Professional Documents
Culture Documents
Notes
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Standard Costing:.............................................................................................................................................19
Sunk Costs:..........................................................................................................................................................19
SUNK COSTS : ..................................................................................................................................................19
Responsibility Accounting :..................................................................................................................................20
RESPONSIBILITY ACCOUNTING :........................................................................................................................20
PROFIT CENTRE :..............................................................................................................................................20
COST CENTRE:..................................................................................................................................................20
INVESTMENT CENTRE:......................................................................................................................................20
Maintaining a cost database:................................................................................................................................20
Fixed and Variable Production Overheads : and Cost Behaviour of......................................................................20
VARIABLE COSTS :............................................................................................................................................20
FIXED PRODUCTION COSTS :............................................................................................................................21
SEMI-FIXED (or STEP-FIXED COSTS) : ...............................................................................................................22
SEMI-VARIABLE (or MIXED COSTS) :..................................................................................................................22
Relevant Range....................................................................................................................................................22
Relevant Range: ..............................................................................................................................................22
Selling Costs.........................................................................................................................................................22
Selling Costs :...................................................................................................................................................22
Conversion Costs:.................................................................................................................................................23
Conversion Costs :............................................................................................................................................23
HIGH-LOW COST ANALYSIS:..............................................................................................................................23
contribution:.....................................................................................................................................................23
budget:.............................................................................................................................................................23
“Standard Hours Produced”:.............................................................................................................................23
“Standard PROFIT STATEMENT”: ......................................................................................................................23
STATIC BUDGET ...............................................................................................................................................23
FLEXED BUDGET ..............................................................................................................................................24
BILL OF MATERIALS ..........................................................................................................................................24
STANDARD COST CARD ...................................................................................................................................24
Formulas..................................................................................................................................................................25
SHARES................................................................................................................................................................25
ANNUITY:..............................................................................................................................................................26
loan: periodic payment of a loan..........................................................................................................................27
Perpetuity:...............................................................................................................................................................27
MARKET VALUE OF A COMPANY:..........................................................................................................................28
market Value of Convertible debentures or preference shares............................................................................28
chapter 11 relevant costs......................................................................................................................................29
Context of relevant costs:....................................................................................................................................29
terms:...................................................................................................................................................................29
adding a new product...........................................................................................................................................29
Dropping a product or division.............................................................................................................................30
Make or buy decision............................................................................................................................................30
special orders.......................................................................................................................................................31
IMPortant : use the relevant costing decision model as an aid in choosing amoung competing alternatives.......31
Chapter 6 Financial and Business Analysis..............................................................................................................35
financial vs mngmnt Accountants viewpoint............................................................................................................35
Financial accountant:...........................................................................................................................................35
Management Accountant:....................................................................................................................................35
Business Risk vs Financial risk..............................................................................................................................35
MACN 202 Management Accounting: Financila Management Section. Notes
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QUESTIONS:
(1) See page 19 vigario – no ii roman figures at bottom –is there a printing error 'budget' should read 'actual"
(i) Same place no -4- last sentence – how is no fixed cost carried to balance sheet, or where are fixed
costs ever carried to balance sheet??? By not going and subtracting over/under recovery or how?
(2) Semi-variable NOT the same as mixed costs – vigio and drury books different.
(3) Google search for different learning curves for different industries/ mnftr. Types e.g. electr.etc.
(4) See page 224 viggio- how does example work- not include fixed costs? Why? Also is answer 268 or -268?
(5) Pg 246-example1- what means 'Other Costs are 20% VAR WITH PRODUCTION UNITS."?
(6) Differential cost driver ???? what's this mean?
(7) Absorption costing :
(i) The IAS statement on inventories states that ALL overheads,eg management salaries and
depreciation and administration MUST BE INCLUDED IN COST OF INVENTORIES on page 1 ch 1.But PAGE
27 CH2 it says any costs that come after PRESENT CONDITION should not be included eg: selling costs.
BUT WE learn to do a COST OF SALES analysis in the INCOME statement where SALARIES ARE NOT
INCLUED nor admin nor depreciation, but opening and closing inventory is included in the
calculation.SO how do you use the figure above to do this calc. which needs opening - closing
inventories + purchases ? where does one get these figures then, or where do you use the IAS
inventory rate then? ( the rest of income statement has salaries, depreciation etc- you cannot charge it
twice/double!! In income statement.!!) I MEAN : DOES ONE SUBTTRACT/ADJUST THE COSTS CHARGED
TO CLOSING STOCK --OUT OF THE NORMAL SALARIES & OVERHEADS IN THE INCOME STATEMENT SO IT
DOSNT GET SUBTRACTED TWICE?
(ii) WHO MAY USE LIFO method of stock valuation??
(iii)STEP COST ALLOCATION METHOD
This tequnique does account for inter-service dept. cost allocation.
The method used here is to allocate the cost for the service dept. which services the greatest no. of other
service depts. first. Or if you get a situation where some service depts. service each other,as in example
here, then first to be allocated is the one with highest cost. SO WHICH GOES FIRST IF ONE GETS BOTH
TYPES AT SAME TIME?
(8) METHOD OF DOING OVERHEAD ACCOUNT AND OVER/UNDER RECOVERY INCOME STATEMENT.
(i) Overhead account CONTRA WIP account. : All estimated/charged overheads to CR , Actual
overheads to DR , Balancing amount as Over/Under recovery to Income Statement.
(ii) REM: ???????just remember the over/under recover amount that goes to income statement or
comes from this account , WILL NOT INCLUDE ANY OVER/UNDER RECOVERY FOR CLOSING
STOCK?????????
SO FOR (8) WHAT IS THE ANSWER TO BETWEEN ????? QUEST. MARKS. YES/NO ? HOW
7) RECONCILLIATION of BUDGET to ACTUAL PROFIT.
a) When a STANDARD COSTING SYSTEM is used, the under/over recovery is shown as :
i) Volume Variance (difference between budget –actual)
ii) AND Expenditure Variance. (difference between budget –actual)
EXAMPLE: Example 1 on left and 2 on right are completely different exercises, both are Reconcilliations.The one
on the right seems the more correct one.-includes units- but not sure if both are equally correct- ASK.
8) Is marketing costs part of mnftring overheads for absorbtion costing? Delivery costs, packaging, etc?
9) On page 52 viggio, why does it say contribution instead of gross profit,3rd row from bottom far left, because
fixed manufacturing costs do and must get included in the the box above- to calc gross profit!
10) Next Qusetion – read the yellow carefully –there are 2 questions here!
subtract one from the other then put difference in recon ( highly unlikely to happen anyway!) what do you
do? And dothey want to see the gross profit for both somewhere or not?
e) 1st :Do opposite to over/under to bring to first period gross profit( if added in income stat, -then subtract
it and visa-versa)
f) Now you have next periods Gross Profit.
g) Now add/minus previous months over/under- same as you would in income stat,(not add if
subtracted etc but add again – you are going toward getting NEXT PERIODS NET PROFIT now as if
it is a normal income stat.)
h) Now add next periods Variable and Fixed non-mnftr overheads in.
Next question:
Part (a)
For a Variable Standard Costing recon, in the” Volume Variance Part” at top top,,(ask : 1-but what do
you do with closing stock – or 2- opening stock with different fixed cost to this year?) you will also leave out fixed-
mnftring costs here, because you don’t do a special “Overheads Volume –variance subtraction” in the expenditure
section below, because you don’t have any fixed costs in the closing stock to wheedle out (if the numbers are
right it could cause a error, If You don’t do all this I think)
Part (b)
And for same issue as above : what do you do wuth the variable and fixed manufacturing costs whem yopu get a
closing stock for this year, or also Opening stock for this year from last year with different fixed costs to this
year.?????
11) For high –low costing, book vig and drury say you use activities as the one to choose for the HIGH-LOW
method- not price, but in test for last question in the 2nd CVP test, the memorandum uses the price to choose
the high + low one?? Which do we use?
12) What do you do with a closing stock in the budget – if you are doing a recon for budget to actual profit in
absorption or variable or standard costing?????? How do you handle this closing stock in the recon itself.
13) What does ‘full costing mean?test 3
14) What does constant price level terms mean? In test 3
15) In job costing for manufacturing accounts : where do you get wages from? (ALL WRITTEN OUT?)
a) You must pay taxes on all all wages in WIP, as asset or asset increase, esp. in closing stock- how does that
work?ie add the wages then subtract them again fior profit, but for plain retail they only use wages as tax
deductable( must a storemans wages go to closing inventory?) but for mnftring it is not tax deductable.
16) For overhead account; for 1st month could you CR transfer wages to WIP before any DR it all- so you have a CR
but not a DR in WIP?
17) For fixed costs in variable costing, must fixed go to cost of sales before gross profit or NOT?????/VERY
IMPORTANT: ie in vigg textbook it does both! See drury exercise 7.16: here it is NOT included –fixed costs in
cost of sales- also this was a test question and we got marked wrong for having fixed costs in cost of sales-
BUT in Viggio pg 137 he DOES put fixed costs in Cost of Sales! So what do we do????
18) Do you get a fully integrated STANDARD absorbtion costing system?
19) What for mat does one do the profit statements and income statements for variable costing, and also
absorbtion – drury and viggario each have 2 or 3 methods each , so 6 or more methods. I mean with cost of
sales , or using ccontribution as a heading or putting some stuff at the top first then others below- general mix-
up each has his own method – spo what is a standard accepted format one should use consistently???BIG
MESS!!!!!!!also with including fixed mnftring costs in variable cost of sales figure - or not - etc etc.
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MACN 202 Management Accounting: Financila Management Section. Notes
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9) For reciprocal allocation (algebra method) of allocating costs to production depts., what happens if you get a
fraction at the end – like R0.345543 - how do you allocate these last fractions between depts.? On page 35
viggio at bottom of page.35 viggio
10) RECON OF PROFITS or also overheads : start at Budget and end at Actual.( or maybe any way you want?)
11) For a JOB COSTING system , part of fully integrated absorbtion costing ,on page 49 viggio , what is contra for
"JOB 1-5" accounts, ie:where does "Job completed" on cr side get posted to? Do these acc's go to trial balance
and Fin Stats? Where in fin stats do they go?
12) Fully integrated absorbtion : do you use budget or actual overheads for closing stock ?- if budget , then if
over/under –recovery is for all of production (incl closing stock) then why is it only added to sold production –
this will give a wrong value for 1-closing stock and 2-profit.OR is the overheads charged to incomplete jobs
already "actual' and not "budget"?
a) TRY PUT sales as only 1 for example pg 130 vig ? then this all becomes clear! (see pg 129 2nd paragraph
from bottom for rule to use budget.. in closing stock only!Also?? before it was said one could use actual or
budget)
b) Fully integrated absorbtion :On page 130 vig highlighted : if over –recovery is for all of production (incl
closing stock) then why is it only added to sold production – this will give a wrong value for 1-closing stock
and 2-profit.OR is the overheads charged to incomplete jobs already "actual' and not "budget"?
c) Over/Under recovery is only applied to sales,not closing stock, but at the full total for closing stock +sales ,
so there is a mistake where sales takes ov/und recovery away from closing stock and visa versa, and
Opening stock dilutes it all a bit too wrongly.(say sales was only 1, then apply this to any example)
d) Pg 150 viggio blu highlight,: for variable costing , if asked for the GROSS PFOFIT, or COST OF SALES
BREAKDOWN, do you include fixed mnft costs or EXCLUDE them then?????
Chapter 9 standard costing :
a) Pg 345 vig – bottom o page, how do they get Standard = R165 000, shouldn’t it be 1.875X 110000?
b) If you have closing stock in a budget ,how do you do the recon for : sales variance: is it
mnftr profit less ‘sales variable costs” or [contribution less closing stock less fixed mnftr-
costs] .-before you div by units and X by difference in sales volume.?
c) From variable &
Chapter 6 Ratios & business risk.
