
Fundamentals of Cost Accounting 3rd Edition by William N. Lanen, Shannon W. Anderson, Michael Maher
Edition 3ISBN: 0073527114
Fundamentals of Cost Accounting 3rd Edition by William N. Lanen, Shannon W. Anderson, Michael Maher
Edition 3ISBN: 0073527114Compare Current Cost to Historical Cost
Refer to the information in Exercise 14-29. In computing ROI, this division uses end-of-year asset values. Assume that all cash flows increase 10 percent at the end of each year. This has the following effect on the assets’ replacement cost and annual cash flows:
End of Year | Replacement Cost | Annual Cash Flow |
1 | $60,000,000 × 1.1 = $66,000,000 | $15,000,000 × 1.1 = $16,500,000 |
2 | $66,000,000 × 1.1 = $72,600,000 | $16,500,000×1.1 = $18,150,000 |
3 | Etc. | Etc. |
4 |
|
|
Depreciation is as follows:
Year | For the Year | “Accumulated” |
1 | $6,600,000 | $ 6,600,000 (= 10% × $66,000,000) |
2 | 7,260,000 | 14,520,000 (= 20% × 72,600,000) |
3 | 7,986,000 | 23,958,000 |
4 | 8,784,600 | 35,138,400 |
Note that “accumulated” depreciation is 10 percent of the gross book value of depreciable assets after one year, 20 percent after two years, and so forth.
Required
a. Compute ROI using historical cost, net book value.
b. Compute ROI using historical cost, gross book value.
c. Compute ROI using current cost, net book value.
d. Compute ROI using current cost, gross book value.
Step 1 of 7
The following information is given in the question:
1. Total assets invested (Gross Book value) are $60 million.
2. Salvage value of assets at the end of the 4th year are $36 million.
3. Annual operating cash flows are $15 million.
4. Annual depreciation is $6 million.
Step 2 of 7
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