2024 – 1 Which one of the following assets is generally the most liquid inventory buildings accounts receivable equipment patents 2

FIN 571 WEEK 2 CONNECT PROBLEMS – 2024

– 

 1.

 

 

Which one of the following assets is generally the most liquid?

inventory

buildings

accounts receivable

equipment

patents

 2.

 

 

It is easier to evaluate a firm using its financial statements when the firm:

is a conglomerate.

is global in nature.

uses the same accounting procedures as other firms in its industry.

has a different fiscal year than other firms in its industry.

tends to have one-time events such as asset sales and property acquisitions.

 3.

 

 

Which one of the following is a current liability?

amount due to a supplier in 18 months

debt payable to a mortgage company in nine months

estimated taxes just paid

loan payment due in 13 months

amount due from a customer in 30 days

 

 4.

Award: 1 out of 2.00 points

 

 

 

During 2015, Rainbow Umbrella Corp. had sales of $740,000. Cost of goods sold, administrative and selling expenses, and depreciation expenses were $550,000, $90,000, and $95,000, respectively. In addition, the company had an interest expense of $94,000 and a tax rate of 35 percent. (Ignore any tax loss carryback or carryforward provisions.)

  

a.

What is the company’s net income for 2015? (Do not round intermediate calculations. A negative answer should be indicated by a minus sign.)

    

  Net income

$ 

     

b.

What is its operating cash flow? (Do not round intermediate calculations.)

     

  Operating cash flow

$ 

 


 

 

During 2015, Rainbow Umbrella Corp. had sales of $740,000. Cost of goods sold, administrative and selling expenses, and depreciation expenses were $550,000, $90,000, and $95,000, respectively. In addition, the company had an interest expense of $94,000 and a tax rate of 35 percent. (Ignore any tax loss carryback or carryforward provisions.)

  

a.

What is the company’s net income for 2015? (Do not round intermediate calculations. A negative answer should be indicated by a minus sign.)

    

   

     

b.

What is its operating cash flow? (Do not round intermediate calculations.)

      

 5.

 

 

 

Which one of these is a correct definition?

Net working capital equals current assets plus current liabilities.

Current liabilities are debts that must be repaid in 18 months or less.

Current assets are assets with short lives, such as inventory.

Long-term debt is defined as a residual claim on a firm’s assets.

Tangible assets are fixed assets such as patents.

6.

Award: 10 out of 10.00 points

 

 

 

Sankey, Inc., has current assets of $5,125, net fixed assets of $25,600, current liabilities of $4,500, and long-term debt of $9,900. (Do not round intermediate calculations.)

 

What is the value of the shareholders’ equity account for this firm?

 

How much is net working capital?

 

  Net working capital

 


 

 

Sankey, Inc., has current assets of $5,125, net fixed assets of $25,600, current liabilities of $4,500, and long-term debt of $9,900. (Do not round intermediate calculations.)

 

What is the value of the shareholders’ equity account for this firm?

 

  Shareholders’ equity

$   

 

How much is net working capital?

 

  Net working capital

$   


 

 

 7.

 

 

 

Shelton, Inc., has sales of $390,000, costs of $178,000, depreciation expense of $43,000, interest expense of $24,000, and a tax rate of 40 percent. (Do not round intermediate calculations.)

  

What is the net income for the firm?

 

 8.

 

 

 

During the year, the Senbet Discount Tire Company had gross sales of $1.25 million. The firm’s cost of goods sold and selling expenses were $544,000 and $234,000, respectively. The firm also had notes payable of $990,000. These notes carried an interest rate of 6 percent. Depreciation was $149,000. The firm’s tax rate was 30 percent.

 

a.

What was the firm’s net income? (Do not round intermediate calculations. Enter your answer in dollars, not millions of dollars, e.g., 1,234,567. Round your answer to the nearest whole number, e.g., 32.)

 

  Net income

 

 

b.

What was the firm’s operating cash flow? (Do not round intermediate calculations. Enter your answer in dollars, not millions of dollars, e.g., 1,234,567. Round your answer to the nearest whole number, e.g., 32.)

 

  Operating cash flow

 


 

References

WorksheetSection: 2.2 The Income StatementSection: 2.5 Cash Flow of the Firm


 

During the year, the Senbet Discount Tire Company had gross sales of $1.25 million. The firm’s cost of goods sold and selling expenses were $544,000 and $234,000, respectively. The firm also had notes payable of $990,000. These notes carried an interest rate of 6 percent. Depreciation was $149,000. The firm’s tax rate was 30 percent.

 

a.

What was the firm’s net income? (Do not round intermediate calculations. Enter your answer in dollars, not millions of dollars, e.g., 1,234,567. Round your answer to the nearest whole number, e.g., 32.)

