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52 MCQ Walk Manufacturing gathered the following data

Jul 10th, 2013
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  2. Download: http://solutionzip.com/downloads/52-mcq-walk-manufacturing-gathered-the-following-data/
  3. Question 1
  4. 1.
  5. Walk Manufacturing gathered the following data about the three products that it produces:
  6. Product Present Sales Value Estimated Additional
  7. Processing Costs Estimated Sales
  8. if Processed Further
  9. A $24,000 $16,000 $42,000
  10. B $28,000 $10,000 $36,000
  11. C $22,000 $6,000 $32,000
  12. Which of the products should not be processed further?
  13. Answer
  14. Product A
  15. Product B
  16. Product C
  17. Products A and C
  18. 2 points
  19. Question 2
  20. 1.
  21. Cara Industries incurred the following costs for 50,000 units:
  22. Variable Costs $90,000
  23. Fixed Costs $120,000
  24. Cara has received a special order from a foreign company for 5,000 units. There is sufficient capacity to fill the order without jeopardizing regular sales. Filling the order will require spending an additional $4,250 for shipping.
  25. If Cara wants to earn $4,000 on the order, what should the unit price be?
  26. Answer
  27. $1.65
  28. $5.85
  29. $2.60
  30. $3.45
  31. 2 points
  32. Question 3
  33. 1.
  34. Opportunity cost is usually
  35. Answer
  36. a standard cost.
  37. a potential benefit.
  38. a sunk cost.
  39. included as part of cost of goods sold.
  40. 2 points
  41. Question 4
  42. 1.
  43. It costs Ross Co. $24 of variable and $10 of fixed costs to produce one bathroom scale which normally sells for $70. A foreign wholesaler offers to purchase 2,000 scales at $30 each. Ross would incur special shipping costs of $2 per scale if the order were accepted. Ross has sufficient unused capacity to produce the 2,000 scales. If the special order is accepted, what will be the effect on net income?
  44. Answer
  45. $8,000 increase
  46. $8,000 decrease
  47. $12,000 decrease
  48. $60,000 increase
  49. 2 points
  50. Question 5
  51. 1.
  52. Brave Industries is considering buying a machine for $180,000 with an estimated life of ten years and no salvage value. The straight-line method of depreciation will be used. The machine is expected to generate net income of $12,000 each year. The cash payback on this investment is
  53. Answer
  54. 15 years.
  55. 10 years.
  56. 6 years.
  57. 3 years.
  58. 2 points
  59. Question 6
  60. 1.
  61. If a company has limited resources, the key factor in performing incremental analysis is
  62. Answer
  63. contribution margin.
  64. limited resources required.
  65. contribution margin per unit of limited resource.
  66. none of these.
  67. 2 points
  68. Question 7
  69. 1.
  70. Roger Industries is considering two capital investment proposals. Estimates regarding each project are provided below:
  71. Project XR8 Project AAA
  72. Initial Investment $800,000 $1,200,000
  73. Annual Net Income $40,000 $84,000
  74. Net Annual Cash Inflow $200,000 $284,000
  75. Estimated Useful Life 5 years 6 years
  76. Salvage Value 0 0
  77. The company requires a 10% rate of return on all new investments.
  78. Present Value of an Annuity of 1
  79. Periods 9% 10% 11% 12%
  80. 5 3.890 3.791 3.696 3.605
  81. 6 4.486 4.355 4.231 4.111
  82. The annual rate of return for Project XR8 is
  83. Answer
  84. 5%.
  85. 10%.
  86. 25%.
  87. 50%.
  88. 2 points
  89. Question 8
  90. 1.
  91. In incremental analysis,
  92. Answer
  93. costs are not relevant if they change between alternatives.
  94. all costs are relevant if they change between alternatives.
  95. only fixed costs are relevant.
  96. only variable costs are relevant.
  97. 2 points
  98. Question 9
  99. 1.
  100. Begley, Inc. is contemplating the replacement of an old machine with a new one. The following information has been gathered:
  101. Old Machine New Machine
  102. Price $250,000 $500,000
  103. Accumulated Depreciation $75,000 -0-
  104. Remaining Useful Life 10 years -0-
  105. Useful Life -0- 10 years
  106. Annual Operating Costs $200,000 $150,000
  107. If the old machine is replaced, it can be sold for $20,000.
  108. The net advantage (disadvantage) of replacing the old machine is
  109. Answer
  110. $15,000
  111. $20,000
  112. $(5,000)
  113. $(50,000)
  114. 2 points
  115. Question 10
  116. 1.
  117. Debra Manufacturing has identified that the cost of a new computer will be $120,000, but with the use of the new computer, net income will increase by $10,000 a year. If depreciation expense is $6,000 a year, the cash payback period is:
  118. Answer
  119. 30 years.