2) DOES return on operating assets include long term loans to others? Or exclude it?
3) Is wages a fixed or variable cost????
4) In the book fin mngmnt b viggio, ch 6 , he uses 3 different ways to calc. the Operational Assets : in pg 236 for
4.3 it says at bottom- average over year,on pg227 it says we must use the beginning value,and only use
average if question asks for it, in solution for practice question it Just gets Average of fixed assets, but for
current assets it uses the year end one? Then in appendix it uses end of year for fixed and for current LESS
investing fixed assets(less investments)
5) For gross profit % ratio : on page 234 it says it is trading profit after cost of sales(so without subtracting all
admin &other expenses), but on pg 225 it says it is EBIT – so after all expenses& other fixed costs eg rent! So
which is it
6) The profitability ratIO’S – is this Net profit + gross profit ratio , or just GP% ratio?- and which GP% ratio is it:
Ebit or after cost of sales???? On pg 236 it says the profitability ratio is EBIT/Turnover EXACTLY!!!
MACN 202 Management Accounting: Financila Management Section. Notes
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7) What is EPS- how do you work it out? is it declared dividends or is it total net profit divided by the
number of shares issued?
8) Check all ratios and ask how you work each one out- some are weird and done different 2 ways in
same chapter.
budgets
9) Pg 308/9 vig see green- july material and production is astuff up – looks like it is wrong- it seems the
figures on pg 308 in working capital’ of twinmate must be ignored for finished production&raw materials – if
you use them youy get wromg answer. Also he forgot the purchases for actual production for june.t
ratios
MACN 202 Management Accounting: Financila Management Section. Notes
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SEMESTER 2 ONWARDS:
3) EXCELLENT EXAMPLE of the difference between Variable and Absorbtion costing where the profit is different in
2 years with same costs&price.
MACN 202 Management Accounting: Financila Management Section. Notes
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3)
MACN 202 Management Accounting: Financila Management Section. Notes
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2-TERMS:(VIG CH 1+2)
The Correct Method To Adopt When Looking At Product Decision-Making
Is As Follows:
1.1. Identify the main or flag-ship product that the company manufactures.
1.2. Maximise the profit on the main product by maximising production ,sales and contribution.
1.3. Sell other products manufactured by the company only if there is spare capacity.
1.4. Sell other products at a price higher than variable cost.
1.5. One can only Max contribution( using Variable costing) per limiting factor, not max profitability by using
ABC or Absorption costing unless you work it out from the start {incl. total activities/total cost drivers=to
get cost driver rate} for each price & production level.)
1) COST RECOVERY RATE.: the rate or basis eg machine hours. at which costs are recovered to a specific eg
production dept.
2) BASIS : the rate/basis is the measurement used to allocate costs eg: labour hours or machine hours.
3) COST PLUS BASIS :means you work out the final figure by starting with the cost price and then adding a certain
amount or % to it.
4) LIMITING FACTORS OF PRODUCTION: like a bottleneck at the machine dept – because machines only produce a
maximum amount each , or one cannot get more than a certain amount of some raw input product per month
etc
INTRO:
1) Management accounting is primarily concerned with producing budgets, setting performance standards, and
evaluating performance
2) Acc sys used for measure costs for profit measurement,inventory valuation ,decision making,performance
measurement, control.
THE PRODUCTION POINT OF INDIFFERENCE, :
Where the total cost of a capital-intensive company = the total cost of a labour-intensive company.
ANALYSIS OF THE COMPANIES COST STRUCTURE:
Its fixed costs and contribution per unit.
CAPITAL STRUCTURE
means whether the company is using equity or debt and what combination of the 2 and interest rates etc etc.
ANNUITY:
The Receipt or Payment of a fixed amount over a number of years or periods.
ANNUITY DUE: if payment is made at the beginning of each period, it is called this
REGULAR /ORDINARY /DEFERRED ANNUITY : if payment is made at the end of the period.
OVER-TRADING
Means the company is selling too mush on credit and debtors are taking too long to pay- too many debtors and
too long to pay. This means it is taking chances with it’s selling on credit policy and over doing it.
COST OBJECTS:
1. COST OBJECT :Definition: ANY ACTIVITY for which a SEPARATE MEASUREMENT of COSTS is desired.
a) Eg; cost of a product , of rendering a service to a bank customer ,of operating a particular sales territory or
dept.
The Cost Collection System works as such ; it accumulates costs-by assign into categories-eg
labour,materials ,overheads.( or by fixed & variable).THEN assigns these costs to cost objects.
MACN 202 Management Accounting: Financila Management Section. Notes
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As a result of this accounting definition ,the valuation of stock is carried out on a FIFO or weighted
average basis.LIFO is strictly prohibited.
DIRECT COSTS :
Costs that can be specifically and exclusively identified with a particular cost object. . .. Eg:wood
in a desk, maintenance labour in -(cost object maintenance dept)-but NOT Maint.Labour in a –(cost
object desk produced).The more direct cost and less indirect costs =the more accurate the estimate.
INDIRECT COSTS :
Costs that cannot be identified specifically and exclusively with a particular cost object, but can only be identified
with a a number of depts.. /cost objects.
CATEGORIES OF MANUFACTURING COSTS. – WITH DIRECT/INDIRECT COSTS.
Direct Materials Xx
Direct Labour Xx
Prime Cost Xx
Manufacturing Overhead Xx
Total Manufacturing Cost Xx
PRIME COST
= Direct materials+Direct Labour +Direct Expenses.
MANUFACTURING OVERHEAD :
All manufacturing costs exept : Direct materials+Direct Labour +Direct Expenses eg:rent of factory.
COST ALLOCATIONS :
process of assigning indirect costs(overheads) to products- using surrogate ,not direct measures.ALSO –
the assigning of eg: rent between mnftring and / non-mnftring depts.
TOTAL MANUFATURING COST :
Direct materials+Direct Labour +Direct Expenses+Mnfctring overheads
PERIOD AND PRODUCT COSTS.
1) Because of external fin acc rules in most countries that require that for inventory evaluation ONLY
MANUFACTURING COSTS /or RETAILER = PURCHASE COSTS + FREIGHT IN -should be included in the
calculation of product costs AS WELL AS ONLY costs related directly to the units of production- accountants
therefore classify costs as product costs and period costs.
a) BECAUSE OF THIS ONLY the FIFO or weidghted average methods may be used to calc. inventory- NOT
L.I.F.O.-ie. Costs must relate directly to units of production.
REASONS CITED FOR THIS:
b) Inventories represent a future probable inflow of revenue , period costs(overheads) do not
c) Many non-manufacturing costs are NOT incurred when the product is being stored-thus inappropriate to
include them in inventory valuation.
INTERNATIONAL STATEMENT ON INVENTORIES states that :Inventories are valued at : all costs incurred in bringing
to current state – ????ONLY manufacturing direct and indirect costs- ie:COSTS OF CONVERSION ???????YES OR NO.
Includes systematic allocation of fixed & variable overheads.
However FIXED OVERHEADS are only allocated at the normal production capacity.If idle plant /low production
inventory costs are ONLY allocated at normal prod. Capacity Levels.BUT in periods of abnormally high production,
the amount of fixed averheads allocated to each product unit is decreased so inventories are not valued at below
cost.
PRODUCT COSTS :
costs identified with goods purchased or produced for resale.-in mnftring is costs attached to product for inventory
valuation of finished goods ,work in progress, matched against sales for recording profits. ONLY MANUFACTURING
OVERHEADS may be INCLUDED as part of absorbtion costing in the valuation of closing stock.Variable costing
would treat it as a period cost and write it off in period it occoured.(IFRS/etc) =recorded as an ASSET until sold
,then as an expense.(when you 'write out' last inventory count and write in new inventory in the profit & loss
statement at year end I THINK? ) ! Product costs= TOTAL MANUFACTURING COSTS =direct
labour+dir.material+direct expenses +Mnftring overheads( from last section) NOT eg: distribution+telephone for
telesales .as per book exactly: Admin Overheads or selling overheads may never be assosiated with production.
PERIOD COSTS :
costs treated as expenses in the period in which they occoured, BUT NOT included in the cost calc. of
inventory valuation.(or /sales/work in progress.)recorded as an expense ONLY,never as an asset! Period costs=
eg: sales expenses+ admin +distribution expenses.
OPPORTUNITY COSTS:
1) OPPORTUNITY COST =The cost of a foregone opportunity in favour of having chosen another one :eg . if the
cost of selling a new product is to stop selling another one , the opportunity cost is the rvenue one used to
receive from the old one.
IAS 2 : INTERNATIONAL STATEMENT ON INVENTORIES states that : Firstly, closing stock – work
completed but unsold- (??? What About inventories & work in progress???) must be valued at the lower
of cost and net realisable value.Inventories are valued at : all costs incurred in bringing to current state
– ONLY manufacturing direct and indirect costs-The Costs of conversion of inventories include costs
directly related to the units of production,such as direct labour.They also include a systematic allocation
of fixed & variable overheads that are incurred in converting material into finished goods.Fixed
production overheads are those indirect costs of production that remain relatively constant regardless
of the volume of production, such as depreciation ,maintenance of factory buildings and equipment,and
the cost of factory management and administration.
However FIXED OVERHEADS are only allocated at the normal production capacity(over anumber of
seasons or periods under normal circumstances,taking into account the loss of activity relating to
planned maintenance) .If idle plant /low production inventory costs are ONLY allocated at normal prod.
Capacity Levels.BUT in periods of abnormally high production, the amount of fixed averheads allocated
to each product unit is decreased so inventories are not valued at below cost.
MACN 202 Management Accounting: Financila Management Section. Notes
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Variable Production overheads are those indirect costs of production that vary directly,or nearly
directly,with the volume of production,such as indirect materials and indirect labour.
As a result of this accounting definition ,the valuation of stock is carried out on a FIFO or weighted
average basis.LIFO is strictly prohibited.
Cost accounting grew out of the need that financial accountants have for financial information ,and
gathers and analyses costs for the purposes of :product costing,job costing,stock valuation.
ABSORBTION COSTING :
IN EXAM, OR REAL LIFE, AS SOON AS ONE GETS AN INCOME STATEMENT OR FIGURES PREPARED
USING ABSORBTION COSTING, ONE MUST QUICKLY CALCULATE THE SAME FIGURES USING VARIABLE
COSTING – OR YOU WILL NOT BE ABLE TO DO PROPER COMPARISONS AND WORK THINGS OUT! Due to
fixed costs being in there- always take them out and convert to CONTRIBUTION ..
Method used to VALUE CLOSING STOCK that includes ALL MANUFACTURING COSTS-VARIABLE AND FIXED-NOT
any NON-MNFTRING COSTS AT ALL!!!!!! ((WHICH DOES/can INCL. RENT AND MAINTENANCE per book)–
The fixed cost element can be determined by budget or by actual,and is added to all variable mnftring
costs(eg direct material) to get the total per unit product cost for inventory valuation per the IAS definition
( which says ALL MNFTRING COSTS must be included in Inventory Valuation incl. fixed mnftring costs eg:
Maintenance etc.) .ONLY Financial Accounting uses it. NOTE: every time production volume changes ,the
cost per unit will change because fixed costs get divided by a larger /or smaller number now.So it is an
inconvenient method requiring constant raising of under/over recovery charges to balance the figures.The 2
reasons for this is:
1-Actual volume is different to budget volume.
2-Actual manufacturing overhead being different to budget overhead.
That is why Management Accounting uses a different method –: called "Variable Costing".
