ACCCOB3 - Notes :)
ACCCOB3 - Notes :)
Work of Management
● Planning
○ Establish goals → Specify how goals will be achieved → Develop budgets
● Controlling
○ Gathers feedback to ensure that plans are being followed
○ Feedback in the form of performance reports that compare actual results with the
budget are an essential part of the control function
● Decision Making
○ Involves making a selection among competing alternatives
○ What should we be selling? Who should we be serving?
● Management Accounting focuses on teaching measurement skills that managers use
to support planning, controlling, and decision making activities
Big Data
● Refers to large collections of data that are gathered from inside or outside a company to
provide opportunities for ongoing reporting and analysis
● The 5 V’s of Big Data
○ Variety — data formats in which information is stored
○ Volume — the continuously expanding quantity of data that companies must
gather, cleanse, and organize
○ Velocity — the rate at which data is received and acted on by organizations
○ Value — time and money organizations expand to analyze Big Data
○ Veracity — users expect their data to be accurate and trustworthy
Data Analytics
● Process of analyzing data with the aid of specialized system and software to draw
conclusions about the information they contain
● Managers often communicate the findings from their data analysis to others through the
use of data visualization techniques such as graphs, charts, maps, diagrams
● Can be used for descriptive, diagnostic, predictive and prescriptive purposes
Strategy
● A game plan that enables a company to attract customers by distinguishing itself
● Focal point of a company’s strategy = target customers
Manufacturing Costs
● Direct Materials — raw materials that go into the final product; costs that can be
conveniently traced to the finished product
○ Example: Seats for a commercial aircraft
● Direct Labor — labor costs that can be easily traced to individual units of product; also
known as touch labor
○ Example: Assembly-line workers at Toyota
● Manufacturing Overhead — all manufacturing costs except direct materials and direct
labor; are indirect costs because they cannot be directly traced
○ Also known as indirect manufacturing cost, factory overhead, etc.
○ Indirect Materials — raw materials; e.g. glue used to assemble a chair
○ Indirect Labor — janitors, maintenance workers, security guards
○ Includes costs such as depreciation, utility costs, property taxes, and insurance
○ Only indirect costs associated with operating the factory are included
● Conversion Cost — sum of direct labor and manufacturing overhead
○ Costs that are incurred to convert direct materials into finished products
Nonmanufacturing Costs
● Also often called selling, general, and administrative (SG&A)
● Selling Costs — costs incurred to secure customer orders and get the finished product
to the customer; also known as order-getting or order-filling
○ Includes advertising, shipping, travel and commissions, salaries, and costs of
finished goods warehouses
○ Direct Selling Costs — advertising campaign for a specific product
○ Indirect Selling Costs — salary of a marketing manager
● Administrative Costs — costs associated with the management of an organization
○ Includes executive compensation, accounting, legal counsel, public relation
○ General administration of the organization as a whole
○ Direct Administrative Costs — salary of an accounting manager in a specific
region
○ Indirect Costs — salary of a chief financial officer who oversees all regions with
respect to individual regions
Product Costs
● Costs involved in acquiring or making a product; also known as inventoriable costs
● “Attached” to a unit of product; stays attached to each unit of product as long as it
remains in inventory awaiting sale
● When sold, these costs are released from inventory as expenses (cost of goods sold)
● Includes direct materials, direct labor, and manufacturing overhead
● Manufacturing costs are recorded on the balance sheet
● Three Types of Manufacturing Product Costs
○ Raw Materials — any materials that go into the final product
○ Work in Process — only partially complete; require further work
○ Finished Goods — completed units of product that have not yet been sold
● Process of Costs
○ Direct Materials: Raw Materials → Work in Progress
○ Direct Labor & Manufacturing Costs: Work in Progress → Finished Goods
○ Finished Goods: Finished Goods → Cost of Good Sold (CoGS)
● Recorded as expenses in the period the products are sold
Period Costs
● Costs that aren’t product costs; selling and administrative expenses
● Not included as part of the cost of either purchased or manufactured goods
● Expensed on the income statement in the period in which they are incurred
Predicting Cost Behavior
● Cost behavior refers to how a cost reacts to changes in the level of activity
● Cost structure is the relative proportion of fixed, variable, and mixed costs in a business
Variable Cost
● Varies, in total, in direct proportion to changes in the level of activity
○ Example: Cost of goods sold, direct materials and labor, commissions, etc.
