Accounting homework help
Accounting homework help. It assesses the following learning outcomes:
- Understand how profit and losses relate to the operating cycle of the company and how the cash position and the operations cash flow determine the spontaneous and discretionary financing needs and mid-term business viability.
- Demonstrate a deep understanding of the role of financial ratios like AR turnover, Inventory turnover or AP turnover and days to collect, days to inventory and days to pay.
- Develop an understanding of real word budget issues.
- Prepare cash Budgets and predict proforma Income Statement and Proforma Balance Sheet.
LAUNCH: WEEK 10 / DELIVERY: Week 13, latest May 10th 2020, 23:59HRS ON MOODLE GMT+1 (Barcelona’s time).
Submission file format: Word Document with all the answers plus the EXCEL file used to perform your calculations
The assignment consists of 2 parts:
Concepts included are in UNIT 5 Cash Budgets
The assignment will be accepted in WORD format ONLY. It is mandatory to submit an EXCEL file where you explain the different calculations you made. So, both files have to be submitted.
Calculation results HAVE TO be explained and the calculation steps explained
CASE:
- Lewis Printing has projected its sales for the first 8 months of 2014 as follows:
Lewis collects 20 percent of its sales in the month of the sale, 50 percent in the month following the sale, and the remaining 30 percent 2 months following the sale. During November and December of 2013, Lewis’s sales were $220,000 and $175,000, respectively. Lewis purchases raw materials 2 months in advance of its sales. These purchases are equal to 65 percent of its final sales. The supplier is paid 1 month after delivery. Thus, purchases for April sales are made in February and payment is made in March. In addition, Lewis pays $10,000 per month for rent and $20,000 each month for other expenditures. Tax prepayments of $22,500 are made each quarter beginning in March. The company’s cash balance as of December 31, 2013, was $28,000; a minimum balance of $25,000 must be maintained at all times to satisfy the firm’s bank line of credit agreement. Lewis has arranged with its bank for short-term credit at an interest rate of 12 percent per annum (1 percent per month) to be paid monthly. Borrowing to meet estimated monthly cash needs takes place at the end of the month, and interest is not paid until the end of the following month. Consequently, if the firm needed to borrow $50,000 during April, then it would pay $500 (=0.01*$50,000) in interest during May. Finally, Lewis follows a policy of repaying its outstanding short-term debt in any month in which its cash balance exceeds the minimum desired balance of $25,000.
- Lewis needs to know what its cash requirements will be for the next 6 months so that it can renegotiate the terms of its short-term credit agreement with its bank, if necessary. To evaluate this problem, the firm plans to evaluate the impact of a ±20 percent variation in its monthly sales efforts. Prepare a 6-month cash budget for Lewis and use it to evaluate the firm’s cash needs.
- Lewis has a $20,000 note due in June. Will the firm have sufficient cash to repay the loan?
- Extract Gross Margin and Cost of Goods Sold from part 1. Assume that their relationship to sales doesn’t change over the contemplated period.
- Determine Inventory turnover and AR turnover
- How long is the operating cycle?
- Assume the operating cycle increases by 20% (x1,2) due to unforeseen reason, how will that impact the cash budget?
- What would be the probable effect on a firm’s cash position of the following events?
- Rapidly rising sales
- A delay in the payment of payables
- A more liberal credit policy on sales (to the firm’s customers)
- Holding larger inventories
What conclusions can you draw from this exercise?
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