 

  Net income

$   

 

b.

What was the firm’s operating cash flow? (Do not round intermediate calculations. Enter your answer in dollars, not millions of dollars, e.g., 1,234,567. Round your answer to the nearest whole number, e.g., 32.)

 

  Operating cash flow

$   


 


 

 9.

 

 

 

Use the following information for Ingersoll, Inc., (assume the tax rate is 40 percent):

  

 

 

2014

 

2015

  Sales

 $

8,335  

 $

8,909  

  Depreciation

 

1,175  

 

1,176  

  Cost of goods sold

 

2,746  

 

3,110  

  Other expenses

 

689  

 

584  

  Interest

 

575  

 

653  

  Cash

 

4,159  

 

5,253  

  Accounts receivable

 

5,489  

 

6,177  

  Short-term notes payable

 

844  

 

796  

  Long-term debt

 

14,010  

 

16,550  

  Net fixed assets

 

34,955  

 

35,877  

  Accounts payable

 

4,416  

 

4,235  

  Inventory

 

9,720  

 

9,988  

  Dividends

 

1,006  

 

1,101  


  

Prepare an income statement for this company for 2014 and 2015. (Do not round intermediate calculations. Round your answers to 2 decimal places, e.g., 32.16.)

             

 

             

 

             

 

             

 

             
   


 

Use the following information for Ingersoll, Inc., (assume the tax rate is 40 percent):

  

 

 

2014

 

2015

  Sales

 $

8,335  

 $

8,909  

  Depreciation

 

1,175  

 

1,176  

  Cost of goods sold

 

2,746  

 

3,110  

  Other expenses

 

689  

 

584  

  Interest

 

575  

 

653  

  Cash

 

4,159  

 

5,253  

  Accounts receivable

 

5,489  

 

6,177  

  Short-term notes payable

 

844  

 

796  

  Long-term debt

 

14,010  

 

16,550  

  Net fixed assets

 

34,955  

 

35,877  

  Accounts payable

 

4,416  

 

4,235  

  Inventory

 

9,720  

 

9,988  

  Dividends

 

1,006  

 

1,101  


  

Prepare an income statement for this company for 2014 and 2015. (Do not round intermediate calculations. Round your answers to 2 decimal places, e.g., 32.16.)

     

Prepare the balance sheet for this company for 2014 and 2015. (Do not round intermediate calculations. Be sure to list the accounts in order of their liquidity.)

  

 
             
             
             
             
             
             
             
             
             
             
             
             
             
             
             
             
             
             
             
             
             
   


 

 10.

 

 

 

The total asset turnover ratio measures the amount of:

total assets needed for every $1 of sales.

sales generated by every $1 in total assets.

fixed assets required for every $1 of sales.

net income generated by every $1 in total assets.

net income than can be generated by every $1 of fixed assets.

 

11.

 

 

 

Al’s Sport Store has sales of $3,190, costs of goods sold of $2,030, inventory of $548, and accounts receivable of $424. How many days, on average, does it take the firm to sell its inventory assuming that all sales are on credit?

97.2

111.1

62.7

109.0

98.5

Inventory turnover = $2,030/$548 = 3.7044 Days in inventory = 365/3.7044 = 98.53 days

12.

 

 

 

A firm has total debt of $1,090 and a debt-equity ratio of .32. What is the value of the total assets?

$4,496

$1,439

$3,406

$3,498

$3,200

Total equity = $1,090 / .32 = $3,406

Total assets = $1,090 + $3,406= $4,496

 13.

 

 

Ratios that measure a firm’s ability to pay its bills over the short run without undue stress are known as:

asset management ratios.

long-term solvency measures.

liquidity measures.

profitability ratios.

market value ratios.

 14.

 

 

 

The debt-equity ratio is measured as:

total equity divided by long-term debt.

total equity divided by total debt.

total debt divided by total equity.

long-term debt divided by total equity.

total assets minus total debt, divided by total equity.

 15.

 

 

 

The Purple Martin has annual sales of $4,800, total debt of $1,210, total equity of $2,500, and a profit margin of 7 percent. What is the return on assets?

7.00 percent

9.06 percent

27.77 percent

13.44 percent

11.74 percent

16.

 

 

 

Ratios that measure how efficiently a firm’s management uses its assets and equity to generate bottom line net income are known as _______ ratios.

asset management

long-term solvency

short-term solvency

profitability

market value

 17.

 

 

 

Which statement expresses all accounts as a percentage of total assets?

pro forma balance sheet

common-size income statement

statement of cash flows

pro forma income statement

common-size balance sheet

18.

 

 

 

A firm has a total debt ratio of .47. This means the firm has 47 cents in debt for every:

$1 in total equity.