● Must be variable with respect to something; something = activity base
○ Activity Base — measure of whatever causes the incurrence of a variable cost;
referred to as a cost driver
■ Example: Direct labor-hours, units produced and sold, etc.
■ Assume that it is the total volume of goods and services
● Remains constant per unit; varies for the total
Fixed Cost
● Cost that remains constant, in total, regardless of changes in the level of activity
○ Example: depreciation, insurance, property taxes, rent, salaries
● The same unless influenced by some outside force
● Remains constant for the total; varies per unit
● Caution against expressing fixed costs on an average per unit basis; creates a false
impression that fixed costs are like variable costs
● Committed Fixed Costs — represent long-term costs that can’t be significantly reduced
even for short periods of time; real estate taxes, insurance, etc.
○ Remain largely unchanged in the short term; costs of restoration are likely to be
far greater than any short-run savings that might be realized
● Discretionary Fixed Costs — managed fixed costs; arise from annual decisions;
includes advertising costs, research, public relations, etc.
○ Can be cut for short periods of time with minimal damage to the long-run goals of
the organization
● Linearity Assumption and the Relevant Range
○ Fixed costs are not always linear
○ Relevant Range — range of activity wherein the assumption is that cost behavior
is said to be linear
Decision Making
● Relevant Costs & Benefits — should be considered in making decisions
● Irrelevant Costs & Benefits — should be ignored in decision making
● Differential Cost & Revenue
○ Differential Cost — incremental cost; always relevant costs; a future cost that
differs between any two alternatives
○ Differential Revenue — future revenue that differs between two choices
○ Similar to the economist’s marginal cost and marginal revenue concept
○ Can be either fixed or variable
● Opportunity Cost — the potential benefit that is given up when one alternative is
selected over another
○ Not usually found in accounting records
○ Are relevant costs that must be explicitly considered in every decision made
● Sunk Cost — cost that has already been incurred and that cannot be changed by any
decision made now or in the future
○ Are irrelevant costs and should be ignored
● Controllable Cost — can be influenced by the manager being evaluated
● Uncontrollable Cost — cannot be influenced by the manager being evaluated
● Value-added Cost — increases the value of products and services provided to the
company’s stakeholders,
● Non-value-added Cost — does not provide any benefit to the company’s stakeholders
2.2 Cost Classifications
External Reporting
● Job-order costing systems are used to create balance sheets and income statements
● Underapplied Overhead — when a company applies less overhead than what it actually
incurs
○ Adjustment for underapplied overhead increases the cost of goods sold and
decreases net income
● Overapplied Overhead — when a company applies more overhead than what it actually
incurs
○ Adjustment for overapplied overhead decreases the costs of good sold and
increases net income
● Subsidiary Ledger — when all job cost sheets are collectively viewed
● Job-order sheets provide an underlying set of financial reports that explain what specific
jobs comprises the amounts in the balance sheet and income statement
4.0 CVP Relationships
Cost-Volume-Profit Analysis
● Assists managers in making important decisions
● Primary purpose is to estimate how profits are affected by five factors: selling price,
sales volume, unit variable costs, total fixed costs, and mix of products sold
● Managers typically adopt the following assumptions:
○ Selling price is constant
○ Costs are linear and can be accurately divided into fixed and variable
○ In multiproduct companies, the mix of products sold remains constant
● The Contribution Income Statement is helpful in judging the impact on profits of changes
in selling price, cost, or volume