500products made per mnth= R2 rent per product ;and these amounts are added to normal vriable costseg
direct material, to get a (estimated/ avg)total cost per product unit . (NOTE: not all fixed costs need to be
allocated as such ONLY mnftring costs MUST BE(WHICH DOES INCL. RENT AND MAINTENANCE per book), other
fixed costs eg admin and computer,marketing costs(more 'sales costs' types get left out)can be left out and
the system would still be called Fully Integrated absorbtion Costing) ONLY where the fixed cost element is pre-
determined though and not based on actual fixed costs ,which is another type of absorbtion costing.The actual
amount will differ from the allocated amount though and OVER or UNDER recovery of fixed overhead will
occour, which must be balanced by a BALANCING AMOUNT known as the over/under –recovered fixed
overhead.This amount is included by 'raising a charge' (possibly it's very own ledger account-CRJ/CPjournal)
and including it in the Cost of sales breakdown in Income statement for Gross Profit calc.
Do NOT ASSUME every company uses fully integrated abs.cost. to allocate costs in order to arrive at the cost
of a product.Only companies that have a JOB COSTING environment , require a pre-determined FIXED COST to
allocate to FUTURE production.Very few companies will allocate costs to production and service depts. ,
followed by re-allocation from service depts. to production depts. However , when using absorbtion costing,
one must remember that one comapny allocates fixed costs differently to another one,and there is no right or
wrong method to allocate fixed costs really, ie some allocate all overheads, some only admin + management ,
some only maintenance and depreciation etc.
IN EXAM, OR REAL LIFE, AS SOON AS ONE GETS AN INCOME STATEMENT OR FIGURES PREPARED
USING ABSORBTION COSTING, ONE MUST QUICKLY CACULATE THE SAME FIGURES USING VARIABLE
COSTING – OR YOU WILL NOT BE ABLE TO DO PRPER COMPARISONS AND WORK THINGS OUT! Due to
fixed costs being in there- always take them out and convert to CONTRIBUTION ..
The method used to VALUE CLOSING STOCK using variable manufacturing costs only- fixed costs are written off as
period costs.(as per book- fixed mnfrtring costs are charged to the Income statement as an expense for the
period.So closing stock is valued on manufacturing variable costs only. Ie: the valuation excludes all mnfring fixed
costs.The System is representative of managerial accounting for decision making.
Variable costing is consistent with CVP analysis,ie fixed costs are treated as period costs.(per book exactly)
FOR VARIABLE COSTING ,THERE ARE 2 WAYS OF VALUING STOCK – 1-BUDGET OR 2-ACTUAL.
DIRECT COSTING.
MARGINAL COSTING.
STANDARD COSTING:
Another method of VALUEING CLOSING STOCK – but at a pre-determined rate for BOTH VARIABLE AND FIXED
COSTS.
STANDARD VARIABLE COSTING:
(a) when only pre-determined variable costs are used.
STANDARD FIXED COSTING:
(b) when only pre-determined fixed costs are used.
SUNK COSTS:
SUNK COSTS :
These are COSTS created by a decision in the PAST that cannot be changed by any future decision – or which has
a zero value when making future decision: eg:depreciation,or money spent on material that is no longer required/
or sellable.-OR buy a car for 10000, when you sell it the 10000 is sunk cost because selling price depends on what
the buyer will pay –it can be above or below 10000 .
MACN 202 Management Accounting: Financila Management Section. Notes
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RESPONSIBILITY ACCOUNTING :
RESPONSIBILITY ACCOUNTING :
accounting for a RESPONSIBILITY UNIT -an organisation unit or part of a business for which a manager is
reponsible.Revenues & Costs so deviations from performance budget can be attributed to resposible
individual.
PROFIT CENTRE :
same as above :Accountability for profitability of assets placed under a managers control.
COST CENTRE:
SAME AS above but AREA or DEPT. for which a manager is responsible.
INVESTMENT CENTRE:
term defines accountability for profit generation AS WELL AS choices in what will or will not be purchased by
way of capital expenditure in running a business.
UNIT Variable
5000 5000
4000 4000 40
Cost
3000 3000 30
Cost
2000 2000 20
1000 1000 10 10 10 10 10 10 10
0 0 0
0 100 200 300 400 500 0 100 200 300 400 500
ActivityLevel ActivityLevel (unitsofoutput)
MACN 202 Management Accounting: Financila Management Section. Notes
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FIXEDCOSTS:(a) Total
FIXED COSTS:(b) unit (supposed hyperbolic!)
Total Fixed Costs
50
Unit Fixed Cost
1000
500
0 0
0 100 200 300 400 500 0 2 4 6
ActivityLevel (no.ofunits) ActivityLevel : Output -no ofunitsproduced
MACN 202 Management Accounting: Financila Management Section. Notes
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STEPFIXEDCOSTS
Total Fixed Costs
300
250
200
150
100
50
0
0 100 200 300 400 500
ActivityLevel
RELEVANT RANGE
RELEVANT RANGE:
A limited level of activity under which costs are analysed as either fixed or variable,eg for production of 1-1000
units, over that another costing structure is used,or another range.
SELLING COSTS
SELLING COSTS :
relate to sales, written off in period incurred. Eg :commission costs,etc.
MACN 202 Management Accounting: Financila Management Section. Notes
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CONVERSION COSTS:
CONVERSION COSTS :
All costs other than Direct Material costs that are incurred in manufacturing a product.The word conversion is
normally associated with process costing and refers to all costs exept direct material directly related to the
manufacturing process.
ADMINISTRATION Costs:
Administration Costs: treated as a manufacturing overhead only if relate to work being carried out in mnftring
process – but in most instances they are written off as a period cost- not mnftr. Cost. Eg: cost of accountant=
period cost , cost of person who records all manufacturing processes number produced, materials used etc only in
mnftring = manftring admin cost .
HIGH-LOW COST ANALYSIS:
REFERS TO ANALYSIS OF SEMI-VARIABLE COSTS where the var. & fixed. Elements are calc. by analysing incr. in
cost in comparison to incr. in prod. Volume.
CONTRIBUTION:
CONTRIBUTION is the SELLING PRICE of a product LESS all VARIABLE COSTS.The term used by Management
accountants to describe the incremental profit that a company will make as the company sells one more unit of
production.(DOES NOT include FIXED COSTS, ONLY SELLING PRICE – VARIABLE COSTS = contribution, then after
that ,CONTRIBUTION-FIXED COSTS=NET LOSS/PROFIT.) Variable costs would include
selling,marketing,distribution costs etc,so ALLl variable costs,none are left out. Mngmn acc only concerned with
contribution,not profit since incr. sales = incr.contribution where fixed costs stay constant. Means ' Profit
contributed toward total profit of firm before fixed costs' so.This happens because fixed costs do not change , but
production volume does, so once all fixed costs have been paid by current production volume, any increase in
production volume above this results in a higher profit than before the fixed costs were paid for.Thus before fixed
profit is paid for , PART OF THE CONTRIBUTION goes to fixed costs, but after the fixed cost is paid for, ALL OF
THE CONTRIBUTION goes toward profit.
SALES
- Variable Costs
(incl.marketing,selling,distrib
ution ie: ALL.
= CONTRIBUTION
- Fixed Costs
= PROFIT
BUDGET:
A budget is a quantitative analysis of a plan or corporate action.It is intended that production/sales etc be co-
ordinated by various depts. to achieve expectations about future income/cash flows/fin pos , fin perf and
supportin plans.
“STANDARD HOURS PRODUCED”:
-“– is the time it takes to produce one product ,used as a common denominator to divide up costs into different
products.
FLEXED BUDGET
Standard Budget : The budget the is drawn up using the ACTUAL sales VOLUME, but with the original costs
from the Original Budget, not the Actual Costs. This can then be compared to the actual Income statement to
see what the difference in each cost was once converted to the actual sales level.
BILL OF MATERIALS
A list of all the actual materials needed to manufacture a specific product. Does not include labour/overheads
etc. like the ‘Standard Cost Card.’
STANDARD COST CARD
Card with the costs of all the Inputs used to make 1 output product.(That should (actual) be used to produce a
product.)1 card is kept for each different product made. (-historical cost -not a goal type cost).Nowdays on
computer.
MACN 202 Management Accounting: Financila Management Section. Notes
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FORMULAS
1) Future Value FORMULA : FV= PV(1+i)n
a) Where FV= future value
b) PV= present value
c) I = interest rate – in DECIMALS eg for 15% Use 0.15 NOT 15%
d) n= number of years/periods
2) Present Value Formula : PV = FV/(1+i)n
3) PV of DEBT Formulas :There are 2 possible situations & formulas here:
a) For “Perpetuity Type ” Loan :PRESENT VALUE (PV) formula of
Debt : PV= Cash-Flow/Kd this is where the loan is indefinite/infinite with no repayment date specified. The
answer is not fixed- it changes if looked at from a PV or FV.
b) For “Repayment Time Specified ”Loan : (PV) formula of Debt : PV=
Cash-Flow
/(1+Kd)n here you must work out the PV with this formula for every year of the loan individually,
and then add up all the answers to get the total.- but you still only use the current market interest rate for
Kd.
c) Where
i) Cash-Flow = the FV – ie money that is to flow in the future- the Future Value =this is the interest in
Rands OR/AND the capital repayments that will be paid back in the future.
ii) Kd = the interest rate charged for debt- if tax is deductable then first deduct the tax % from the
rate before you use it. Interest After Tax = interest rate X [100% - tax rate% ]%. This Kd is the
current market value of debt , not at the actual interest rate actually being paid back by company, but
at the lowest you could get today instead- even if it is.
SHARES
a) STATIC DIVIDENDS FORMULA(no growth )
i) There are 2 Ways this can get calculated: depending on if the shares are to be held “for ever” or to be
“sold” after a specific time. The difference is for the “for ever” one it works similar to the ‘perpetuity’
formula = [ Do/Ke ] and the second works similar to the Present Value formula [ like =FV/(1+i) ]
(1) PERPETUITY Type FORMULA: where the share is to held for an indefinite period ie: ‘in perpetuity’.
Do
(a) Ex-Dividend formula: Value = /Ke X Number of shares : means
if the shareholder receives a dividend today that dividend is EXCLUDED
(b) Cum-Dividend formula: Value = Dividend + (Do/Ke X TOTAL
number of shares.) means if the shareholder receives a dividend today then that
dividend is INCLUDED in the calculation of value of share (you just add the dividend
to answer-simple)
(c) Remember: you can ALSO get the PV of an ANSWER from this formula if it only will
occour in eg 3 yrs time. : say that for the next 2 years the share price will fluctuate ( or grow
etc) but in 3 years time it will start to remain the same from there on- static. If you are looking
for the value of the share today, you must first calculate the PV of the next 2 years separately
using another method ( directly or using growth formula below etc.) THEN you can calculate the
value of the 3rd year onwards using the above formula and bring this to PV by substituting your
FV you got in the for it to bring it to PV. : ie: [Do/Ke] = FV , so PV today = [D0/Ke ] / (1+i)n ……where
we would use ‘Ke’ for ‘i’ here.!
(2) “TO BE SOLD “ Type PRESENT VALUE FORMULA : where the shares are to be sold after a specific
period of time :now it’s a PV calculation.
Do
(a) Ex-Dividend formula: Value = /(1+Ke)n X Number of shares :
means if the shareholder receives a dividend today that dividend is EXCLUDED You
use this formula once for each separate year to come, so for 3 years you must do the calc. 3
times and add the answers up to get the total.
