H05. MAS03-CVPAnalysis
H05. MAS03-CVPAnalysis
COST
MANAGEMENT
A B R A H A M R A M O S, C P A
THE RELATIONSHIP
COST-VOLUME-
BETWEEN COSTS
VOLUME AND
PROFITS
PROFIT
ANALYSIS
INTRODUCTION
TO COST-VOLUME-PROFIT ANALYSIS
Cost-volume profit analysis is a tool than can be used for planning and decision-making. It is a systematic examination
of the relationships between costs, cost drivers/activity and profit.
The Cost-Volume-Profit Analysis (CVP Analysis) aims to answer the following questions:
1. How many units does the entity need to breakeven during the year?
2. How much will the net profit of the entity grow if additional units were to be produced?
3. What will be the new break even point when additional fixed costs are introduced?
It is very important to be able to determine the cost behavior in order to properly perform the CVP Analysis.
APPLICATION OF CVP ANALYSIS
The Application
of CVP
Types of
Type or product Marketing productive
Pricing policy
to produce or sell strategy facilities to
acquire
ELEMENTS OF CVP ANALYSIS
Elements of
CVP Analysis
Sales:
Variable cost Total Fixed
1. Selling price Sales Mix
2. Sales volume
per unit Costs
CLASSIFICATION OF COSTS UNDER CVP
All costs of the company, whether manufacturing, marketing and administrative expenses, are taken into account. For
CVP analysis, costs are classified only as either variable or fixed costs.
Variable costs are all costs that increase as more units are sold (DM, DL, VOH and variable selling and administrative).
Fixed costs are costs that remain the same in total regardless of the number of units produced or sold.
CVP analysis may be used to determine the number of units or sales volume to break-even. Break-even point (BEP) is
when total costs is equal to total revenue, thus there is neither profit nor loss. The BEP is where all fixed costs are
covered and any additional units add only variable costs. Thus, contribution margin above BEP will result to profit.
There are two ways to obtain the BEP.
1. Formula method = Operating income = Sales revenue – Variable costs – Fixed costs
2. Graphical method = Plot the sales/costs at the y-axis and the volume/units at the x-axis. The point where the
total revenue line meets the total cost line is the break-even point.
FORMULA METHOD
1. Break-even chart
GRAPHICAL METHOD
2. Profit-volume graph
SAMPLE COMPUTATION - BEP
SAMPLE COMPUTATION
1. BEP in units
Total fixed costs = 800,000 + 400,000 = 1,200,000
Selling price = 400
Variable costs = 220 (variable product costs) + 20 (400 x 5%; variable selling) = 240
The break-even point is the point where there is no income nor loss. Fixed costs equals the contribution margin.
TARGET PROFIT
Producing goods beyond the break-even point results to profit for the firm.
SAMPLE COMPUTATION – AFTER TAX
Further assume that Blazin-boards wants to earn $140,000 net income. Tax-rate is 30%
SAMPLE COMPUTATION
Here we introduce sales mix in the CVP analysis. An organization selling multiple products has their own relative
proportion of each type of product sold. This is known as the sales mix. The weighted average contribution
margin will be introduced to the equation. This is the average of the several products’ unit contribution margin, weighted
by the relative sales proportion of each product. Refer to the sample below:
Cheesecakes and Cookies are being sold in a 9:1 ratio. Selling price are P500 and P100, respectively. While variable
cost per unit are P240 and P36, respectively.
WA. Contribution margin per unit = (90% x 260) + (10% x 64) = P240.4
WA. Contribution margin percentage = (90% x 52%) + (10% x 64%) = 53.2%
MULTI-PRODUCT SETTING
An important question is can we just compute the unit contribution margin for each product instead of getting the
weighted average contribution margin? This is possible if there were no common fixed costs which are allocated to
each product line. Thus, we may instead view the break-even point equation as a single product after factoring in the
sales mix. Total fixed costs included common and direct.
1. BEP in units
Total fixed costs = 800,000 + 550,000 = 1,350,000
Sales mix = 4:1
Selling price = 400 (Regular); 600 (Deluxe)
Unit variable costs = 240 (Regular); 300 (Deluxe)
WA. CM/unit = (4/5x 160) + (1/5 x 300) = 188
2. BEP in sales
Total fixed costs = 800,000 + 550,000 = 1,350,000
Sales mix = 4:1
Selling price = 400 (Regular); 600 (Deluxe)
Unit variable costs = 240 (Regular); 300 (Deluxe)
WA. CM% = (4/5x 40%) + (1/5 x 50%) = 42%
An important assumption of the CVP analysis is that both sales and costs are known with certainty. But in actual
scenarios, this is rarely the case. Risk and uncertainty are a part of the business decision and must be considered.
The margin of safety is the difference between the current or budgeted sales revenue less its break-even sales
revenue. The safety margin gives management a feel for how close projected operations are to the organization’s
break-even point.
The operating leverage is concerned with the usage of fixed costs in an organization. Firms may decrease variable
costs per unit, causing contribution margin per unit to increase. The effect changes in sales on profitability increases.
The greater the fixed cost proportion, as compared to variable costs, will benefit the firm with greater increases in
profits as sales increases. Unfortunately, when sales decrease the organization will also suffer greater losses.
RISK AND UNCERTAINTY –
MARGIN OF SAFETY & OPERATING LEVERAGE
1. MOS in units
Total fixed costs = 800,000 + 400,000 = 1,200,000
Selling price = 400
Variable costs = 220 (variable product costs) + 20 (400 x 5%; variable selling) = 240
BEPunits = 1,200,000 / (400 – 240) = 7,500 units
Planned sales in units = 10,000
2. MOS in sales
Total fixed costs = 800,000 + 400,000 = 1,200,000
Selling price = 400
Variable costs = 220 (variable product costs) + 20 (400 x 5%; variable selling) = 240
BEPsales = 1,200,000 / (40%) = 3,000,000
Planned sales = 10,000 x 400 = 4,000,000
Change in Profit = 40% x 4 = 160% increase Change in Profit = 40% x 2 = 80% increase
Increase in profit = 125,000 x 1.6 = 200,000 Increase in profit = 100,000 x 0.8 = 80,000
New profit after increase in sales = 325,000 New profit after increase in sales = 180,000
COST-VOLUME-PROFIT
ANALYSIS THE END