○ Emphasis is on cost behavior
● Contribution Margin (CM) is used first to cover fixed expenses
○ Any remaining CM contributes to the net operating income
● The $200 tells us that if the firm sells an additional bicycle, $200 will be the additional
CM or profit generated to cover fixed expenses and profit
● Each month, the company must generate at least $80,000 in the total CM to break-even
● 400 units a month is the break-even point
● If the company sells one more bike (401 bikes), operating income will increase by $200
● Net Operating Income = Units x Contribution margin
CVP Graph
● Three key figures: Fixed expenses, total expenses, and sales
CM Ratio
● CM Ratio = Contribution margin / Sales
● CM Ratio = Contribution margin per unit / Selling price per unit
● If the CM Ratio is 40%, then a $1 increase in sales results in a total CM increase of 40c
● Variable Expense Ratio = Variable expenses / Sales
● CM Ratio = 1 - Variable expense ratio
● Profit = (CM ratio x Sales) - Fixed expense
Break-even Analysis
● The Equation Method
○ Profit = Unit CM ratio x Q - Fixed expense
■ Wherein Profit = 0
● The Formula Method
○ Unit Sales to Break-even = Fixed Expenses / Unit CM
○ Dollar Sales to Break-even = Fixed Expenses / CM Ratio
Margin of Safety
● Excess of budgeted or actual sales dollars over the break-even volume of sales dollars
● Amount by which sales can drop before losses are incurred
● Higher margin of safety = lower risk of not breaking even
● Margin of Safety in Dollars = Total sales - Break-even sales
○ Can also be expressed in percentage and units
Break-even Analysis
● CM Ratio = Contribution margin / Sales
● Break-even Point = Traceable fixed expenses + Common fixed expenses / CM ratio
Standards
● Benchmarks or norms used for measuring performance
● Price Standards — specify how much should be paid for each unit of input
● Quantity Standards — specific how much of an input should be used to make a product
● Setting Direct Materials Standards
○ Standard Price per Unit — final, delivered cost of materials, net of discounts
○ Standard Quantity per Unit — summarized in a Bill of Materials
● Setting Direct Labor Standards
○ Standard Rate per Hour — often a single rate; reflects mix of wages earned
○ Standard Hours per Unit — time and motion studies for each labor operation
● Setting Variable MO Standards
○ Price Standard — rate is the variable portion of the POHR
○ Quantity Standard — quantity is the activity in the allocation base for POH
● Standard Cost Card
Variances
● Standard costs per unit can be used to compute activity and spending variances
● Spending variances become more useful by breaking them down into price and quantity
variances
● General Model for Variance Analysis
● Price and Quantity standards are determined separately
○ The purchasing manager is responsible for raw material purchases, while the
production manager is responsible for the quantity used
○ Buying and using activities occur at different times
■ Raw materials may be held in inventory for a long period
● Types of Price Variance
○ Materials Price Variance
○ Labor Rate Variance
○ VOH Rate Variance
● Types of Quantity Variance
○ Materials Quantity Variance
○ Labor Efficiency Variance
○ VOH Efficiency Variance
Variance Analysis
● Actual Quantity — the amount of direct materials, direct labor, and variable MO used
● Standard Quantity — standard quantity allowed for the actual output of the period
● Actual Price — amount actually paid for the input used
● Standard Price — amount that should’ve been paid for the input used
● Material Price Variance (MPV) = (AQ x AP) - (AQ x SP) or AQ(AP - SP)
● Material Quantity Variance (MQV) = (AQ x SP) - (SQ x SP) or SP(AQ - SQ)
If the quantity variance is greater than the price variance, then the spending variance is
unfavorable.
If the efficiency variance is greater than the rate variance, then the spending variance is
favorable.
Add the rate variance and efficiency variance to get the spending variance. If they are
both favorable, then the spending variance is also favorable.