$.53 in total assets.

$1 in current assets.

$.53 in total equity.

$1 in fixed assets.

 19.

 

 

 

The quick ratio is measured as:

current assets divided by current liabilities.

cash on hand plus current liabilities, divided by current assets.

current liabilities divided by current assets, plus inventory.

current assets minus inventory, divided by current liabilities.

current assets minus inventory minus current liabilities.

20.

 

 

 

The current ratio is measured as:

current assets minus current liabilities.

current assets divided by current liabilities.

current liabilities minus inventory, divided by current assets.

cash on hand divided by current liabilities.

current liabilities divided by current assets.

 21.

 

 

 

The higher the inventory turnover, the:

less time inventory items remain on the shelf.

higher the inventory as a percentage of total assets.

longer it takes a firm to sell its inventory.

greater the amount of inventory held by a firm.

lesser the amount of inventory held by a firm.

 22.

 

 

 

The receivables turnover ratio is measured as:

sales plus accounts receivable.

sales divided by accounts receivable.

sales minus accounts receivable, divided by sales.

accounts receivable times sales.

accounts receivable divided by sales.

References

 23.

 

 

 

Galaxy United, Inc.
2009 Income Statement
($ in millions)  

  Net sales

$8,550     

  Less: Cost of goods sold

7,180     

  Less: Depreciation

    400     

  Earnings before interest and taxes

970     

  Less: Interest paid

      83     

  Taxable Income

887     

  Less: Taxes

    310     

  Net income

$   576     

 

  Galaxy United, Inc.
2008 and 2009 Balance Sheets
($ in millions)  

 

2008

2009

 

 

2008

2009

  Cash

$     130     

$   150      

 

  Accounts payable

 $1,110     

  $1,150    

  Accounts rec.

940     

770      

 

  Long-term debt

    1,000     

    1,155    

  Inventory

1,470     

1,520      

 

  Common stock

$3,140     

$2,940    

  Sub-total

$2,540     

$2,440      

 

  Retained earnings

    520     

795    

  Net fixed assets

3,230     

3,600      

 

 

 

 

  Total assets

$5,770     

$6,040      

 

  Total liab. & equity

$5,770    

$6,040    


What is the return on equity for 2009?

rev: 01_14_2016_QC_CS-37830

10 percent

13 percent

16 percent

18 percent

15 percent

 24.

 

 

 

 

If Wilkinson, Inc., has an equity multiplier of 1.57, total asset turnover of 1.7, and a profit margin of 6.7 percent, what is its ROE? (Do not round intermediate calculations and enter your answer as a percent rounded to 2 decimal places, e.g., 32.16.)

  

  ROE

 


 

References


 

If Wilkinson, Inc., has an equity multiplier of 1.57, total asset turnover of 1.7, and a profit margin of 6.7 percent, what is its ROE? (Do not round intermediate calculations and enter your answer as a percent rounded to 2 decimal places, e.g., 32.16.)

  

  ROE

 %  


 

 25.

 

 

The financial ratio measured as net income divided by sales is known as the firm’s:

profit margin.

return on assets.

return on equity.

asset turnover.

earnings before interest and taxes.

 26.

 

 

The financial ratio that measures the accounting profit per dollar of book equity is referred to as the:

profit margin.

price-earnings ratio.

return on equity.

equity turnover.

market profit-to-book ratio.

 27.

 

 

Puffy’s Pastries generates five cents of net income for every $1 in equity. Thus, Puffy’s has _______ of 5 percent.

a return on assets

a profit margin

a return on equity

an EV multiple

a price-earnings ratio

 28.

 

 

If stockholders want to know how much profit the firm is making on their entire investment in that firm, the stockholders should refer to the:

profit margin.

return on assets.

return on equity.

equity multiplier.

earnings per share.

 29.

 

 

The most effective method of directly evaluating the financial performance of a firm is to compare the financial ratios of the firm to:

the firm?s ratios from prior time periods and to the ratios of firms with similar operations.

the average ratios of all firms within the same country over a period of time.

those of other firms located in the same geographic area that are similarly sized.

the average ratios of the firm?s international peer group.

those of the largest conglomerate that has operations in the same industry as the firm.

 30.

 

 

Which one of these equations is an accurate expression of the balance sheet?

Assets ? Liabilities −Stockholders? equity

Stockholders? equity ? Assets + Liabilities

Liabilities ? Stockholders? equity −Assets

Assets ? Stockholders? equity −Liabilities

Stockholders? equity ? Assets −Liabilities

 31.

 

 

The financial statement summarizing a firm’s accounting performance over a period of time is the:

income statement.

balance sheet.

statement of cash flows.

tax reconciliation statement.

statement of equity

 

 

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