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Keep or Drop Decisions Managerial Accounting Prepared by Diane Tanner University of North Florida Chapter 23.

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Presentation on theme: "Keep or Drop Decisions Managerial Accounting Prepared by Diane Tanner University of North Florida Chapter 23."— Presentation transcript:

1 Keep or Drop Decisions Managerial Accounting Prepared by Diane Tanner University of North Florida Chapter 23

2 What are Keep or Drop Decisions?  A short-term decision of whether or not to drop or continue one of the following:  Product line – such as shoes at JCPenney, home appliances at Best Buy  Product – such as breakfast burritos at McDonalds, Blue Moon beer at Hooters  Service line – such as carpet installation by Home Depot, textbook rentals at Follett book store  Service – such as rental of DVDs by Netflix, downloading of MP3s by Amazon  Segment – such as a geographical division, retail verses wholesale offerings, outpatient surgery in a hospital, 3G cellular service 2

3 Relevant Amounts What is not relevant  Allocated fixed costs  Often called common costs  Consists of overhead costs that a company allocates or divides up amongst several units that use the costs 3 Incremental Revenue The decline in revenue from dropping Incremental Cost Savings The variable cost savings due to dropping The direct fixed cost savings due to dropping

4 How to Make Keep or Drop Decisions Use qualitative characteristics to assess 4 If the decline in revenue < incremental cost savings Drop the product/product line, unless qualitative characteristics impact the decision Do not drop the product/product line, unless qualitative characteristics impact the decision If the decline in revenue > incremental cost savings If the decline in revenue = incremental cost savings

5 Beware of Allocated Fixed Costs 5 Because not all costs will disappear when we allocate costs to products. Our allocations can make a segment look less profitable than it really is.  Dropping a product/service/line/segment that has a net loss often creates a bigger loss  Referred to as the Cost Allocation Death Spiral Why should we keep the ice cream segment? It shows a loss?

6 Keep or Drop Example 6 Take Outs has three product lines in its retail stores: snacks, salads, and sandwiches. The allocated fixed costs are unavoidable. Results of July follow: Demand of snacks is expected to increase by 10% if salads are dropped. Prepare an incremental analysis. SnacksSaladsSandwichesTotal Units sold8001,2002,4004,400 Revenue$49,600$52,800$67,200$169,600 Variable costs19,20026,40033,60079,200 Direct fixed costs10,00014,00013,00037,000 Allocated fixed costs16,00018,00016,00050,000 Operating income$4,400($5,600)$4,600$3,400

7 Keep or Drop Example cont. 7 Data reproduced: Incremental decline in salad revenue($52,800) Incremental variable cost savings - salads 26,400 Incremental direct fixed costs savings –salads 14,000 Incremental snack revenue (10% x $49,600) 4,960 Incremental variable costs –snacks (10% x $19,200) (1,920) Incremental decrease in profit if drop salads ($9,360) SnacksSaladsSandwichesTotal Units sold8001,2002,4004,400 Revenue$49,600$52,800$67,200$169,600 Variable costs19,20026,40033,60079,200 Direct fixed costs10,00014,00013,00037,000 Allocated fixed costs16,00018,00016,00050,000 Operating income$4,400($5,600)$4,600$3,400 Original profit +/- Change in profit = New profit New profit = $3,400 - $9,360 = $5,960 loss Original profit +/- Change in profit = New profit New profit = $3,400 - $9,360 = $5,960 loss

8 8 The End


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