Decentralized Organizations
● Advantages
○ Top management are free to concentrate on strategy
○ Lower-level managers gain experience in decision-making, have access to better
information, and can respond quickly to customers; first-class information
○ Decision-making authority leads to job satisfaction
● Disadvantages
○ Lower-level managers may make decisions without seeing the big picture and
may have objectives not aligned to the organization;s
○ Difficult to spread innovative ideas
○ Lack coordination among autonomous managers
○ Can easily be remedied by the balanced scorecard, design performance
evaluation, effective communication, periodic team building
Responsibility Accounting
● Managers are held responsible only for those items they can control to a significant
extent
● Responsibility Center — organization whose manager has control over cost, profit, and
investments
● Cost Centers — segment whose manager has control over costs
● Profit Center — segment whose manager has control over both costs and revenues
● Investment Center — segment whose manager has control over costs, revenues, and
investments in operating assets
Criticisms of ROI
● Without a balanced scorecard, management may not know how to increase ROI
● Managers often inherit many committed costs which they have no control over
● Managers who evaluate on ROI may reject profitable investment opportunities
Residual Income
● Rate of Return (RoR) — net gain or loss of an investment over a specified time period
● Differs from ROI in that it measures net operating income earned less than the minimum
required return on average operating assets
○ ROI measures net operating income earned relative to the investment in
average operating assets
● Residual Income = Net Income - (Ave. Operating Assets x Min. Required RoR)
● Encourages managers to make profitable investments that would otherwise be rejected
using ROI
Transfer Price
● Price charged when one segment of a company provides goods or services to another
segment of the company
● Objective is to motivate managers to act in the best interests of the firm
● Three Primary Approaches
○ Negotiated transfer prices
○ Set transfer prices at cost using either variable cost or full (absorption) cost
○ Transfers at market price
● If there are sufficient idle crates, the price range would be $15 - $20
○ West Coast > $15, whereas Grocery Mart < $20
● If there are no idle crates, there is no acceptable range
○ West Coast > $25, whereas Grocery Mart < $20
● If there are 500 idle crates, then there is a price range of $17.5 - $20
○ West Coast > $17.5, whereas Grocery Mart < $20
● Evaluation of Transfer Prices
○ If a transfer within a company results in higher profits for the company, there is
always a range of transfer prices wherein both divisions would benefit
● If managers are pitted against each other, a noncooperative atmosphere is guaranteed
● Given the disputes that often follows, most companies rely on other means of setting
transfer prices
Case: Sipco
● Given: $0.6/machine hour, $200,000 fixed costs
Balanced Scorecard
● Used to help management translate its strategy into performance measures
● Performance measures include financial, customer, internal business processes, and
learning and growth
● Financial
○ Includes sales, profitability ratios, cash flows, profits, trend performance, and
market performance
● Customer
○ Customer satisfaction, acquisition and retention, customer lifetime value, loyalty
and customer service, and value proposition
● Internal Business Processes
○ Innovation, product and service quality, agility, cost and delivery times, etc.
● Learning and Growth
○ May include recruitment, retention rates, job satisfaction, compensation and
advancement opportunities, skill development, etc.
● Financial vs. Nonfinancial Measures
○ This framework rejects the notion that improving process-oriented measures
automatically leads to financial success
○ Including a financial perspective keeps organizations accountable for translating
improvements in nonfinancial performance to bottom-line results
○ If favorable, nonfinancial trends do not translate to financial results, the balanced
scorecard is designed to force the organization to re-examine its strategies
○ The new machine costs $3,000 but saves $3 per unit in direct labor
○ Here, we see a $12,000 increase in net operating income
● Example: Shortened Version
○ If the number is negative, it means that it’s best to keep the product line
○ If the number is positive, it means that it’s best to drop the product line
● Comparative Income Approach
○ Avoidable costs include direct materials and labor, variable overhead, and salary
○ Sunk costs include the depreciation of equipment
○ Allocated overhead costs are common to all products; would be unchanged
○ Here, we can see it is cheaper to make the product internally
● Opportunity costs are not actual cash outlays; not recorded formally
Special Orders
● Special Orders — one-time orders that aren’t considered in normal operations
● Only the incremental costs and benefits are relevant
○ Existing fixed manufacturing overhead costs would not be affected by the order
● Example: Jet Inc.’s Special Order
Constrained Resource
Managing Constraints
● Relaxing or Elevating the Constraint — increase the capacity of a bottleneck
● Can be done by:
○ Working overtime on the bottleneck
○ Subcontracting some of the processing
○ Investing in additional machines
○ Shifting workers from non-bottleneck to bottleneck
○ Focusing business process improvement efforts
○ Reducing defective units processed
Activity-Based Costing
● Activity-Based Costing can be used to help identify potentially relevant costs
● Managers should exercise caution against reading more into this traceability
● Tendency to assume that if a cost is traceable to a segment, it is automatically avoidable