(b) Cum-Dividend formula: Value = Dividend + (Do/(1+Ke)n X
TOTAL number of shares.) means if the shareholder receives a dividend today
MACN 202 Management Accounting: Financila Management Section. Notes
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then that dividend is INCLUDED in the calculation of value of share (you just add the dividend to
answer-simple)
(c) Remember you could do the above calc. for years 3 & 4 but do years 1&2 with another formula
for eg.”growth” and just add the answers up to get the total.( say there was growth for first 2 yrs
then no growth for 2 yrs.)
b) GROWTH / FALLING DIVIDENDS (growth or getting less)
i) PERPETUITY Type FORMULA: where the share is to held for an indefinite period ie: ‘in perpetuity’. Do not use year 0
dividends, only end year 1
D1
(a) Ex-Dividend formula: Value = /Ke - g X Number of shares :
means if the shareholder receives a dividend today that dividend is EXCLUDED
(b) Cum-Dividend formula: if they ask for cum-dividend then (probably) just add the dividend
you are receiving to the answer per share.
ii) “TO BE SOLD “ Type PRESENT VALUE FORMULA : where the shares are to be sold after a specific period of
time :now it’s a PV calculation.
D1
(a) Ex-Dividend Formula : Value = /(1+Ke )n X Number of shares :
(ie cash flow/for this one you MUST work each year out separately using the PV formula given
here. To accommodate the growth (g) in dividends each year you cannot do it with the formula,
you must manually increase the dividends each year, then work out the Present Value for each
separate year using the above formula .THE SELLING PRICE AT THE END OF THE PERIOD MUST
BE INCLUDED IN THE final year PV calculation.(ie just add it to the final year dividends and get
the PV of the total, no need to do a separate calculation!)Then add all the years up to get the
present value of the shareholding.
(b) Cum-Dividend Formula: Cum-Dividend: probably just add the dividend you are receiving to
the answer
(c) Remember:you might have to work out the PV for only 2 years using this formula,
then switch to another formula if question says there will be no more growth from
the 3rd year onward : that new answer then gets in turn brought to P.V.
iii)
ANNUITY:
3) Future Value FORMULA for ORDINARY/DEFERRED/REGULAR ANNUITY. : FVa = I x [ (1+i)n
– 1 / i] (1+i)
a) I = Constant Amount invested each year
b) FVa = future value of the annuity.
c) i = interest rate – in DECIMALS eg for 15% Use 0.15 NOT 15%
d) n= number of years/periods
PERPETUITY:
1) A Perpetuity is a normal Annuity but with an infinite life.
2) You only work it out by using a special formula:
3) PRESENT VALUE of a PERPETUITY FORMULA : PVp= I/i
a) PVp = Present Value of a Perpetuity.
b) I = Constant Amount invested each year
c) i = interest rate – in DECIMALS eg for 15% Use 0.15 NOT 15%
d) This one is where payments are at the end of the year.- I think- it does not say in the book what it is. Also
it does not say what the formula for at begin of year (annuity due) is.
4) PRESENT VALUE of a -growing- PERPETUITY FORMULA : PVp= I/i-g where g=
growth in decimals eg 0.08
MACN 202 Management Accounting: Financila Management Section. Notes
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TERMS:
1) Relevant Cost:
i) a future cash flow arising as a direct consequence of the decision under review.-ONLY RELEVANT COSTS
should be considered in decision making , because it is assumed that in the long run future profits
would be maximized if the ‘cash profits’ of the company, ie: the cash earned from sales minus the cash
expenditures incurred to sell the goods, are also maximized.
ii) COSTS WHICH ARE NOT RELEVANT INCLUDE:
(1) Past sunk costs, or money already spent.
(2) Future spending already committed by separate decisions.
(3) Costs which are not of a cash nature eg: depreciation
(4) Absorbed overheads (only cash overheads incurred are relevant to a decision)
iii) The relevant cost of a unit of production is usually the variable cost of that unit plus (or minus) any
change in the total expenditure of fixed costs.
2) Differential cost
a) A differential cost is the difference in cost of alternative choices. If Option A costs an extra R300 Option B
costs an extra R360, the cost differential is R60, with Option B being more expensive. A differential cost is
the difference between the relevant costs of each option.
3) Incremental cost
a) The differential cost of an extra unit of production is the extra cost required to make that unit, ie it is the
difference in cost between making the unit and not making it. This type of cost is also called incremental
cost. Incremental costs are relevant costs.
4) Opportunity cost
a) An opportunity cost is the benefit foregone by selecting one alternative in preference to the most
profitable alternative. If, for example, a company is currently making a cash-flow of R100 000 from the
use of a machine and it now has an opportunity of investing in a new machine, the choices are:
i) Continue with the existing machine
ii) Replace with the new machine
iii) Sell existing machine (opportunity cost)
5) Sunk costs
a) A sunk cost in decision-making terms is a past expenditure incurred as a result of past decisions,which:
i) Has been charged as a cost of sale in a previous accounting period
OR
ii) Will be charged in a future accounting period, although the expenditure has already been incurred (or
the expenditure decision irrevocably taken). An example of this type of cost is depreciation. if the fixed
asset has been purchased, depreciation may be charged for several years but the cost is a sunk cost
about which nothing can now be done.
SPECIAL ORDERS
1) A special order is one that will not affect a companies current sales to its regular customers (often as an
export). It is usually sold at below full cost – by using contribution to work out an extra low price, because
overheads are covered by sales to normal customers. { {Note : Be careful : even doing this for export can
cause the goods to re-appear on the local market at lower price than you usually even sell at.}
2) The following qualitative aspects must be considered for special orders:
a) The effect of selling at lower prices to use excess capacity: the buyer might undersell you to your normal
customers.
b) One might have to use normal customers capacity to fulfill a large order and loose normal sales.
c) The special order may be packaged in a different brand so as not to compete with the normal sales, or sold
on a foreign market.
d) Price must cover variable costs, special shipping& production costs and some contribution.
e) Opportunity cost of tying up the plant must be considered.
f) Effect on commissions paid to company staff.
g) Accommodation of sales to existing customers
h) Future long term contracts from company requesting a special order price.
i) Market factors: how will the special order affect our competitiors attitude to pricing.
3) Example:
3) LIMITING FACTORS EVALUATION: How To Evaluate Management Accounting Information For All
Questions And In Particular Where There Is A Limiting Factor
a) Step1-5 Simplified: 1-sort variable/fixed costs+ work out totals.2-do contribution VS limiting
factors(bottlenecks).
Step 1
Sort out the information given by evaluating fixed costs and variable costs, both budget and actual. Virtually
all questions require an analysis of the cost structure. Have headings, eg fixed costs, variable costs, high / low,
absorption costing, variable costing. You will invariably be given information on a variable costing or
absorption costing basis that requires you to sift through the information and show the costs as variable costs
or fixed costs.
Step 2
MACN 202 Management Accounting: Financila Management Section. Notes
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Identify maximum production capacity for machinery or labour and show whether there is a limiting factor.
Headings should read “Potential limiting factor — machine hours”, (or labour hours or material, etc). You must
also conclude whether there is a limiting factor for each cost analysed.
Step 3
When there is a limiting factor, you must determine the contribution per unit, followed by the cost per limiting
factor.
Step 4
Do the budget.
Step 5
Evaluate possible alternative information that may change the contribution per unit determined in Step 3
above.
Once a company has established itself and has passed the break-even point, the company will look to
changing its cost structure so that the contribution per unit increases. Invariably, this means moving from a
‘low fixed cost, high variable cost’ cost structure to a ‘high fixed cost, low variable cost’ cost structure. It
therefore becomes important at this point to determine the Production Point Of Indifference, ie where the
total cost of a capital-intensive company = the total cost of a labour-intensive company
d) LONG-TERM OBJECTIVE
The long-term objective should be to maximise return on investment. Companies should therefore aim at
increasing sales and reducing variable costs. In the long-term, a company will aim at minimising the variable
costs of production, and therefore maximise contribution. Targeting fixed costs is counter-productive. Fixed
costs are the engine-room of the company and represent the manufacturing assets that generate sales profit.
If the overheads are too high, it is because the sales are too low. Target sales, and the costs will look after
themselves. Most companies, when faced with difficult times, tend to target fixed costs such as salaries and
the infrastructure of the company, which often leads to a slow death. It is better to target variable costs which
will increase contribution and sales rather than a cost reduction. Always focus on sales.
d) EXAMPLE: NOTE: the examples below are very simple, to get the idea of all the angles, incl.
multiple limiting factors at the same time where you must use ‘linear programming’ to solve it,
you must go through examples in the book.
MACN 202 Management Accounting: Financila Management Section. Notes
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The example below evaluates two production options, high fixed costs, low variable costs vs. the option of low
fixed costs and high variable costs. In examinations, you must focus on the overall discussion.
EXAMPLE B: A BIT MORE DIFFICULT: CHOOSE BETWEEN 1-IMPORTING & 2-LIMITING FACTOR.
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MACN 202 Management Accounting: Financila Management Section. Notes
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MANAGEMENT ACCOUNTANT:
1) MOST IMPORTANT INPUTS/criterion: The Present Value of Future Cash flows.
a) This means the CURRENT MARKET VALUES of investments such as EQUITY, DEBT, ASSETS are assessed at
current market value, not book value.
2) PRINCIPLE TOOLS(some) :
a) Financial risk and
b) Business risk of the firm- 2 separate attributes assessed separately which have an effect on each other.
2) Definition: FINANCIAL RISK: =’ Kd’ the risk that “relates to the borrowing of long-term and short-term
debt.” The company becomes liable for :
(1) Monthly Interest repayments
(2) Capital Repayments.
b) The Financial Risk is : that funds will be available to pay
i) Interest
ii) Capital Repayments
iii) Default Risk – this third risk can be avoided by using Equity Finance.
c) Financial Gearing : the object of this financial risk is that it is hoped that the cost of debt is lower than
returns offered by the assets purchased with borrowed funds - thus increasing returns to shareholders.
d) Evaluating Financial Risk : it is important to consider ‘Business Risk’ as well to evaluate financial risk itself
because a company with high business risk should borrow limited amounts of cash, but with less business
risk the capacity to take on financial risk is increased.
3) If ever given a question in exam , and company has any form of debt, then
a) Ke = Business Risk + Financial Risk
b) If there is no debt in the structure then Ke= Business risk only.
4) Companies can be classified in terms of their business risk:
HIGH RISK MEDIUM RISK LOW RISK
Mining Restaurant Supermarket (retail)
Chemical Security Household Products
Speciality Products Building Banking
Technology Clothing(??? Not sure –
check up)- not high
fashion, but plain.
High Fashion(I think)-
replacement Turnover
2-Equity: c) Operating Leverage 4-Stock Turnover
3Price Earnings ratio 2-Less important ones:
a) Net profit
4Dividend Payout
percentage
5Dividend Yield b) Profitability
c)Return on Equity
d)Earnings per Share
e)Dividends Per Share
RATIOS
MARGIN OF SAFETY:
a) Difference between :
Budgeted Sales Volume MINUS Break-Even Sales Volume.
b) Sometimes Expressed as % of Budgeteted Volume or Budgeted Revenue.
PROFIT RATIO
=Profit / Sales =0.abcd or ( * 100/1= ab.cd %) TO 4 decimal places OR to 2 decimal places for %
REM: FIXED expenses is NEVER just the totals that do not change –you must FIRST CHECK
EVERY TOTAL eg: labour-MATERIALS-OVERHEADS ETC FOR THE FIXED PART AND VAR. PART
BEFORE you calc. the total fixed costs.
4) Another way to see the light this ratio provides is to work out the cost structure (variable/fixed cost structure) –
and a high fixed/low variable will mean a high ratio&low risk , but a low fixed /high variable will probable mean
a low ratio&low risk.
(GP%) GROSS PROFIT PERCENTAGE % RATIO: = GROSS PROFIT/TURNOVER | =%
ANSWER |
14) Remember it is turnover , not revenue, so if there are figures for both use turnover because GP% is for
“operations”, not including “other income “ like rent or dividends (I THINK-CHECK WITH LECTURER)
15) Most important business risk assessment when operating leverage and B/E information are not available.
