1 1/10 Case Analysis: AREVA AREVA provides solutions for CO2 free electricity generation, transmission and distribution I. Areva as a whole II. Fuel Fabrication:

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Ch. 2 - Understanding Financial Statements, Taxes, and Cash Flows , Prentice Hall, Inc.
Advertisements

FINANCIAL STATEMENTS Chapter 3 Balance Sheet Income Statement Statement of Cash Flows.
1 Republic of Macedonia-ESM EVN Income statement For the year ended 31 December _____ Note Current year Previous year Revenues Electricity revenues Other.
© 1999 by Robert F. Halsey In this chapter, we will cover the four financial statements that are provided by companies to shareholders and other interested.
The Financial Statements
Chapter 3.
Cost Accounting Allocation of Overhead MB-664 May 2009.
Financial Aspects of a Business Plan
© The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., 2002 McGraw-Hill/Irwin Management Accounting: A Business Partner Chapter 16.
Financial Ratio Analysis
1 Understanding Project Cost Elements Lecture No. 22 Chapter 9 Fundamentals of Engineering Economics Copyright © 2008.
2 main types of accounting formally records, summarises and reports the transactions of the business.  Financial accounting: formally records, summarises.
Accounting and Financial Decisions
Financial Statements and Ratio Analysis CHAPTER 2.
L’OREAL Aurélien FATTORE - Pieter HOFSTRA Kenza OUAZZANI - Carsten SIEBERT 1- Value Chain and Organization 2- General data 3- Cost estimation and allocation.
5 C H A P T E R Operating Budgets.
BASIC TERMINOLIGIES USED IN FINANCIAL ACCOUNTING BY: WAQAR AHMAD LECTURER MANAGEMENT SCIENCE DEPARTMENT RANA UNIVERSITY KABUL, AFGHANISTAN.
Using Financial Accounting Information: The Alternative to Debits and Credits, 6/e by Gary A. Porter and Curtis L. Norton Copyright © 2009 South-Western,
Creating a Successful Financial Plan
Production, Marketing and Administrative costs Manufacturing companies convert materials into finished goods. There are two type of costs involved here:
Com 4FK3 Financial Statement Analysis Week 2, 2012 Cash Flow Analysis.
Financials Start up Cost Source of Funds EquityLoans $20K$25K $45K Operational costs Fixed$43,085$113,700$281,840 Variable$29,570$163,220$460,975.
Analyzing Financial Statements For Investing and Credit Decisions.
1 Chapter 2 Financial Statement and Cash Flow Analysis.
FINANCIAL STATEMENTS AND CASH FLOW ANALYSIS CHAPTER 24.
The Financial Statements Presentations for Chapter 2 by Glenn Owen.
ENGINEERING ECONOMICS ISE460 SESSION 2 CHAPTER 2, May 28, 2015 Geza P. Bottlik Page 1 OUTLINE Questions? News? Chapter 2 – Financials Chapter 8 - Costs.
Statement of Cash Flows Chapter 12 McGraw-Hill/Irwin © 2009 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc.
REVISED SCHEDULE VI 10/25/ Revised Schedule VI applicable to all companies for the financial year commencing from 01 st April However do.
C H A P T E R 5 Operational Budgets. Learning Objective 1 Describe the importance of personal budgeting.
Lecture 28. Chapter 17 Understanding the Principles of Accounting.
1 Chapter 9 Analysis of Financial Statements. 2 I. General Accounting Principles A. Reliability B. Understandability C. Comparability.
1 Elements of the Balance Sheet M. En C. Eduardo Bustos Farías.
 Fixed (Indirect/Overheads) – are not influenced by the amount produced but can change in the long run e.g., insurance costs, administration, rent,
CPS ® and CAP ® Examination Review MANAGEMENT, Fifth Edition By Haney and Mazzola ©2005 Pearson Education, Inc. Pearson Prentice Hall Upper Saddle River,
PROF. MS. TRUPTI NAIK Accounting Terms (Semester I)
The Decision Maker. Managing a Profitable Company.
The Accounting Equation During 2007, Total Liabilities for XYZ Inc. increased $60,000 and Total Assets increased by $50,000. What changes must have occurred.
MGT 497 Financial Statements Prof. Rick Hayes, Ph.D., CPA.
Manufacturing Accounts
Kardan Institute of Higher Education
Primary Objective of Financial Reporting Invest?? Borrow $$?? Sell stocks or bonds?? Start new business?? Loan $$?? Extend credit $$?? LO1 Provide information.
CDA COLLEGE ACC101: INTRODUCTION TO ACCOUNTING Lecture 2 Lecture 2 Lecturer: Kleanthis Zisimos.
Unit 3.5 Final Accounts. Financial Statements ▫Profit and Loss account ▫Balance sheet ▫Cash Flow statement Financial Accounting Management Accounting.
Heikki Vauhkonen 2008 Tulikivi Corporation. Sales Operating profit Percentage of sales Profit before income tax
Accounting and Financial Decisions
Corporate finance Summer 2017
Tutorials week 48 Amsterdam Business School
Management Principles and Human Resources
Basics of financial management Chapter 16
Standard Cost Systems: A Financial Reporting Perspective Using Microsoft Excel Appendix 10B.
Channel Management and Logistics
Channel Management and Logistics
5.3 Income statements IGCSE Business Studies
Gary A. Porter and Curtis L. Norton
Cost Accounting-I Recording System.
FINANCIAL STATEMENT ANALYSIS
Cost Accounting-I Examples.
FINANCIAL STATEMENT ANALYSIS
Product Costing Session Five MBA 502B Managerial Accounting
Financial Analysis Quick ratio: ($22,000+ $41,500)/
FINANCIAL STATEMENT ANALYSIS
Classification of Cost
Financial Statements and the Annual Report
Analyzing Investment Activities
Chapter 2 Financial Statements and the Annual Report
Accounting for Assets Cash Flows.
Presentation transcript:

1 1/10 Case Analysis: AREVA AREVA provides solutions for CO2 free electricity generation, transmission and distribution I. Areva as a whole II. Fuel Fabrication: rods assembly line Outline: Daphnée Hus - Elodie Ragot - Hélène Falipou - Maïté Saulnier - Nicolas Janin

2 2/10 Income Statement, 1 st Semester 2007 In millions of eurosH H Sales revenue Other income from operations12755 Cost of sales Gross margin Research and development expenses Sales and marketing expenses General and administrative expenses Restructuring and early retirement costs Income from cash and cash equivalents Gross borrowing costs Net borrowing costs Other financial income Net financial income Income tax Net income of consolidated businesses Share in net income of associates Net income from continuing operations Net income from discontinued operations020 Net income attributable to equity holders of the parent Average number of shares outstanding Basic earnings per share Adjusted earnings per share  Gross Margin: 1084 M€;  Net Financial Income: 118 M€ Overheads  Big difference = a lot of Overheads I. 1)

3 3/10 Simplified balance Sheet, 1 st Semester 2007 In millions of euros 6/30/0712/31/06 ASSETS Goodwill Property, plant and equipment and intangible assets Assets earmarked for end-of-life-cycle operations Investments in associates Other non-current financial assets LIABILITIES AND EQUITY Equity Provisions for end-of-life-cycle operations Other provisions (including net deferred tax liabilities) Net working capital requirement Put option held by Siemens Net debt (excluding Siemens’ put) Simplified balance sheet total Net debt (including Siemens’ put) Net debt (excluding Siemens’ put) VARIATION: 60 % working capital = net balance of operating uses and sources of funds If WCR>0: uses of funds exceed sources of funds, if WCR<0: sources of funds higher than uses WCR<0 corresponding to a net use of customer advances and prepayments I. 2)

4 4/10 Fuel assembly factory Value Chain: Cost object: Fuel rod Caps Tube Fuel Fuel assembly Skeleton Fuel rods Cost object Research and Development Design Supply Marketing and sales PRODUCTION Distribution Customer service Developing Make to order Adaptation to customers’ needs Internal suppliers Core process Pull production Market decisions:  Price setter  Long-run pricing  High quality/High price Product-life cycle:  Maturity II. 1)

5 5/10 Costs  Example of product costs:  Direct materials: raw materials (skeleton, caps, tubes, nuclear fuel…)  Direct labour: people who work more than 75% in production (workers of the production process line)  Manufacturing overheads: Indirect material: paper, gloves to protect workers… Indirect labour: employees from maintenance of machinery… Indirect manufacturing expenses: lighting, heating and insurance…  Example of period costs: marketing and sales, accounting…  Variability of costs:  Fixed costs: salary, maintenance…  Variable costs: row materials… II. 2)

6 6/10 ABC system HierarchyExamplesCost drivers Unit-level Assembling a fuel assembly Duration: Number of hours of direct labour Batch- related Setting up machines to control the level of uranium enrichment Processing a purchase order (fuel assemblies with the same uranium enrichment) Transaction: Number of set-ups Transaction: Number of orders Product- sustaining Designing the fuel rods (length, soldering) and the skeleton given the uranium enrichment Duration: Number of product development hours Facility- sustaining Renting the plant Transaction: Number of square metres  Costing system  Job-costing : Each fuel assembly has its own characteristics and is unique,  ABC : - More details and focuses on activities and cost drivers - Talks the language of the organization II. 3)

7 7/10 EU, Normal, Abnormal losses  Abnormal losses  Uranium loss  Normal losses  Bad soldering (due to worker´s mistakes),  Tube and cap losses (0,5% of tolerated losses due to suppliers) 1 Fuel assembly = 200 rods + 1 skeleton  Equivalent Unit ? II. 4) We can count the number of components integrated at each stage of the process  we can determine the cost of a product not yet finished without using the concept of EU

8 8/10 Management Control  Result Control  Graph results  Information display, where everybody can see the results, the objectives and so on…  Responsibility centre  Profit centre  The fuel assemblies are sold to another branch of AREVA company  Cybernetic control system  Weekly meeting  Feedback from the workers  Continuous improvement policy Budget limitation AN INFORMATION DISPLAY II. 5)

9 9/10 Budgeting process REACTORS SECTOR AREVA NC Factory B AREVA NPAREVA T&D FUEL SECTORNUCLEAR SERVICES SECTOR DESIGN & SALES BU FUEL MANUFACTURING BU ZIRCONIUM MANUFACTURING BU FBFC Factory AFactory CFactory D  Activity based budgeting:  Estimation of the customers’orders for the next year.  Estimation of resources needed Bottom-up system EQUIPMENT SECTOR II. 6)

10 10/10 Relevant Costs  Should a second assembly line be created?  In the fuel assembly factory, old machines are not allowed to be resold after use (remaining radiation)  No disposal value Qualitative aspectsQuantitative aspects = relevant costs Meeting of the customers’ needs Changes in the labour organization Meeting of the standards (nuclear regulation) Modernity Set-up costs o consultancy firms o building firms o new equipments Operating costs o direct labour (new workers) o factory overheads (electricity…) o direct materials o productivity (cost per unit) II. 7)