The correct answer is mass production. Mass production is
being defined as having to manufacture products in large quantities by which
they are likely utilized by an assembly of line technology. This is a process
by which it creates similar products in large numbers.
Answer:
Dr Bond investment $50,000
Cr cash $50,000
Dr cash $1,250
Cr interest revenue $1,250
Dr cash $50,000
cr bond investment $50,000
Explanation:
On July 1 2019,Red company would have parted with cash of $50,000 which means that cash account should be credited with $50,000 while bond investment account is debited with same amount
On receipt of first interest payment of $1,250 (5%*$50,000*1/2) cash is debited with $1,250 while interest revenue is credited with the same amount.
Upon receipt of face value at redemption,the journal entry would be opposite of the initial one
Answer:
The answer is: Cash and marketable securities $5,406,393
Explanation:
We have:
+ Current ratio = Current asset / Current liabilities = 2; with Current liabilities is given at $8 million => Current asset is $16 million;
+ Current asset = Inventory + Account Receivable + Cash and marketable securities <=> Cash and marketable securities = $16 million - Inventory - Account Receivable ( as current asset is calculated above at $16 million)
+ Average collection period = Account Receivable/ Credit Sales x 365 <=> Account Receivable = Average collection period/365 x Credit sales = 30/365 x 64 million = $5,260,274
+ Inventory turnover = Sales / Inventory <=> Inventory = Sales/ Inventory turnover = 64 million / 12 = $5,333,333
=> Cash and marketable securities = 16,000,000 - 5,333,333 - 5,260,274 = $5,406,393.
Answer:
False
Explanation:
The first part was true. A higher WACC results in a lower NPV simply because a higher discount rate results in a lower present value.
E.g. 100 / (1 + 6%)³ = 83.96, but if we increase r to 10%, then 100 / (1 + 10%)³ = 75.13
The second part is wrong because under the IRR method, the decision rule is very simple, all projects are accepted if their IRR is higher than the project's WACC (or discount rate). I.e. if hte project's WACC increases, so does the chance of the project being rejected because the IRR might be lower than the WACC.