b. 240,000 pounds
c. 230,000 pounds
d. 211,500 pounds
7-38
The Direct Materials Budget
7-39
The Direct Materials Budget
Assumed ending
inventory.
7-40
Expected Cash Disbursement for
Materials
• Royal pays $0.40 per pound for its materials.
• One-half of a month’s purchases is paid for in the
month of purchase; the other half is paid in the
following month.
• The March 31 accounts payable balance is
$12,000.
7-41
Expected Cash Disbursement for
Materials
7-42
Expected Cash Disbursement for
Materials
7-44
Quick Check
What are the total cash disbursements for
the quarter?
a. $185,000
b. $ 68,000
c. $ 56,000
d. $201,400
7-45
Expected Cash Disbursement for
Materials
7-46
Learning Objective 5
7-47
The Direct Labor Budget
• At Royal, each unit of product requires 0.05 hours (3 minutes)
of direct labor.
• The company has a “no layoff” policy so all employees will be
paid for 40 hours of work each week.
• For purposes of our illustration assume that Royal has a “no
layoff” policy and workers are paid at the rate of $10 per hour
regardless of the hours worked.
• For the next three months, the direct labor workforce will be
paid for a minimum of 1,500 hours per month.
Let’s prepare the direct labor budget.
7-48
The Direct Labor Budget
7-49
The Direct Labor Budget
7-50
The Direct Labor Budget
-
-
-
-
-
-
7-52
Quick Check
What would be the total direct labor cost for
the quarter if the company follows its no lay-
off policy, but pays $15 (time-and-a-half) for
every hour worked in excess of 1,500 hours
in a month?
a. $79,500
b. $64,500
c. $61,000
d. $57,000
7-53
Quick Check
What would be the total direct labor cost for
the quarter if the company follows its no lay-
off policy, but pays $15 (time-and-a-half) for
every hour worked in excess April ofMay
1,500 hours
June Quarter
Labor hours required 1,300
- 2,300 1,450
in a month?Regular hours paid 1,500 1,500 1,500 4,500
a. $79,500 Overtime hours paid - 800 - 800
7-54
Learning Objective 6
Prepare a manufacturing
overhead budget.
7-55
Manufacturing Overhead Budget
• At Royal, manufacturing overhead is applied to units of
product on the basis of direct labor-hours.
• The variable manufacturing overhead rate is $20 per direct
labor-hour.
• Fixed manufacturing overhead is $50,000 per month, which
includes $20,000 of noncash costs (primarily depreciation of
plant assets).
7-56
Manufacturing Overhead Budget
7-58
* rounded
Manufacturing Overhead Budget
Direct materials
budget and information.
7-60
Ending Finished Goods Inventory Budget
7-61
Ending Finished Goods Inventory Budget
7-62
Ending Finished Goods Inventory Budget
Production costs per unit Quantity Cost Total
Direct materials 5.00 lbs. $ 0.40 $ 2.00
Direct labor 0.05 hrs. $ 10.00 0.50
Manufacturing overhead 0.05 hrs. $ 49.70 2.49
$ 4.99
Budgeted finished goods inventory
Ending inventory in units 5,000
Unit product cost $ 4.99
Ending finished goods inventory $ 24,950
Production Budget.
7-63
Learning Objective 7
7-64
Selling and Administrative Expense
Budget
• At Royal, the selling and administrative expense budget is
divided into variable and fixed components.
• The variable selling and administrative expenses are $0.50
per unit sold.
• Fixed selling and administrative expenses are $70,000 per
month.
• The fixed selling and administrative expenses include $10,000
in costs – primarily depreciation – that are not cash outflows
of the current month.
7-67
Quick Check
What are the total cash disbursements for
selling and administrative expenses for the
quarter?
a. $180,000
b. $230,000
c. $110,000
d. $ 70,000
7-68
Selling Administrative Expense Budget
7-69
Learning Objective 8
7-70
Format of the Cash Budget
The cash budget is divided into four sections:
1. Cash receipts section lists all cash inflows excluding cash
received from financing;
2. Cash disbursements section consists of all cash payments
excluding repayments of principal and interest;
3. Cash excess or deficiency section determines if the
company will need to borrow money or if it will be able to
repay funds previously borrowed; and
4. Financing section details the borrowings and repayments
projected to take place during the budget period.
7-71
The Cash Budget
Assume the following information for Royal:
Maintains a 16% open line of credit for $75,000
Maintains a minimum cash balance of $30,000
Borrows on the first day of the month and repays
loans on the last day of the month
Pays a cash dividend of $49,000 in April
Purchases $143,700 of equipment in May and
$48,300 in June (both purchases paid in cash)
Has an April 1 cash balance of $40,000
7-72
The Cash Budget
Schedule of Expected
Cash Collections.
7-73
The Cash Budget
Schedule of Expected
Cash Disbursements.
Direct Labor
Budget.
Manufacturing
Overhead Budget.
7-74
The Cash Budget
7-75
The Cash Budget
7-77
Quick Check
What is the excess (deficiency) of cash
available over disbursements for June?
a. $ 85,000
b. $(10,000)
c. $ 75,000
d. $ 95,000
7-78
Quick Check
What is the excess (deficiency) of cash
available over disbursements for June?
a. $ 85,000
b. $(10,000)
c. $ 75,000
d. $ 95,000
7-79
The Cash Budget
7-80
The Budgeted Income Statement
Cash Budgeted
Budget Income
Statement
Prepare a budgeted
income statement.
7-82
The Budgeted Income Statement
Sales Budget.
Royal Company
Budgeted Income Statement
For the Three Months Ended June 30
Ending Finished
Sales (100,000 units @ $10) $ 1,000,000 Goods Inventory.
Cost of goods sold (100,000 @ $4.99) 499,000
Gross margin 501,000
Selling and
Selling and administrative expenses 260,000
Operating income 241,000 Administrative
Interest expense 2,000 Expense Budget.
Net income $ 239,000
Cash Budget.
7-83
Learning Objective 10
Prepare a budgeted
balance sheet.
7-84
The Budgeted Balance Sheet
Royal reported the following account
balances prior to preparing its budgeted
financial statements:
•Land - $50,000
•Common stock - $200,000
•Retained earnings - $146,150 (April 1)
•Equipment - $175,000
7-85
Royal Company
Budgeted Balance Sheet 25% of June
June 30 sales of
Assets: $300,000.
Cash $ 43,000
Accounts receivable 75,000 11,500 lbs.
Raw materials inventory 4,600 at $0.40/lb.
Finished goods inventory 24,950
Land 50,000 5,000 units
Equipment 367,000 at $4.99 each.
Total assets 564,550
7-86
Royal Company
Budgeted Balance Sheet
June 30
Beginning balance $146,150
Assets: Add: net income 239,000
Cash $ 43,000
Deduct: dividends (49,000)
Accounts receivable Ending balance
75,000 $336,150
Raw materials inventory 4,600
Finished goods inventory 24,950
Land 50,000
Equipment 367,000
Total assets 564,550
7-87
End of Chapter 07
7-88