Lecture 4
Lecture 4
THEORY
Monitoring the enterprise
business performance and ABC
ASSETS LIABILITIES
ASSETS (A) SOURCES OF ASSETS (L)
• Current assets • equity (E)
• Fixed assets • debts (D)
∆A ∆E
increase of A for profit or increase E for profit or
reduction for loss reduction for loss
Financial flow statement
is a financial statement that shows financial inflows and outflows
(changes in financial assets) in a certain period (usually in
one year).
INFLOWS OUTLFOWS
Increase in financial resources*: Reduction in financial resources*:
due to business (paid sales) due to the reduction of liabilities,
due to new firm debts (financing) e.g., debt repayment (de-financing)
due to the reduction of the non- due to business investment, e.g.,
Receipts:
mean an increase in the money balance in the enterprise's cash
register or on business account;
are a positive element of money flow.
Financial inflows:
increase the enterprise's financial resources;
are a positive element of the financial flow associated with the
balance sheet.
financial inflows occur due to:
business operation (paid sales)
increases of liabilities (financing),
the reduction of the non-monetary part of assets
(disinvestment).
Expenses:
are a negative element of profit and loss flows (income statement);
they contain only the costs contained in the sold products/services.
Payments:
a negative element of money flow that reduces the balance in a
business (bank) account or in the cash register.
Financial outflows:
reduction of the enterprise's financial resources;
is a negative element of the financial flow associated with the balance
sheet. It is caused by:
- de-financing (reduction of liabilities: repayment of debts or investments of owners);
- investments (increase in non-monetary assets: purchase of inventories or fixed
assets).
Costs:
monetary value of consumed factors of production.
Consumption of inputs:
physically (non-monetary) expressed consumption of production
factors in the production process
Define the basic types of profit or loss.
Profit (difference between higher revenues and lower costs from
sold products and services: expenses):
profit from ordinary activities
operating profit (revenues from sales + possible subsidies and
the like - purchase value or costs of sold quantities - costs of
sales and administration)
profit from financing (revenues from financing - expenses for
financing)
extraordinary profit (extraordinary revenues - extraordinary
expenses).
Net profit (profit less income taxes and other taxes). Scheduled:
based on work (on employee profit shares) and
on the basis of capital (dividends, on the increase of share
capital, on the formation of reserves, on the undistributed
part of net profit).
Variable
costs
Revenue Fixed Total
s costs contributi
Profit on margin
Gross profit
Production
costs
Revenu Non-production Gross
es costs profit
Profit
The difference in price
Purchase value of
Revenue merchandise
s Trading costs Differenc
Profit e in
price
Profit increased for financing
expenses
REVENUES EXPENSES
EXTRAORDINARY EXTRAORDINARY
ORDINARY REVENUES REVENUES ORDINARY EXPENSES EXPENSES
The more important product for the firm is the one that
contributes more to the business performance and uses less
resources of a an enterprise.
ABC method is a methods for choosing production-sales plan
(or product mix) by the process of breaking down business
components according to their importance for the firm. It
belongs to linear programming methods.
The final result of the ABC method is the list of the quantities of
each particular product (the product mix) that an enterprise should
produce and sell in order to maximize profit.
ΣCPK=79.00
5.500 0ΣTCB
For the last product B 1.000 hours are left, which means that we could produce -FC = 24.000
with the remaining hours 250 units of product B only (1.000/4). π = 55.000
b) What if 6.500 working hours were availabe?
SOLUTION:
450 units of the last (B) product can now be produced. As a result, total
contribution margin increased for B as well as does the profit.
Required Production Market
TCB (€) =
hours per P AVC constraint constr. Planned Required
Product product (€) (€) (units) (units) production hours = (P-AVC)Q
C 10 80 20 620 150 150 1.500 9.000
A 6 180 60 500 1.500 500 3.000 60.000
B 4 80 40 450 900 // 450
500 // 1.800
2.000 18.000
6.500 ΣTCB=87.000
-FC = 24.000
Π = 63.000
For the last product B 2.000 hours are left, which means that we could produce 500 units of
product B (2.000/4) with the remaining hours.
However, we plan 450 units of product B only as allowed by the strictest (in this case
production) constraint, although we could produce 500 units considering the number of
hours of work left for B.
As a result, we only spend 450 x 4 = 1.800 hours for product B, which means that 2.000-
1.800 = 200 hours are unused. Profit is increased, because we can use full production
capacity in case of product B, which was not possible in the previous case.
Methods of analysing of
enterprise business
performance
Method of decomposition or analysis (search for the
smallest elements of observation)
* 100