Rate)n NPV = $52‚125 + 12‚000/(1 +.12)8 = 4‚846.60 12‚000/(1 +.12)7 = 5‚428.19 12‚000/(1 +.12)6 = 6‚079.58 12‚000/(1 +.12)5 = 6‚809.13 12‚000/(1 +.12)4 = 7‚626.21 12‚000/(1 +.12)3 = 8‚541.35 12‚000/(1 +.12)2 = 9‚566.33 12‚000/(1 +.12)1 = 10‚714.29 -52‚125 Add each NPV to get NPV = $7‚486.68 IRR in excel – CF0 = -52‚125‚ CF1-8= 12‚000‚ IRR = 16% (10-4) Profitability Index Refer to previous problem. What the project’s profitability index? PI = 1 + NPV/Investment Required = 1 + $7‚486.68/$52‚125 =
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CHAPTER 2 How to Calculate Present Values Answers to Problem Sets 1. If the discount factor is .507‚ then .507*1.126 = $1 2. 125/139 = .899 3. PV = 374/(1.09)9 = 172.20 4. PV = 432/1.15 + 137/(1.152) + 797/(1.153) = 376 + 104 + 524 = $1‚003 5. FV = 100*1.158 = $305.90 6. NPV = -1‚548 + 138/.09 = -14.67 (cost today plus the present value of the perpetuity) 7. PV = 4/(.14-.04) = $40 8. a. PV = 1/.10 = $10 b. Since the perpetuity
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Chapter 4 Process Costing Chapter 4 Process Costing Solutions to Questions 4-1 A process costing system should be used in situations where a homogeneous product is produced on a continuous basis. 4-2 Job-order and processing costing are similar in the following ways: 1. Job-order costing and process costing have the same basic purposes—to assign materials‚ labor‚ and overhead cost to products and to provide a mechanism for computing unit product costs. 2. Both systems use the same basic
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CHAPTER FOUR Q4.3. Power Toys (a) Since every resource has exactly one worker assigned to it‚ the bottleneck is the assembly station with the highest processing time (#3) (b) Capacity = 1 / 90 sec = 40 units per hour (c) Direct labor cost = Labor cost per hour / flow rate = 9*$15/h / 40 trucks per hour = $3.38/truck (d) Direct labor cost in work cell= (75+85+90+65+70+55+80+65+80) sec/truck * $15/hr = $2.77/truck (e) Utilization = flow rate / capacity 85 sec / 90 sec = 94.4% (f) (g) Capacity = 1
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Chapter 4 29. Annuity Present Values What is the value today of a 15-year annuity that pays $500 a year?The annuity’s first payment occurs at the end of year 6. The annual interest rate is 12 percentfor years 1 through 5‚ and 15 percent thereafter. (Ross‚ Stephen A.. Corporate Finance‚ 8th Edition. Irwin/McGraw-Hill‚ 112006. 4.8). 33. Growing Annuity Southern California Publishing Company is trying to decide whether to revise its popular textbook‚ Financial Psychoanalysis Made Simple. The company
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Chapter 04 Analyzing Investing Activities Multiple Choice Questions 1. Which of the following would rarely be classified as a current asset? A. Prepaid insurance B. Goodwill C. Marketable Securities D. Work-in-progress 2. Which of the following would not be classified as a current asset? A. Inventory B. Accounts payable C. Accounts receivable D. Prepaid expenses 3. An asset is considered to be liquid if: A. it is readily converted into a current asset. B. it is
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Question 11. In early 2003 Bristol-Myers Squibb announced that it would have to restate its financial statements as a result of stuffing as much as $3.35 billion worth of products into wholesalers’ warehouses from 1999 through 2001. The company’s sales and cost of sales during this period was as follows: 2001 2000 1999 Net sales $18‚139 $17‚695 $16‚502 Cost of products sold 5‚454 4‚729 4‚458 The company’s marginal tax rate during the three years was
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Score: 90 1. out of 90 points (100%) award: 10 out of 10.00 points Prepare a 2011 balance sheet for Cornell Corp. based on the following information: cash = $143‚000; patents and copyrights = $630‚000; accounts payable = $220‚500; accounts receivable = $115‚000; tangible net fixed assets = $1‚660‚000; inventory = $301‚000; notes payable = $120‚000; accumulated retained earnings = $1‚246‚000; long-term debt = $861‚000. (Be sure to list the accounts in order of their liquidity.) CORNELL COP. Balance
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Score: 120 1. out of 120 points (100%) award: 10 out of 10.00 points Just Dew It Corporation reports the following balance sheet information for 2011 and 2012. JUST DEW IT CORPORATION 2011 and 2012 Balance Sheets Assets 2011 Current assets Cash Accounts receivable Inventory Total Liabilities and Owners’ Equity 2011 2012 $ 11‚000 27‚000 75‚000 $ 14‚250 36‚750 96‚250 $ 113‚000 $147‚250 Current liabilities Accounts payable Notes payable 2012 $ 54‚000 14‚800 $ 63‚750 20‚500 $ 68‚800 $
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FUNDAMENTALS OF Corporate Finance Jonathan Berk Stanford University Peter DeMarzo Stanford University Jarrad Harford University of Washington ISBN 0-558-65200-X Fundamentals of Corporate Finance‚ by Jonathan Berk‚ Peter DeMarzo‚ and Jarrad Harford. Published by Prentice Hall. Copyright © 2009 by Pearson Education‚ Inc. Editor in Chief: Donna Battista Sr. Development Editor: Rebecca Ferris Market Development Manager: Dona Kenly Assistant Editors: Sara Holliday‚ Kerri McQueen Managing
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