16) HOW IT WORKS:
a) if turnover increases by 500, by how much will GP% increase :ANSWER by the contribution. (unless you
were operating at a loss before turnover increased!)
b) the contribution ratio must be higher than the GP% ALLWAYS unless fixed costs are = 0!
17) FINANCIAL ANAYSIS:
a) If turnover increases: THE more capital intensive it gets (high fixed,low var.), the greater an increase in
GP% for an increase in turnover ,and greater the drop in GP% for a drop in turnover % . So if for capital
intensive business, we would expect the GP% to increase quite substantially if turnover increases. nIf it
does not then it shows the company has not performed as well as it should have(might have been going at
a loss before the increase, or maybe fixed costs were slaphappily increased as well, or contribution
decreased)
b) If GP% increases : ALL WE SAY IS THAT THE PROFITABILITY OF THE COMPANY HAS Improved
c) WHAT negative factors could cause GP% to go up less when Turnover% increases a lot:
i) Selling price drop (most common reason)
ii) Var. cost increase (next most common reason)
iii) Fixed cost increase.
RETURN ON OPERATING ASSETS: EARNINGS BEFORE INTEREST AND TAX/ OPERATING
ASSETS *100/1 | = % ANSWER
1) Use gross profit before interest. From ALL(not other income)
2) Use (fixed assets – long term investments) + ALL current assets,
3) Exclude “long term investments” in the “fixed costs” section.
4) Current assets include all bank + debtors + inventory.
5) Use value at beginning of period for assets, unless question specifically states “average asset value” the
begin+end/2
a) When they do the average of 2 years, they sometimes take average of fixed assets but add it to the
current assets without getting an average of the current assets , only of fixed assets? It seems you do not
have to , but may sometimes do it this way to balance some kind of oddities.
6) Interest is a cost of finance just like dividends are a cost of finance, thus both are excluded from the
calculation
7) This ratio can be got from Profitability ratio X Operating asset Turnover ratio = this Ratio
1) An answer of 0.39 means that you get a profit of about 40 c per rand , which is very low. This means there is
underutilized capacity or over-investment in fixed assets, one of the two.
SUB-RATIO – PROFITABILITY RATIO: = EBIT / TURNOVER
An answer of 0.39 means that you get a profit of about 40 c per rand , which is very low. This means there is
underutilized capacity or over-investment in fixed assets, one of the two.
1) WHEN WE LOOK AT THE FINANCIAL OPERATIONS OF A COMPANY:, we are interested in only 2 things.:
a) FINANCE DECISION. : refers to the source of funds ie: either debt or equity.
b) INVESTMENT DECISION. : also called “Capital Budgeting” (where the required inputs are WACC and
future cash flows) refers to the purchase of an asset/s for the sole purpose of increasing shareholder
wealth, if the future cash flows are greater than the required return then the asset should be purchased
.The Shareholders wealth comes only from either:
i) Dividends
ii) Shares Appreciation : Increase in the Value of the Company.(shares)
(1) Valuations: this is needed to measure the increase in Value of the Company.
2) In “Finance” as such you must always deal with market values of debt (kd) and of equity (ke) and never
with book values.
6) Definition: FINANCIAL RISK: =’ Kd’ the risk that “relates to the borrowing of long-term and short-term
debt.” The company becomes liable for :
(1) Monthly Interest repayments
(2) Capital Repayments.
b) The Financial Risk is : that funds will be available to pay
i) Interest
ii) Capital Repayments
iii) Default Risk – this third risk can be avoided by using Equity Finance.
c) Financial Gearing : the object of this financial risk is that it is hoped that the cost of debt is lower than
returns offered by the assets purchased with borrowed funds - thus increasing returns to shareholders.
d) Evaluating Financial Risk : it is important to consider ‘Business Risk’ as well to evaluate financial risk itself
because a company with high business risk should borrow limited amounts of cash, but with less business
risk the capacity to take on financial risk is increased.
7) If ever given a question in exam , and company has any form of debt, then
a) Ke = Business Risk + Financial Risk
b) If there is no debt in the structure then Ke= Business risk only.
8) Companies can be classified in terms of their business risk:
HIGH RISK MEDIUM RISK LOW RISK
Mining Restaurant Supermarket (retail)
Chemical Security Household Products
Speciality Products Building Banking
Technology Clothing(??? Not sure –
check up)
High Fashion(I think)
c) TAX RATE : to see how much of the interest PAID is cancelled out by TAX
reduction.
d) How the project will be funded ??: the WACC will not be affected by the finance method chosen
but FUTURE funding of other projects will be affected by choice
e) Present Value :The value of any investment or valuation of a project is ALLWAYS the Net
Present Value of the Future Cash Flows.
3) ALLWAYS use the Market Value method to calc. the WACC to see how much debt or equity you can still use.
NEVER use another method.For equity use formula value=D1/(ke-g). ,and for debt use the market value
method. Remember also for equity you only use the answer from formula, don’t add any Share Premium or
Retained Earnings or Reserves of any kinds.
4) Remember to add the new investment to the grand total you work out to figure out the new amounts allowed
from the Target ke:kd percentages.- don’t forget it.!
5) All the Market values of Preference dividends(not less tax) + Debentures(less tax) + Long term loan(less tax)
get worked out separately and added one by one to the market value of Equity to get the grand total before
you divide it up in the ke:kd target percentages.
a) Debentures: Use the formula for PV of Future cash Flows to infinity , and remember to subtract the TAX
from both “top D1” and “bottom kd” before you calculate the formula.So here the Yearly interest in rands
is the D1 at the top(less tax deduction), and the Current market interest rate for similar type of debentures
is the Kd at the bottom.: formula for PV of Future cash Flows to infinity = D1/(kd-g)
b) Preference Shares : Pref.Dividends are not tax deductable so do not deduct tax here from D1 or Kd. Use
the formula for formula for PV of Future cash Flows to infinity = D1/(kd-g)
c) Long Term Loan : see method for calculating the “market value of WACC” and use the same method as
for debt in that method (PV of each year’s interest in Rands +PV of each capital repayment, added
together). Don’t forget to deduct tax above&below in PV calc-ie from interest paid in rands and from
Current market rate for interest used at bottom in PV formula. DONT deduct TAX from the LOAN CAPITAL
AMOUNT REPAYMENTS, only the other 2.
6) How to calculate whether a company should invest in a project: see this scan example below:
MACN 202 Management Accounting: Financila Management Section. Notes
P a g e | 48
c) WACC is the minimum return a company needs to fully compensate the debt providers as well as the
equity providers, basicly the ”specially worked out” mathematical “average” of the debt interest and
equity dividends to be paid out yearly in return for the capital used to finance the company.
d) It is also called the ‘appropriate discount rate used in the evaluation of future investments’.
e) Note:
i) EQUITY = incl. Retained income + Non-Distributable + Distributable Reseves + Share
Premium + Any form of debt that has a conversion option to Ordinary Shares.+??Share
issue expenses pg7 note top??
ii) DEBT=Lease + Pref.Shares + Mortgage Bonds + Debentures + Long term loans + any form
of finance with NO option to convert to ordinary shares.
f) If asked to calculate the WACC for investment decisions, it means work out the “TARGET WACC”.
g) METHOD to Cal. WACC:
i) WACC % = [Ke X % DEBT] + [Kd X % EQUITY]
(1) Add all the Debt + Equity used by company. Then calc the % of debt in the total and the % of equity
in the total.
(2) Use the % calculated above and the actual Ke & Kd worked out below to calculate : WACC % = [Ke
X % DEBT] + [Kd X % EQUITY]
ii) Kd =DEBT:
(1) Pref Shares & Long Term loan & Debentures are all debt.
(2) Pref Shares dividends ARE NOT TAX DEDUCTABLE, but Debentures&Loans interest repayments are
tax deductable.
(3) TAX :To Deduct Tax from the % interest payable for debt, you say “quoted interest percent” X [100-
tax rate]/100 = The Effective tax rate. (but never use this method to work out anything wit profit, because once you
remove tax like this you cannot go work out tax for the remainder in your next calc. anymore because it is already out % wise, any attempt to
do this results in major errors- do not ever use this rate where tax must come out afterwards in your sum.)
(4) Add the % of each type of debt AFTER it’s OWN specific tax deduction in the weighted ratio it is to
the total debt, to get your debt average %.
(a) Eg: Say Pref shares = R 100@9% before tax, & Debentures = R400@20% & Long term loan =
R500@ 12% , Then you say Total debt = 100+400+500 =1000. So [100/1000 X 9] + [400/1000
X {20X60%} ] + [500/1000 X {12X60%} ] = 0.9+4.8+3.6= 9.3% effective debt interest.
iii) Ke =EQUITY :
(1) Just get the Ke .
iv) In order to calculate the WACC one can use 1 of 3 methods.
(1) BOOK VALUE Method:
(a) Use the book values of equity and debt to work out WACC, exactly as they appear in the books
of the company on that date.
(b) This method is wrong – you cannot actually take the book values to get WACC, you must use
market values.
(c) EQUITY = incl. Retained income + Non-Distributable + Distributable Reseves + Share
Premium + Any form of debt that has a conversion option to Ordinary Shares.+??
Share issue expenses pg7 note top??
(d) DEBT=Lease + Pref.Shares + Mortgage Bonds + Debentures + Long term loans + any
form of finance with NO option to convert to ordinary shares.
(e)
(2) MARKET VALUE Method:
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VALUATION OF A COMPANY:
3) VALUE= Present value of Future Cash Flows : this is simply stated the Concept Of Value Used In All
Calculations of company or share value.
4) ????VALUE OF ORDINARY SHARES = Value of Company –less- Value of Debt .????how does this work, see
book pg11 vig fin.mngmnt.
5) ORDINARY SHARES VALUE: To calculate the value of the companies shares today, in order to calculate the
price you wish to sell them at, you use the formula for “PV of Future Dividends to Infinity”.
6) PREFERENCE SHARES VALUE : use the same formula as below.
7) Formula for (PV) Present Value of all Future Dividends to Infinity: = D1/(ke-g) (can be used for
ordinary or preference shares or debentures: anything with dividends it seems)
a) D1= dividend in one years time
i) For Debentures :Remember to deduct tax from the D1 value of interest in Rands actually paid each
year before you use it in the formula.
b) Ke= shareholders required return (in decimals eg: 0.2)
i) For Ordinary Shares: remember that for calculating the Market value of equity you do NOT include
the distributable&non-distributable reserves or share premium or anything else in equity- only the
Ordinary shares values.
ii) For Debentures : ke will be called kd instead, and one must first remember to deduct tax from the D1
value of interest in Rands actually paid each year as well as from the the kd interest percentage before
you use it: ie if debenture interest = 10% and tax = 30 % then the rate to use for this formula will be :
10 X 70% = 7% .
iii) For Preference Shares : ke will of course be called kd instead, but one does not deduct tax from
preference dividends, because it is not tax deductable.
c) g= growth to infinity (in decimals eg: 0.04) (NOTE if g= 0 or not given, then just put it as g=0 in the
calculation.)
d) (D0 =dividend today)
8) In exam, if asked to calculate the value of ordinary shares, always multiply final answer by total no. of shares
to get the total company value, UNLESS they specifically ask for the value of just 1 share.(each)
7) Debentures: Use the formula for PV of Future cash Flows to infinity , and remember to subtract the TAX from
both “top D1” and “bottom kd” before you calculate the formula.So here the Yearly interest in rands is the D1
at the top(less tax deduction), and the Current market interest rate for similar type of debentures is the Kd at
the bottom.: formula for PV of Future cash Flows to infinity = D1/(kd-g)
8) Preference Shares : This is just Non-Tax deductable form of “debt”. Pref.Dividends are not tax deductable so
do not deduct tax here from D1 or Kd. Use the formula for formula for PV of Future cash Flows to infinity
= D1/(kd-g)
9) Long Term Loan : see method for calculating the “market value of WACC” and use the same method as for
debt in that method (PV of each year’s interest in Rands +PV of each capital repayment, added together).
