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Transfer Pricing/Strategy

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Transfer Pricing/Strategy Case 18-2 Presented by: Group 3 Nidhi Jain, Ajay Aggarwal, Thomas Giap, Qingwei Meng Transfer Pricing Definition Determination of exchange ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Transfer Pricing/Strategy


1
Transfer Pricing/Strategy
  • Case 18-2
  • Presented by Group 3
  • Nidhi Jain, Ajay Aggarwal,
  • Thomas Giap, Qingwei Meng

2
Transfer Pricing
  • Definition
  • Determination of exchange price when different
    business units within a firm exchange the
    products and services
  • When it is important
  • Firm with vertical integration, having different
    value-creating activities in the value chain
  • Objective
  • To motivate managers
  • To provide appropriate incentive for managers
  • To provide basis for fairly rewarding managers
  • Minimize taxes locally as well as internationally
  • To develop strategic partnership

3
Transfer Pricing Methods
  • Variable Cost Method
  • Transfer price variable cost of selling unit
    markup
  • Full cost Method
  • Transfer price Variable Cost allocated fixed
    cost
  • Market Price Method
  • Transfer price current price for the selling
    units in the market
  • Negotiated price method

4
Choosing the Right Transfer Price
  • Is there an outside supplier?
  • Is the sellers variable cost less than the
    market price?
  • Is the selling unit operating at full capacity?

5
Cole Division Assumptions
  • Cole Division will buy components only from
    Bayside division I.e. there is no outside
    supplier
  • Cole can sell inside or outside the firm
  • Cole division is at full capacity

6
Robert Products Inc.
INTERNAL TO THE FIRM
EXTERNAL FOREIGN
Bayside
Price 400
Wales Company
Price 600
Cole
Price 1,250
Variable Cost 600500 1,100
London Company
Diamond
Price 1,500
7
Cole Division
Internal to the firm
External to the firm
Bayside division
3,500 Units, var cost 250 per unit
3,000 Units, var cost 300 per unit
Price 600
Price 500
Cole Division
Further processing variable cost- 400
Further processing variable cost- 500
price 1,100 or 1,500
price 1,250
?
Diamond division
Wales company
8
Diamond Division
Cole Division
London Company
Bayside division
Variable cost-200
Variable cost - 300
Price 400
Price 600
London company
Diamond division
Further processing variable cost- 500
3,000 Units, price- 1,500
3,000 Units
Diamond Division
9
Cole Division
  • If there is an outside supply ----Yes.
  • Is the sellers variable costs lt outside price?
    Yes.
  • Does seller have excess capacity? No.
  • If contribution from outside purchase gt
    contribution from inside purchase . . .
  • ? Decision to Transfer Sell outside.

10
Transfer Pricing
11
Transfer Pricing
The firm benefits more from Option 2.
12
Strategic Factors
  • International Transfer Pricing Consideration
  • Tax Rate- minimize taxes locally as well
    internationally
  • Exchange Rate
  • Custom Charges
  • Risk of expropriation
  • Currency Restriction
  • Strategic relationship
  • Assist bayside division to grow
  • Gain entrance in the new country
  • Suppliers quality or name

13
Transfer Pricing with ABC
14
Q1. Why did Teva introduce transfer pricing
  • Teva, a multinational pharmaceutical company,
    solved its transfer pricing problems by using
    activity-based costing
  • Teva reorganized its pharmaceutical operations
    into 1 operation division (with 4 manufacturing
    plants) and 3 marketing divisions
  • Marketing divisions are organized into the US
    marketing and the local market, and the rest of
    the world
  • Responsible for decisions about sales, product
    mix, pricing and customer relationships
  • Marketing were evaluated on sales, not profit
  • Manufacturing plants were measured how meeting
    expense budgets and delivered the right orders on
    time
  • Cost system emphasized variable costs materials
    expenses and direct labor. All other costs were
    considered fixed
  • Decided to introduce transfer pricing system that
    would enhance profit consciousness and improve
    coordination between operations and marketing

15
Q2. What Everyone Wanted
  • Senior Management
  • System that encourages decisions consistent with
    long-run profitability
  • Encourage actions that benefits the overall
    companys profitability
  • Allows managers to distinguish costs relevant for
    short-run decisions
  • Transfer prices could be used to support
    decisions in both marketing and operating
    divisions, including