  120. 20 years.
  121. 12 years.
  122. 7.5 years.
  123. 2 points
  124. Question 11
  125. 1.
  126. A company is considering purchasing factory equipment that costs $640,000 and is estimated to have no salvage value at the end of its 8-year useful life. If the equipment is purchased, annual revenues are expected to be $180,000 and annual operating expenses exclusive of depreciation expense are expected to be $76,000. The straight-line method of depreciation would be used.
  127. The cash payback period on the equipment is
  128. Answer
  129. 13.3 years.
  130. 8.0 years.
  131. 6.2 years.
  132. 3.1 years.
  133. 2 points
  134. Question 12
  135. 1.
  136. The rate of return that management expects to pay on all borrowed and equity funds is the
  137. Answer
  138. cost of capital.
  139. cutoff rate.
  140. hurdle rate.
  141. minimum rate.
  142. 2 points
  143. Question 13
  144. 1.
  145. In a make-or-buy decision, opportunity costs are
  146. Answer
  147. added to the make total cost.
  148. deducted from the make total cost.
  149. added to the buy total cost.
  150. ignored.
  151. 2 points
  152. Question 14
  153. 1.
  154. Cost behavior analysis is a study of how a firm’s costs
  155. Answer
  156. relate to competitors’ costs.
  157. relate to general price level changes.
  158. respond to changes in the level of business activity.
  159. respond to changes in the gross national product.
  160. 2 points
  161. Question 15
  162. 1.
  163. CVP analysis does not consider
  164. Answer
  165. level of activity.
  166. fixed cost per unit.
  167. variable cost per unit.
  168. sales mix.
  169. 2 points
  170. Question 16
  171. 1.
  172. Pascal, Inc. is planning to sell 600,000 units for $1.50 per unit. The contribution margin ratio is 20%. If Pascal will break even at this level of sales, what are the fixed costs?
  173. Answer
  174. $180,000.
  175. $420,000.
  176. $600,000.
  177. $720,000.
  178. 2 points
  179. Question 17
  180. 1.
  181. Greg’s Golf Carts produces two models: Model 24 has sales of 500 units with a contribution margin of $40 each; Model 26 has sales of 350 units with a contribution margin of $50 each. If sales of Model 26 increase by 200 units, how much will profit change?
  182. Answer
  183. $10,000 increase
  184. $17,500 increase
  185. $27,500 increase
  186. $28,000 increase
  187. 2 points
  188. Question 18
  189. 1.
  190. A company sells a product which has a unit sales price of $5, unit variable cost of $3 and total fixed costs of $150,000. The number of units the company must sell to break even is
  191. Answer
  192. 75,000 units.
  193. 30,000 units.
  194. 300,000 units.
  195. 50,000 units.
  196. 2 points
  197. Question 19
  198. 1.
  199. Fixed costs are $900,000 and the variable costs are 75% of the unit selling price. What is the break-even point in dollars?
  200. Answer
  201. $2,100,000
  202. $2,700,000
  203. $3,600,000
  204. $1,200,000
  205. 2 points
  206. Question 20
  207. 1.
  208. Variable costs for Abbey, Inc. are 25% of sales. Its selling price is $60 per unit. If Abbey sells one unit more than break-even units, how much will profit increase?
  209. Answer
  210. $45
  211. $15
  212. $20
  213. $240
  214. 2 points
  215. Question 21
  216. 1.
  217. Cost activity indexes might help classify costs as
  218. Answer
  219. temporary.
  220. permanent.
  221. variable.
  222. transient.
  223. 2 points
  224. Question 22
  225. 1.
  226. Which one of the following is a name for the range over which a company expects to operate?
  227. Answer
  228. Mixed range
  229. Fixed range
  230. Variable range
  231. Relevant range
  232. 2 points
  233. Question 23
  234. 1.
  235. The break-even point cannot be determined by
  236. Answer
  237. computing it from a mathematical equation.
  238. computing it using contribution margin.
  239. reading the prior year’s financial statements.
  240. deriving it from a CVP graph.
  241. 2 points
  242. Question 24
  243. 1.
  244. In applying the high-low method, what is the unit variable cost?
  245. Month Miles Total Cost
  246. January 80,000 $96,000
  247. February 50,000 $80,000
  248. March 70,000 $94,000
  249. April 90,000 $140,000
  250. Answer
  251. $1.44
  252. $1.50
  253. $1.60
  254. Cannot be determined from the information given.
  255. 2 points
  256. Question 25
  257. 1.
  258. A CVP graph does not include a
  259. Answer
  260. variable cost line.