Don’t forget to deduct tax above&below in PV calc-ie from interest paid in rands and from Current market rate
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for interest used at bottom in PV formula. DONT deduct TAX from the LOAN CAPITAL AMOUNT REPAYMENTS,
only the other 2
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INTRODUCTION:
1) Time value of Money is an essential concept in the understanding of finance.
2) BANK OVERDRAFT : is not seen as debt unless a part of it IS ACTUALLY being used as a form of long term
financing/debt THEN that part used as such should be accounted for as ‘debt’ in the debt: equity ratio.
3) DEFERRED TAXATION: DEFERRED TAX IS NOT included as tax when calculating the capital structure of a
company, because the timing of tax payments is accounted for when evaluating the project investment
decision. You just ignore it outright. This will only really apply when calculating the WACC at ‘book value’
method- so ignore it always when you do this.
4) THE ‘CURRENT MARKET VALUE’ TO USE AS THE Ke OF Kd WHEN DOING ALL THE CALCULATIONS
:where “actual todays market values” instead of the interest rate being paid today due to previous years
dealings, is as follows:
a) First Choice: if the same type of security’s current interest rates are given.Use that one, even if it is
higher than other securities in same class eg if you have got debentures and ‘loans’ are cheaper than
‘debentures at current rates, you still only use debentures rates.
b) Second Choice: if only a similar and not the same type of security’s market rates are given , then use tah
one: eg if you got debentures and only current rates for loans are given then use the loans rates as your
current market rates for debentures.
5)
FUTURE VALUE:
7) Future Value FORMULA : FV= PV(1+i)n
a) Where FV= future value
b) PV= present value
c) I = interest rate – in DECIMALS eg for 15% Use 0.15 NOT 15%
d) n= number of years/periods
8) COMPOUND INTEREST : The future value of an investment over 3 years FV=PV(1+i) (1+i) 1+i) = PV(1+i) X
(1+i) X (1+i), that is what PV(1+i)n means : to the power of n means all this. So it basicly is the interest gained
in year 1 and 2 etc reinvested and this is called compound interest.
9) FUTURE VALUE TABLES : the future value table can be used instead of using a calculator.It basicly works
like this : it gives you a “Factor” for each year from 1 ,2,3,4 etc. upwards in a column for each percentage rate.
So for 10% interest you go to the 10% column , go down it to the year number you want, take the ‘Factor”
from there and multiply it by the Present Value to get the answer you want. (the ‘factor’ =(1+i)n )
10) SOLVING FOR i . (INTEREST RATE). : if a question asks you to find the interest rate if given the ONLY the :
PV & FV & n : what happens is you get stuck at the point of FV/PV = (1+i)n after working out the formula
backwards, there seems to be no mathematical solution to solve this, so the only way to do it is to start trying
to substitute different values for i in the formula FV/PV = (1+i)n until you hit on the right one OR one can
use the Future Values Table and look across, (not down), the 3 year row till you get the FV/PV . To use the
calculator all you have to remember is to put the PV as a “–“ and FV as “+” (or visa versa-works same) or the
calculator will not do it-it says “error”.
11) SOLVING FOR n (NO. OF YEARS) : if a question asks you to find the number of years if given ony { i & PV
& FV } , you do the same as above : go as far as you can with the formula, then either try different values till
you hit the right one or use the FV table. The calculator also just needs a PV as “+” or FV as “-“
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12) Using MONTHS, WEEKS OR QUARTERLY instead of YEARS in the FORMULA : if the interest is compounded
monthly, weekly or quarterly then you have to simply have more periods for ‘n’ in the formula and divide up the interest
rate to a lower figure by :
a) Interest rate : divide the yearly interest rate by the number of periods in the year eg : for months by 12, or for
quarters by 4 : this will give you the interest rate per period to put in the formula above.
b) Number of Periods: here you multiply the number of years by the number of periods in each year to get the (higher)
figure to put in the formula. So for months X 12 , or for quarters X 4 etc.
1) The Value of an Investment or Project or Company or Company Shares is the “Present Value of Future Cash
Flows”.If you are valuing a share and if the share pays regular dividends, then there are 2 scenarios : static or
growing dividends. There is a formula for each:
2) BANK OVERDRAFT : is not seen as debt unless a part of it IS ACTUALLY being used as a form of long term
financing/debt THEN that part used as such should be accounted for as ‘debt’ in the debt: equity ratio.
3) 3) DEFERRED TAXATION: DEFERRED TAX IS NOT included as tax when calculating the capital
structure of a company, because the timing of tax payments is accounted for when evaluating the
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project investment decision. You just ignore it outright. This will only really apply to WACC using
‘book value method”- so always ignore deferred tax here.
(2) “TO BE SOLD “ Type PRESENT VALUE FORMULA : where the shares are to be sold after a specific
period of time :now it’s a PV calculation.
Do
(a) Ex-Dividend formula: Value = /(1+Ke)n X Number of shares :
means if the shareholder receives a dividend today that dividend is EXCLUDED You
use this formula once for each separate year to come, so for 3 years you must do the calc. 3
times and add the answers up to get the total.
(b) Cum-Dividend formula: Value = Dividend + (Do/(1+Ke)n X
TOTAL number of shares.) means if the shareholder receives a dividend today
then that dividend is INCLUDED in the calculation of value of share (you just add the dividend to
answer-simple)
(c) Remember you could do the above calc. for years 3 & 4 but do years 1&2 with another formula
for eg.”growth” and just add the answers up to get the total.( say there was growth for first 2 yrs
then no growth for 2 yrs.)
ii) Where:
(a) Do = Current Dividends or Year 0 dividends, per share. ( “D”=dividends “0” =Year 0)
(b) Ke = Shareholders Required return or Discount Rate. –use in DECIMALS eg for 15% Use 0.15 NOT
15% (K = latin e=Equity) (‘Ke is the same as i in the PV formula’-as per book vertabim)
(c) n = number of years (only in the ‘To Be Sold” formula)
iii) When: the question is silent as to Cum- or Ex-Dividends you must use Ex-dividends. Another reason
for doing an ex-dividend valuation (unless otherwise asked) is that PV assumes that the first cash flow
will take place at the end of the period.
b) GROWTH / FALLING DIVIDENDS (growth or getting less)
i) Cum-Dividend or Ex-Dividend : the book says nothing about this for this type but it probably works
exactly the same as for static dividends. If it is Cum-Dividends then you probably just have to add the
dividend you receive today to the answer!
ii) There are also 2 types of formula for this one- the Perpetuity type and the “To Be Sold
Soon” one.
iii) Do not use year 0 dividends, only end year 1 dividends!!!!
iv) PERPETUITY Type FORMULA: where the share is to held for an indefinite period ie: ‘in perpetuity’. Do not use year 0
dividends, only end year 1
D1
(a) Ex-Dividend formula: Value = /Ke - g X Number of shares :
(b) Cum-Dividend formula: if they ask for cum-dividend then (probably) just add the dividend
you are receiving to the answer per share.
(c) Remember: you can get the PV of an answer from this formula if it only will occour in
eg 3 yrs time. : say that for the next 2 years the share price will fluctuate ( or grow etc) but in
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3 years time it will start to remain the same from there on- say at 5% growth. If you are looking
for the value of the share today, you must first calculate the PV of the next 2 years separately
using another method ( directly or using growth formula below etc.) THEN you can calculate the
value of the 3rd year onwards using the above formula and bring this to PV by substituting your
FV you get into the PV formula again to bring it to PV. : ie: [D1/Ke – g] = FV , so PV today = [D1/Ke –
g] / (1+i)
n ……
where we would use ‘Ke’ for ‘i’ here.!
v) “TO BE SOLD “ Type PRESENT VALUE FORMULA : where the shares are to be sold after a specific period of
time :now it’s a PV calculation.
DO NOT USE g HERE! And remember to use D1 and not D0.
D1 n
(a) Ex-Dividend Formula : Value = /
(1+Ke ) X Number of shares :
(ie cash flow/for this one you MUST work each year out separately using the PV formula given
here. To accommodate the growth (g) in dividends each year you cannot do it with the formula,
you must manually increase the dividends each year, then work out the Present Value for each
separate year using the above formula .THE SELLING PRICE AT THE END OF THE PERIOD MUST
BE INCLUDED IN THE final year PV calculation.(ie just add it to the final year dividends and get
the PV of the total, no need to do a separate calculation!)Then add all the years up to get the
present value of the shareholding.
(b) Cum-Dividend Formula: Cum-Dividend: probably just add the dividend you are receiving to
the answer
(c) This is an Odd-one out: You have to be very careful here : there are 2 odd things to
watch for:
(i) For this one you DO NOT USE g , you just use the PV formula ALONE:
so here you must work each year out separately 1 by 1, and for each year just increase the
dividend MANUALLY.
(ii) How you work this out depends on the VANTAGE POINT of the person:
who is working it out. You might have to use the other ‘perpetuity type’ formula even if it
dos’nt look like it; because: So if you are selling in 3 years time at 500 each, with a dividend
growth of 5% ,you say work out the PV today of all 3 years to come (all 3 dividends to be
paid + the selling price you will get) = your valuation from your vantage point. BUT if the
person who is buying them from you wants to work out the value of the same shares at the
exact same point in time in 3 years time, he will use a completely different formula for the
same thing AND WILL ALSO ALLWAYS GET A DIFFERENT ANSWER: You see, HE only uses the
‘perpetuity type ’ formula –because he has no plans to sell the share yet and the NOTE:
(3+1= 4th) years dividend to be paid out (his first one) and (ke-g) as the dividend(as
per perpetuity formula).Remember to use the dividend from 1 year ahead of when he buys-
not the dividend on the date of ‘year 3’ when he gets the shares( ie D1 NOT D0 ) Anyway ,so
his valuation could very well be higher than the sellers and , on paper at least, he could
make a profit if he were to sell it on the spot there and then when he receives it! See
example on pg 27/28 Vig-Finance.
(d) Remember : D1 means: if you get 2 odd payments in Year 1 and 2, then from year 3 a
dividend of 400 growing at 5 %, it means that year 3 =400 is D1 , because year 2 is Y0 for the
400 onwards part and the 400 is Y1. Then on top of it year 2 is = n in the formula for PV if you
want to bring the whole part from year 3 : the 400-onwards answer: down to PV-because For D1
you take year 2 of course. Watch out for this one in questions; it catches you easy.
(e) Remember:you might have to work out the PV for only 2 years using this formula,
then switch to another formula if question says there will be no more growth from
the 3rd year onward : say that for the next 2 years the share price will fluctuate ( or grow etc)
but in 3 years time it will start to remain the same from there on- say at 5%. (or visa versa). If
you are looking for the value of the share today using all this info., you must first calculate the
PV of the next 2 years separately using this PV method THEN you can calculate the value of the
3rd year onwards using the ‘perpetuity –non-growth’ formula and bring the answer to PV by
substituting your answer as the FV in the PV formula to bring it to PV. : ie: [D1/Ke – g] = FV , so PV
today = [D1/Ke – g] / (1+i)n ……where we would use ‘Ke’ for ‘i’ here.! See pg 28/29 in vig.-finance.
