Title: Review
1Review
- Unit contribution, margin and markup
- Fixed vs. variable costs
- Problems with cost-plus pricing (e.g., Death
Spiral).
2Problems with Cost-plus Pricing
- Cost-plus pricing will lead to over-pricing in a
weak market. - Cost-plus pricing will lead to under-pricing in a
strong market.
3(No Transcript)
4Mini Case Study Self-Expedited Death Spiral
Year Stores
1985 1
1987 5
1992 37
1996 850
1999 950
2003 2000
2005 4700
- In 2007 Movie Gallery changed the 7-day rental
period to 5-day. - The 7-day option was retained, at an additional
fee. - In the same year Movie Gallery filed for
bankruptcy protection and stocks dropped below
1.
5What Could Have MG Done?
6Pricing Based on Markup / Margin
A retailer buys a sofa for 1000. What will be
the retailers selling price if it decides to go
with (a) 30 markup and (b) 30 margin?
- Markup
- The markup is 100030300
- Selling price 3000 300 3300
- Margin
- Selling price p, say.
- The is p30/100
- p 30003p/10. So, p 4285.7
7Chapter 9Financial Analysis
8Types of BEP
Type II BEP of a fixed-cost investment
Type I BEP of a price change
BEP Analysis
Type III BEP of the change in variable cost
Type IV BEP of Cannibalization
9Ask The Right Questions
- The cost question in pricing is not
- What prices do we need to cover costs and achieve
our profit objectives? - The cost questions in pricing are
- How much sales gain would be required to profit
from a price cut? - How much sales loss would be tolerable to profit
from a price increase? - What costs can we afford to incur and still earn
a profit?
10Example Type I BEP
PortaShelf is considering either raising or
lowering their current price by 20.The company
would like to know how many units would have to
be sold under these price changes to maintain
the current profit margin of 10.
Current Price
Option 1
Option 2
PortaShelf 100
80 120
11Example Type I BEP
Option 1 Decrease price by 20 to 80
Price 80 Variable unit cost (marginal cost)
60 Markup 80 - 60 20 Therefore, each
unit sold currently contributes 20 to fixed cost
recovery and profit. Say that fixed costs
(plant, administration) are 30 million. Thus,
twice as many units must be produced to maintain
the same profit level.
Profit 2 million units x 80 (2 million
units x 60) 30 million
(total revenue)
(variable cost)
(fixed cost)
10 million
12Example Type I BEP
Option 1
A 20 reduction in price reduces the unit
contribution by 50 and requires that unit
sales double to achieve the current level
of profitability.
Questions Does PortaShelf have the operating
capacity to double capacity? If the answer is
no, then both variable unit costs and fixed costs
will likelyincrease as PortaShelf
13Example Type I BEP
Option 2 Increase price by 20 to 120
Price 120 Variable unit cost (marginal cost)
60 Markup 120 - 60 60 Therefore, each
unit sold currently contributes 60 to fixed cost
recovery and profit. Say that fixed costs
(plant, administration) are 30 million. Thus,
production can be reduced by about 33 in order
to maintain the current profit level.
Profit 667,000 units x 120 (667,000 units
x 60) 30 million
(total revenue)
(variable cost)
(fixed cost)
10 million
14Example Type I BEP
Option 2
A 20 increase in price increases the markup by
33and requires that unit sales be only 2/3rds
the current amount to maintain the current level
of profitability.
Depending on the organization of their
operations, PortaShelf may notrequire various
cost items that contribute to either their
variable or fixedcosts. For example, they may be
able to
15How to get the percentage of need sales volume
16Total, Variable, and Fixed Costs
17Type II BEP analysis chart for a picture frame
store
18Formulas for Type II BEP Analysis
In Units
Break-Even Point
In Dollars
1 -
19Formulas for Type II BEP Analysis
In Units
Break-Even Point
20Example Type II BEP in Units
Practice
- Leeds Manufacturing sells bookcases for 100
each. They have variable costs of 50. They
want to build a new production line with total
fixed cost (TFC)of 200,000. What will be the
break-even point(BEP) in units to cover this new
line? - BEP TFC / (Unit Price Unit Variable Cost)
21Example Type II BEP in dollars?
Practice
- Sun Manufacturing sells bookcases at a price of
100 a piece. - Variable costs per unit are 50.
- They want to build a new production line with a
fixed cost of 200,000. What will be the
break-even point (BEP) in to cover this new
line?
22Formula for Type II BEP Analysis
In Dollars
Break-Even Point
1 -
23Example Type II BEP in Dollars
BEP ()
24Example Type II BEP in Dollars
Practice
- Leeds Manufacturing sells bookcases. They want to
build a new production line which will cost
200,000 and produce 4,000 new bookcases per
year. If variable cost per unit is 50 dollars,
and demand is virtually unlimited, how much must
they charge for each bookcase if they want to
breakeven in the first year?
25Practice
Example Type II BEP in dollars
- Sun Manufacturing sells bookcases at a price of
100 a piece. - Variable costs per unit are 50.
- They want to build a new production line with a
fixed cost of 200,000. What will be the
break-even point (BEP) in to cover this new
line?
26Example Type III BEP
- Sun Manufacturing sells bookcases at a price of
100 a piece. - Variable costs per unit are 50.
- Suppose that the unit variable costs have changed
to 60, what will be the percentage increase in
sales volume in order to make the profit remains
the same?
27Formula for Type III BEP Analysis
Break-Even Point
28Solution
- Margin at the old unit variable cost is 50
- Margin at the new unit variable cost is 40
BEP
- To make sure the profit remains the same, the
sales volume has to go up by 25.
29Example Type IV BEP
- Sun Manufacturing sells bookcases at a price of
100 a piece. - Variable costs per unit are 50.
- Suppose that the company is considering introduce
a new brand that sells 120 and costs 60 each,
what will be the percentage of sales for the new
brand that is coming from the existing brand, so
that the profit remains the same?
30Formula for Type IV BEP Analysis
Break-Even Rate (
)
31Solution
- Margin of the existing product is 50
- Margin of the new product is 60
- To make sure the profit remains the same, the new
product can take up to 83.3 of the market share
from the existing product.
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