  261. fixed cost line.
  262. sales line.
  263. total cost line.
  264. 2 points
  265. Question 26
  266. 1.
  267. If a company had a contribution margin of $300,000 and a contribution margin ratio of 40%, total variable costs must have been
  268. Answer
  269. $450,000.
  270. $180,000.
  271. $750,000.
  272. $120,000.
  273. 2 points
  274. Question 27
  275. 1.
  276. Which of the following is not a management function?
  277. Answer
  278. Constraining
  279. Planning
  280. Controlling
  281. Directing
  282. 2 points
  283. Question 28
  284. 1.
  285. Managerial accounting is applicable to
  286. Answer
  287. service entities.
  288. manufacturing entities.
  289. not-for-profit entities.
  290. all of these.
  291. 2 points
  292. Question 29
  293. 1.
  294. Which one of the following costs would not be inventoriable?
  295. Answer
  296. Period costs
  297. Factory insurance costs
  298. Indirect materials
  299. Indirect labor costs
  300. 2 points
  301. Question 30
  302. 1.
  303. Assuming the cost of direct materials used is $1,300,000, compute the total manufacturing costs using the information below.
  304. Raw materials inventory, January 1 $30,000
  305. Raw materials inventory, December 31 $60,000
  306. Work in process, January 1 $27,000
  307. Work in process, December 31 $18,000
  308. Finished goods, January 1 $60,000
  309. Finished goods, December 31 $48,000
  310. Raw materials purchases $1,300,000
  311. Direct labor $690,000
  312. Factory utilities $225,000
  313. Indirect labor $75,000
  314. Factory depreciation $500,000
  315. Operating expenses $630,000
  316. Answer
  317. $2,790,000.
  318. $2,781,000.
  319. $2,490,000.
  320. $3,420,000.
  321. 2 points
  322. Question 31
  323. 1.
  324. In an analogous sense, external user is to internal user as generally accepted accounting principles are to
  325. Answer
  326. timely.
  327. special-purpose.
  328. relevance to decision.
  329. SEC.
  330. 2 points
  331. Question 32
  332. 1.
  333. Cost of goods sold
  334. Answer
  335. only appears on merchandising companies’ income statements.
  336. only appears on manufacturing companies’ income statements.
  337. appears on both manufacturing and merchandising companies’ income statements.
  338. is calculated exactly the same for merchandising and manufacturing companies.
  339. 2 points
  340. Question 33
  341. 1.
  342. Which of the following are period costs?
  343. Answer
  344. Raw materials
  345. Direct materials and direct labor
  346. Direct labor and manufacturing overhead
  347. Selling expenses
  348. 2 points
  349. Question 34
  350. 1.
  351. The subtotal, “Cost of goods manufactured” appears on
  352. Answer
  353. a merchandising company’s income statement.
  354. a manufacturing company’s income statement.
  355. both a manufacturing and a merchandising company’s income statement.
  356. neither a merchandising nor a manufacturing company’s income statement.
  357. 2 points
  358. Question 35
  359. 1.
  360. The wages of a timekeeper in the factory would be classified as
  361. Answer
  362. a period cost.
  363. direct labor.
  364. indirect labor.
  365. compliance costs.
  366. 2 points
  367. Question 36
  368. 1.
  369. Assuming that the cost of goods manufactured is $2,760,000 compute the cost of goods sold using the following information.
  370. Raw materials inventory, January 1 $30,000
  371. Raw materials inventory, December 31 $60,000
  372. Work in process, January 1 $27,000
  373. Work in process, December 31 $18,000
  374. Finished goods, January 1 $60,000
  375. Finished goods, December 31 $48,000
  376. Raw materials purchases $1,300,000
  377. Direct labor $690,000
  378. Factory utilities $225,000
  379. Indirect labor $75,000
  380. Factory depreciation $500,000
  381. Operating expenses $630,000
  382. Answer
  383. $2,769,000.
  384. $2,712,000.
  385. $2,748,000.
  386. $2,772,000.
  387. 2 points
  388. Question 37
  389. 1.
  390. The function that pertains to keeping the activities of the enterprise on track is
  391. Answer
  392. planning.
  393. directing.
  394. controlling.
  395. accounting.
  396. 2 points
  397. Question 38
  398. 1.
  399. Which of the following statements about internal reports is not true?
  400. Answer
  401. The content of internal reports may extend beyond the double-entry accounting system.
  402. Internal reports may show all amounts at market values.
  403. Internal reports may discuss prospective events.
  404. Most internal reports are summarized rather than detailed.
  405. 2 points
  406. Question 39
  407. 1.