Where:
(f) D1 = DO NOT USE YEAR 0 DIVIDENDS! ONLY USE end of year 1 dividends! D1 means
Current Dividends or Year 1 dividends, per share. ( “D”=dividends “1” =Year 1 ie -end of year 1-)So
for the ‘Static/No-Growth’ one we use year 0 but for this one we use the dividends you will get at
end of year 1: Remember this! ‘
(g) Ke = Shareholders Required return or Discount Rate. –use in DECIMALS eg for 15% Use 0.15 NOT
15% (K = latin e=Equity) (‘Ke is the same as i in the PV formula’-as per book vertabim)
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e)
f) The book value of total capital employed is the “TOTAL EQUITIES & LIABILITIES” section on the balance
sheet. It may be calculated as the balance at the beginning of the financial year, or the average assets
employed over the year, ie beginning asset value plus end of year asset value divided by 2.
g) ASSUMPTIONS: this formula only works subject to the following being true:
i) ) retained earnings must be the only source of investment capital
ii) a constant proportion of earnings must be reinvested each year
iii) the reinvested earnings must generate a constant annual rate of return.
10. Note: a funny thing is if a company is paying 20% interest on a loan which appears on the balance sheet
at 100, but the current market interest on debt rate is lower eg: 15% so they are dof and should only be
paying this, not 20%, then you say : quote “ in real terms the company has more debt than is
shown in the balance sheet” the reason for this is that if you were to put 20% (same market rate) in the
formula below as Kd instead of 15% (lower market rate) as Kd your answer as to the “Market Value” of the
debt would be EXACTLY 100., but if you use 15% as Kd then the answer would always be MORE than 100,
but if you use 25% (higher market rate) the Market Value will always be lower!
11. Note: The formulas below are ONLY to work out the MARKET VALUE of the debt amount today. So basicly
what would that debt be worth if the bank somehow could ‘sell’ the loan to someone else- I think. It is
weird figures they get from this formula though !-note!
ANNUITY:
5) An annuity refers to a stream of EQUAL payments of a fixed amount over a number of years or periods. Eg
1000 invested every year for 10 years is called a 10 year annuity investment.
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6) BEGINNING / or END OF THE YEAR : the timing of the investment can take place at begin or end of year. Each
one has a different formula
a) “ANNUITY DUE “: for the FV at beginning of year (.: For the FV ,not the PV, the only difference between
the 2 is that for beginning of year annuity due all you have to do is multiply the Ordinary Annuity-end year-
by (1+i) to get the -begin year- “annuity due”, but this does not work for the PV of the annuity due- see the
formulas below.
b) “ORDINARY or REGULAR or DEFERRED ANNUITY” : at end of year.
PERPETUITY:
5) A Perpetuity is a normal Annuity but with an infinite life.
6) You only work it out by using a special formula:
7) PRESENT VALUE of a PERPETUITY FORMULA : PVp= I/i
a) PVp = Present Value of a Perpetuity.
b) I = Constant Amount invested each year
c) i = interest rate – in DECIMALS eg for 15% Use 0.15 NOT 15%
d) This one is where payments are at the end of the year.- I think- it does not say in the book what it is. Also
it does not say what the formula for at begin of year (annuity due) is.
D1
8) PRESENT VALUE of a -growing- PERPETUITY FORMULA : PVp= /i - g where
g=growth and D1 is the same as I above but indicates the payment received at the end of
the first year, NOT at the beginning of the first year : so it will normally be the given payment
with the first years growth added ie; not 100 but 100X 5% growth = 105!
9) Remember : D1 means: if you get 2 odd payments in Year 1 and 2, then from year 3 a dividend of 400
growing at 5 %, it means that year 3 =400 is D1 , because year 2 is Y0 for the 400 onwards part and the 400 is
Y1. Then on top of it year 2 is = n in the formula for PV if you want to bring the whole part from year 3 : the
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400-onwards answer: down to PV-because For D1 you take year 2 of course. Watch out for this one in
questions; it catches you easy.
ISSUE COSTS
1) Any issue cost from any form of financing where the company incurs a cost in issuing a form of finance, is NOT
EVER added to the cost of equity or cost of debt finance( share issue costs & debenture issue costs) , INSTEAD
these costs are supposed to be included as part of the cost of the project being financed. So if investment
cost= 200; and issue costs = 10 then actually; investment cost= 210.
2) HOWEVER, where it is deemed as desirable to issue costs in determining the Market Value or (Market dividend
from it) then the cost per share must be deducted from the market value of the share.
e)
f) The book value of total capital employed is the “TOTAL EQUITIES & LIABILITIES” section on the balance
sheet. It may be calculated as the balance at the beginning of the financial year, or the average assets
employed over the year, ie beginning asset value plus end of year asset value divided by 2.
g) ASSUMPTIONS: this formula only works subject to the following being true:
i) ) retained earnings must be the only source of investment capital
ii) a constant proportion of earnings must be reinvested each year
iii) the reinvested earnings must generate a constant annual rate of return.
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INTRODUCTION:
Definition: Capital Structure: Refers to long term financing of the company. So either debt or equity financing.
The question is : should a company have debt as part of its ‘capital structure’.
?Definition: Financial Structrure: : it seems like all 3 of: Total Assets & equity=Issued Shares & Total Debt.?
i)
ii) Example: do any calculation is this way exactly – and remember to add in the : ‘old’ profit they normally
get .so always get ALL profit and ALL equity from ALL investments of the company (not just this project)
to work out the Shareholders Return =Tot.profit/Tot.equity. ALSO REMEMBER interest is calculated on
the “LOAN” or “INVESTMENT”, not on the PROFIT.
iii)
c) CREATES WEALTH (PER “ECONOMICS –money supply)
d) CHEAPER THAN EQUITY
e) PROMOTES GROWTH IN COMPANY.
EXAMPLE : The book uses the same example as used in 1(b)i above.
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f)
FINANCIAL GEARING:
1) Financial gearing describes the proportion of debt compared to equity financing.
2) High financial gearing means heavy reliance on debt financing and Low financial gearing means it is
heavily reliant on equity financing.
3) With high financial gearing will show a greater Earnings per Share in times of increased profit.
4) In an Economic downturn highly geared companies will do worse than those with low-gearing due to interest
(and capital) that must be repaid.
5) High financial gearing implies increased risk- and those with increased risk do well in good times and show
below average in bad times.
6) (See yellow why amount-how can amount make a difference????). THE IMPORTANT QUESTION IN
THE LONG TERM FINANCING DECISION is: whether the cost of capital for a company is dependant on its
financial structure. If long term debt does affect the cost of capital, then the company should minimize its cost
of capital by borrowing an “amount” of debt capital that will give the company its lowest cost of capital.
7) If you work out the EPS for companies with 1-low gearing , and 2-medium gearing , and 3-high gearing (but
equity stays at eg 2 million, just the makeup of the equity is different for each of low/medium/high) for 4
different profit levels , you end up finding out that the high gearing company cannot make the interest
payments in bad profit years, but does the BEST in good profit years, and visa versa for the others in
corresponding proportion to their levels.see example pg 43 viggio-finance.
ADVANTAGES & DISADVANTAGES OF FIN. GEARING.
ADVANTAGES DISADVANTAGES
1-Interest is Tax Deductable (exept for preference 1-Fixed Annual Interest
shares)
2-Higher Net return –ie: Fin. Gearing increases 2-Repayment of Capital
Shareholders return.
3-Creates Wealth 3-Financial Risk (kd)
4-Promotes Growth in company 4-Loose knee caps if not paid.
5-Cheaper than Equity.
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WACC WEIGHTED AVERAGE COST OF CAPITAL. ALSO CALLED THE DISCOUNT RATE USED IN EVALUATION OF
FUTURE INVESTMENTS.
1) WACC is the return a company needs to fully compensate the debt providers as well as the equity
providers.
2) It is also called the ‘appropriate discount rate used in the evaluation of future investments’.
3) METHOD: Add the long term debt + Equity used Divide the company up
e) Note:
i) EQUITY = incl. Retained income + Non-Distributable + Distributable Reseves + Share
Premium + Any form of debt that has a conversion option to Ordinary Shares.+??Share
issue expenses pg7 note top??
ii) DEBT =Lease + Pref.Shares + Mortgage Bonds + Debentures + Long term loans + any
form of finance with NO option to convert to ordinary shares.
f) If asked to calculate the WACC for investment decisions, it means work out the “TARGET WACC”.
h) METHOD to Cal. WACC:
i) WACC % = [Ke X % DEBT] + [Kd X % EQUITY]
(1) Add all the Debt + Equity used by company. Then calc the % of debt in the total and the % of equity
in the total.
(2) Use the % calculated above and the actual Ke & Kd worked out below to calculate : WACC % = [Ke
X % DEBT] + [Kd X % EQUITY]
ii) Kd =DEBT:
(1) Pref Shares & Long Term loan & Debentures are all debt.
(2) Pref Shares dividends ARE NOT TAX DEDUCTABLE, but Debentures&Loans interest repayments are
tax deductable.
(3) TAX :To Deduct Tax from the % interest payable for debt, you say “quoted interest percent” X [100-
tax rate]/100 = The Effective tax rate. (but never use this method to work out anything wit profit, because once you
remove tax like this you cannot go work out tax for the remainder in your next calc. anymore because it is already out % wise, any attempt to
do this results in major errors- do not ever use this rate where tax must come out afterwards in your sum.)
(4) Add the % of each type of debt AFTER it’s OWN specific tax deduction in the weighted ratio it is to
the total debt, to get your debt average %.
(a) Eg: Say Pref shares = R 100@9% before tax, & Debentures = R400@20% & Long term loan =
R500@ 12% , Then you say Total debt = 100+400+500 =1000. So [100/1000 X 9] + [400/1000
X {20X60%} ] + [500/1000 X {12X60%} ] = 0.9+4.8+3.6= 9.3% effective debt interest.
iii) Ke =EQUITY :
(1) Just get the Ke .
iv) In order to calculate the WACC one can use 1 of 3 methods.
(1) BOOK VALUE Method:
(a) Use the book values of equity and debt to work out WACC, exactly as they appear in the books
of the company on that date.
(i) EQUITY INCLUDES : add all: Ordinary shares + Reserves + Retained earnings + Share
premium = Book Value of Equity.
(ii) DEBT INCLUDES : plain book value of any debt. This must not be calculated using any PV
formulas- use the value in liability accounts only.
(iii) To get the kd and ke :
1. Kd : the interest rate (not market rates but book value rates)
2. Ke: shareholders required return
(b) This method is wrong/has little value – you cannot actually take the book values to get WACC,
you must use market values.
(2) MARKET VALUE Method:
not add these reserves or retained earnings etc. later on either, you only use the value you get
from the formula as your equity, nothing else.
(4) CALCULATING :Interest (Kd) & Dividend (Ke) Rates :
(5) CALCULATING : Market Value of Equity and Debt:
Market Value of Equity: Formula for Present Value of all Future Dividends to
Infinity: = D1/(ke-g) use this formula to get the market value of equity.It is a weird
formula but it is the prescribed formula for working out the market value for ordinary shares,
or for preference shares or any other type of shares.
D1= dividend in one years time
Ke= shareholders required return
g= growth to infinity (NOTE if g= 0 or not given, then just put it as g=0 in the
calculation.)
(D0 =dividend today)
Market Value of Debt: for each year to come, work out the interest payable for that year
at the actual interest rate to be used that year.(not necessarily the current market interest
rates and also the Capital repayments(repayment of original amount loaned) that must take
place that year. Add these two together to get the total repayable that year and then work
out the PV for that amount using THIS TIME THE CURRENT MARKET VALUE of interest
on debt (as opposed to /not the other interest % used to calc. amounts used above) . Add all
the years of the loans repayment&interest PV’s to get the present value of future cash flows
of debt interest at the current market discount rate= the Answer.