  408. Which of the following is not another name for the term manufacturing overhead?
  409. Answer
  410. Factory overhead
  411. Pervasive costs
  412. Burden
  413. Indirect manufacturing costs
  414. 2 points
  415. Question 40
  416. 1.
  417. Which cost is not charged to the product under variable costing?
  418. Answer
  419. Direct materials
  420. Direct labor
  421. Variable manufacturing overhead
  422. Fixed manufacturing overhead
  423. 2 points
  424. Question 41
  425. 1.
  426. Hinge Manufacturing’s cost of goods sold is $420,000 variable and $240,000 fixed. The company’s selling and administrative expenses are $300,000 variable and $360,000 fixed. If the company’s sales is $1,680,000, what is its net income?
  427. Answer
  428. $360,000
  429. $960,000
  430. $1,020,000
  431. $1,080,000
  432. 2 points
  433. Question 42
  434. 1.
  435. In 2012, Teller Company sold 3,000 units at $300 each. Variable expenses were $210 per unit, and fixed expenses were $120,000. What was Teller’s 2012 net income?
  436. Answer
  437. $150,000
  438. $270,000
  439. $630,000
  440. $900,000
  441. 2 points
  442. Question 43
  443. 1.
  444. Companies that use just-in-time processing techniques will
  445. Answer
  446. have greater differences between absorption and variable costing net income.
  447. have smaller differences between absorption and variable costing net income.
  448. not be able to use absorption costing.
  449. not be able to use variable costing.
  450. 2 points
  451. Question 44
  452. 1.
  453. Capitol Manufacturing sells 2,000 units of Product A annually, and 3,000 units of Product B annually. The sales mix for Product A is
  454. Answer
  455. 40%.
  456. 60%.
  457. 67%.
  458. cannot determine from information given.
  459. 2 points
  460. Question 45
  461. 1.
  462. For Buffalo Co., at a sales level of 5,000 units, sales is $75,000, variable expenses total $40,000, and fixed expenses are $21,000. What is the contribution margin per unit?
  463. Answer
  464. $2.80
  465. $7.00
  466. $8.00
  467. $15.00
  468. 2 points
  469. Question 46
  470. 1.
  471. Sprinkle Co. sells its product for $60 per unit. During 2012, it produced 60,000 units and sold 50,000 units (there was no beginning inventory). Costs per unit are: directmaterials $15, direct labor $9, and variable overhead $3. Fixed costs are: $720,000 manufacturing overhead, and $90,000 selling and administrative expenses. Under absorption costing, what amount of fixed overhead is deferred to a future period?
  472. Answer
  473. $30,000
  474. $120,000
  475. $150,000
  476. $720,000
  477. 2 points
  478. Question 47
  479. 1.
  480. For Pierce Company, sales is $500,000, variable expenses are $310,000, and fixed expenses are $140,000. Pierce’s contribution margin ratio is
  481. Answer
  482. 10%.
  483. 28%.
  484. 38%.
  485. 62%.
  486. 2 points
  487. Question 48
  488. 1.
  489. Variable costing
  490. Answer
  491. is used for external reporting purposes.
  492. is required under GAAP.
  493. treats fixed manufacturing overhead as a period cost.
  494. is also known as full costing.
  495. 2 points
  496. Question 49
  497. 1.
  498. What is the key factor in determining sales mix if a company has limited resources?
  499. Answer
  500. Contribution margin per unit of limited resource
  501. The amount of fixed costs per unit
  502. Total contribution margin
  503. The cost of limited resources
  504. 2 points
  505. Question 50
  506. 1.
  507. For Franklin, Inc., sales is $2,000,000, fixed expenses are $600,000, and the contribution margin ratio is 36%. What is net income?
  508. Answer
  509. $120,000
  510. $216,000
  511. $504,000
  512. $720,000
  513. 2 points
  514. Question 51
  515. 1.
  516. Which cost is charged to the product under variable costing?
  517. Answer
  518. Variable manufacturing overhead
  519. Fixed manufacturing overhead
  520. Variable administrative expenses
  521. Fixed administrative expenses
  522. 2 points
  523. Question 52
  524. 1.
  525. Ramirez Corporation sells two types of computer chips. The sales mix is 30% (Q-Chip) and 70% (Q-Chip Plus). Q-Chip has variable costs per unit of $36 and a selling price of $60. Q-Chip Plus has variable costs per unit of $42 and a selling price of $78. Ramirez’s fixed costs are $540,000. How many units of Q-Chip would be sold at the break-even point?
  526. Answer
  527. 5,063
  528. 5,869
  529. 9,000
  530. 11,813
  531.  
  532. Download: http://solutionzip.com/downloads/52-mcq-walk-manufacturing-gathered-the-following-data/
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