(i) Eg: for a loan of 1000000 repayable in 4 yrs at 10% per year where the “current
market value” of debt is 14 %:
100000 100000 100000 100000 + 1,000,000
(1+0.14) (1+0.14)2 (1+0.14)3 (1+0.14)4
=87719 + =76947 + =67497 + =651288(do this step in 2 part s like in book for exam
markers to get it.)
=883451
ANSWER
(a) This method uses the target RATIO of Debt:Equity of the company to calculate the TARGET
WACC , which is done using current market Kd (interest rates) and current market Ke
(shareholders required return).
(b) So use the target ratio of ke : kd at todays interest rates & Ke rates to get your answer for the
target WACC. This resultant WACC is then the appropriate rate to use in all investment
decisions.
(c) It seems 40: 60 is the proper ratio for debt: equity to use for all companies, but I am not sure? –
must find out /research!.
(d) If you have no target WACC you can use the firms current capital structure (debt : equity ratio)
AT MARKET VALUES , if it seems to be at the optimal level.
(e) WACC of holding company : neither the target WACC or actual WACC of holding company is
used for a subsidiary, each companies individual WACC is used by itself for any calculations
because each industry is different / has different risks etc.
Alternative Case:
MACN 202 Management Accounting: Financila Management Section. Notes
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DETERMINING THE OPTIMAL DEBT: EQUITY RATIO AND THE TARGET WACC.
1) The Target WACC should always be the possible : ie on the above graphs this would be where the WACC line
dips to its lowest point in the middle, not at the point where it equals Ke (Equity requirement)
2) You work both out in one shot by: you can either draw up a diagram as shown above and the target WACC and
target Debt:Equity ratio will simply be the point where the WACC line dips the lowest of all.
a) Or you can work it out mathematicly by:
i) List all possible debt: equity ratios from 0: 100 to 100 : 0 in ‘20%’ increments but including “50%’.
ii) Then find out from shareholders and debt providers what their Ke and Kd will be for each specific level
of debt: equity listed above.
iii) Now just work out the WACC at each level using the above figures: Your target WACC will be the
LOWEST WACC you get and target debt : equity ratio will simply be the one that applies to the LOWEST
WACC.
3) Fact:The market value that minimizes WACC , maximizes the Market Value of the company, and thus
Maximises the market value of the equity capital (shares) , because of the way & formulas one uses to
calculate the “Market Value of a Company “ namely the fact that ‘current market values of interest=Kd ’ and
‘shareholders required return= Ke ’ are used, plays the prominent role here.
MILLER & MODIGLIANI THEORY: (PICK THE MAIN POINTS FROM BELOW AND WRITE FACTS BELOW EACH OTHER –RE DO TO MAKE
SOME COMMON FACTS PLAIN)
1) In 1958 Miller & Modigliani proposed that there is no optimal capital structure , because the advantage of debt
directly counteracted by an increase in Ke, such that the WACC would always equal business risk. Millar &
Mogidliani however made certain assumptions:
a) All Investors are rational
b) Capital Markets are Perfect
c) Relevant Information is freely available to everybody.
d) All Investors have the same expectation about the future
e) There are no transaction costs
f) There is no taxation, or there is no distinction between company and personal tax
g) Firms can be classed into business risk or operating risk classes.
h) Individuals and firms can borrow at the same rate, and personal gearing is assumed to be a perfect
substitute for company gearing.
2) As per this theory, no optimal level of gearing exists –so there is NO Optimal debt: equity ratio for
a company!
3) Miller and Modigliani argued that the cost of capital is independent of the capital structure, and hence the
value of the firm is independent of the proportion of debt to total capitalisation. As debt financing increases,
the initial effect would be to lower the WACC, thus increasing the value of the firm. The model, however,
argues that increased gearing results in shareholders requiring an increased return to equate the
increased risk. The change in the required equity return will just offset any possible saving or loss on the
interest change. As gearing increases, the WACC will remain constant, therefore no optimal level of capital
gearing exists.
4) The equilibrium factor in the Miller and Modigliani theory is the arbitrage process. The arbitrage process takes
place where two firms of identical income and risk exist, and where one of the firms has a temporafily higher
value due to the different debt : equity ratios of the two firms. The investors would arbitrage in order to bring
equalise the values of the companies.
5) As per this theory, the ONLY formula you use to work out the value of a firm is : V0 = Y/WACC = Dividends(Do) + DebtInterest
Paid in Cash
/WACC (AFTER TAX)
a) Where
i) Vo= market value of the firm
ii) Y= dividend + interest
iii) Ko= WACC
6) Diagram of this theory: here the WACC line will ALLWAYS = the equity.
THE ARBITRAGE PROCESS : FOR THE MILLER-MODIGLIANI THEORY. (PICK THE MAIN POINTS FROM BELOW AND WRITE
FACTS BELOW EACH OTHER –RE DO TO MAKE SOME COMMON FACTS PLAIN)
1) The arbitrage process is a term used to describe how an investor of a company that has both debt and equity
finance will only be satisfied if he is receiving a return (Ke) that fully compensates him for financial risk. If he is
not adequately compensated, he will invest in an all-equity financed company and increase his return by
taking on personal financial risk by borrowing at a cost equal to the corporate borrowing rate.
a) However this theory seldom if ever applies to the real world and is just a applied science theory.
MACN 202 Management Accounting: Financila Management Section. Notes
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b) ThisIf the Ke of a company is not high enough to fully compensate shareholders for their risk as stated
above , then as per moglidani theory states they are not necessarily operating in a traditional system, but
there is a temporary imbalance in the levels of Ke and now the shareholders must slowly go through the
‘arbitration’ process to ensure their ke increases or else they rather Borrow Personally in the SAME equity
to debt ratio the company was borrowing in(the equity they take out/sell :to: personal debt to go borrow
now), invest in a different ALL EQUITY company to get a higher return as explained above.
c) Because market value of shares= Do/ke , if the Ke is too low after acquiring debt then the shareholders
have allowed their value of their investment to rise by not doing arbitrage, so the value of the shares are
“OVERVALUED” and must drop by having the market value drop.
d) Theory states this pressure will cause the balance in all companies to slowly self correct.
2) Calculating The Correct Value For A Companys Shares : which has debt &equity ,where the Ke is Below
that what it should be after comparing to a similar company with only equity, no debt. do this:
a) First work out the market value of company using Mv = dividend + interest / WACC ( less tax , and at market values)
b) Second take MV – debt value = equity value. (mv means market value)
c) third work out what the shareholders Ke should be to be correct : MVequity = Do/Ke so Ke=
Do/ MV equity
3) Exam question: always do a full sum to show how much you borrow and what your new profit and new return
on investment will be for any arbitrage question where the investor is advised to sell and borrow personally ….
(scan an example still)
4) Definition: equilibrium cost of equity: means the Kd which the shareholder should have in order to be in
equilibrium( the right one)
5) Note: for this theory it is assumed that Ke (and probably market cost of debt as well) will be exactly the same
for businesses in the same class which have identical business risk, due to all the assumptions that the theory
has(see assumptions above). So: if in a question the WACC (not Ke) is different for 2 businesses but they are in
same class & have same business risk, then it is definitely working according to a traditional system and not
the former theory because one must have taken on debt without the exact compensating change in Ke by the
shareholders, which would cause the WACC difference between them.(even if the 2 Ke’s are different, they
are not in different in perfectly compensating ratio – thus it’s a traditional, not mogidliani.
a) To calc. which shareholders do better use dividends/’market’ value of shares=return, not book value- to
check any complicated questions.
6) REMEMBER: if you must calculate the equilibrium market value or share value or debt value of a company you
have to use ‘market values’ not book values , for the Ke or Kd or WACC (for market value of firm)at bottom of
formula. So if there are 2 companies then the HIGHEST WACC available on the market is the one you use to
value the company : using formula ‘dividends’+’debt interest payments’/WACC , and same story for
other stuff.
7)
8) See example pg 49 viggio for a compex question as relating to this- very intricate- must read it carefully to
fully understand this.
a) Lease
b) Mortgage loan
c) Long-term loan (not short term loans/overdraft/supplier credit)
d) Debenture
e) Pref. Share
3) Equity:
a) Ordinary shares
b) Reseves
c) Retained income
d) Share issue costs
COST OF CAPITAL : (IN %)
1) To evaluate an investment project you need a discount rate.
2) The discount rate must reflect the risk of the project.
3) The target WACC rate is the correct discount rate to use as it reflects the capital structure of the firm and
return required by shareholders after allowing for risk.
4) If you have no target WACC you can use the firms current capital structure (debt : equity ratio) AT MARKET
VALUES , if it seems to be at the optimal level.
5) There are 3 assumptions behind the use of a firms current WACC as the discount rate in investment appraisal.
a) The firms will retain it’s existing proportion of debt: equity (ie current=target)
b) The Project is marginal (small in comparison to total capital value of firm- most project are indeed small)
c) The project has the same ‘risk’ as other projects of the firm- if it has more/less then an appropriate risk-
adjusted rate must be used.
COST OF EQUITY CAPITAL (IN %)
1) You just use the standard formulas for calculating the Market Value of Shares by using the discounted PV of
future cash flows. Then you just change each formula around so Ke becomes the subject and use this to work
out the Ke % which is your “cost of equity capital)
2) How To Determine Growth Rate:
a) Method most used: get average of growth rate over a few years., or make an estimate based on
unknown information.Finance is not an exact science and we at times need to estimate inputs that are not
necessarily 100% correct.
b) Alternatively: calc. growth rate based on ROE-return on assets. Problem with this is ROE is at historical
values, not market values.Cost of debt capital : redeemable debentures :
COST OF DEBENTURES
1) FORMULA FOR MARKET VALUE OF DEBENTURES: MV= i/(1+Kd) n + i/(1+Kd) n
+ i/
n n
(1+Kd) + R/(1+Kd)
a) The market value of debentures is calculated -exactly- the same as market value of debt. It is just the PV of
future cash flows –incl. interest & capital repayments.
ordinary shares at the date of the option in say 3 years , from debentures , then there is one complication : TO
GET THE Present Value OF THE MARKET VALUE OF THE NEW ORDINARY SHARES today in order to add it to the
PV of any cash flows up to the date of conversion = Market Value of DEBENTURES, TOU MUST USE THE
DEBENTURE Kd (LESS TAX), AND NOT THE ORDINARY SHARE Ke at which the FV market value of the shares
were worked out.
COST OF RETAINED EARNINGS :
As the retained earnings form part of shareholders capital, the required return for retained earnings is exactly the
same as that for Share Capital- ie equity capital. Just use the same result you get for ‘cost of equity capital’
ISSUE COSTS
3) Any issue cost from any form of financing where the company incurs a cost in issuing a form of finance, is NOT
EVER added to the cost of equity or cost of debt finance( share issue costs & debenture issue costs) , INSTEAD
these costs are supposed to be included as part of the cost of the project being financed. So if investment
cost= 200; and issue costs = 10 then actually; investment cost= 210.
4) HOWEVER, where it is deemed as desirable to issue costs in determining the Market Value or (Market dividend
from it) then the cost per share must be deducted from the market value of the share. IE: Final
Answer minus the Issue cost.
c)
d) The book value of total capital employed is the “TOTAL EQUITIES & LIABILITIES” section on the balance
sheet. It may be calculated as the balance at the beginning of the financial year, or the average assets
employed over the year, ie beginning asset value plus end of year asset value divided by 2.
MACN 202 Management Accounting: Financila Management Section. Notes
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e) ASSUMPTIONS: this formula only works subject to the following being true:
i) ) retained earnings must be the only source of investment capital
ii) a constant proportion of earnings must be reinvested each year
iii) the reinvested earnings must generate a constant annual rate of return.