16
Q2. What Everyone Wanted
  • Division Managers
  • Transfer prices would report the financial
    performance of their divisions fairly
  • Managers could influence the reported performance
    of their divisions by making business decisions
    within their scope of authority
  • Performance should reflect changes in product
    mix, improved efficiency, investment in new
    equipment, and organizational changes
  • Decisions made by managers of marketing divisions
    would reflect both sales revenue and associated
    expenses incurred in the operations division
  • The system must anticipate that division managers
    would examine the method and take actions that
    maximized the reported performance of their
    divisions

17
Q2. What Everyone Wanted
  • Financial Staff
  • Credible and reliable information for decision
    making at all levels of the organization without
    excessive arguments and controversy
  • System that is clear, easy to explain, and easy
    to use
  • Updates should be easy
  • Components of the transfer price calculation
    should promote good understanding of the
    underlying factors driving costs
  • System would be used for internal charging of
    costs from the operations division to the
    marketing divisions

18
Q3. Why Traditional Transfer Pricing Method not
work
  • Variable Cost Method
  • Covering only ingredients and packaging materials
    which was inadequate for their purposes
  • Marketing divisions would report extremely high
    profits because they were being charged for
    materials only
  • Operations divisions would get credit only for
    expenses of purchased materials
  • No motivation to control labor or other fixed
    expenses
  • Marginal cost transfer price would give the
    marketing divisions no incentive to shift their
    source of supply
  • Measuring profits as price less materials cost
    would continue to allow marketing and sales
    decisions to be make without regard to their
    implications for production capacity and long-run
    costs and overall company profitability
  • Full cost Method
  • Overhead did not capture the actual cost
    structure in Tevas plant
  • Market Price Method
  • No market existed for manufactured and packaged
    products that had not been distributed or
    marketed to customers
  • Negotiated price method
  • Would lead to endless arguments

19
Q3. Why did ABC work?
  • First decided to implement ABC in its largest
    production plant
  • A multidisciplinary project team develop an
    activity dictionary, drive factory costs to
    activities, identify cost drivers for each
    activity, collect data, and calculate ABC based
    product costs
  • Originally the ABC models were retrospective
  • Calculating the activities costs, activity cost
    driver rates, and product costs for the prior
    year
  • End of 1993, senior management wanted to use ABC
    to calculate transfer prices for the coming year
  • Teva built its ABC production cost model for 1994
    using data from the first three quarters 1993
  • Group decided to use the forecasted costs based
    on budgeted expense data, forecasted volumes and
    mix of sales, projected process utilization and
    efficiencies to calculate the transfer price

20
Q4. Using ABC costs for Transfer Pricing
Manufacturing Plants
Cost Pools
Unit Costs
Batch Costs
Product Specific
Plant Level
  • Charges based on actual quantities of each
    individual products acquire
  • Materials and labor
  • Charged for actual number of production and
    packaging batches of each product order
  • Charges based on budgeted numbers
  • No individual product is sold to more than one
    marketing division
  • Based on the budgeted use of the capacity of the
    4 manufacturing facilities

Marketing Division
21
Q4. The ABC Transfer Price Model Structure
  • ABC hierarchical structure of unit, batch,
    product sustaining and plant-level costs
  • Unit Level Costs direct expenses associated
    with producing individual product units such as
    tablets, capsules, and ampoules
  • Includes cost of raw materials, packaging
    materials, and direct wages paid to production
    workers
  • Batch-level costs expenses of resources used
    for each production or packaging batch.
  • Costs of preparation, setup, cleaning, quality
    control, lab testing, and computer, packaging and
    production management
  • Lot sizes for production are predetermined based
    on the capacity of the containers in the
    production line
  • Product sustaining costs expenses incurred in
    registering the products, making changes to a
    products production processes, and designing the
    package
  • Plant-level costs cost of maintaining the
    capacity of production lines including
    depreciation, cost of safety inspections,
    insurance, and general expenses

22
Q4. Using ABC costs for Transfer Pricing
  • Prices are set for the coming year based on
    budgeted data
  • Calculates standard activity cost driver rates
    for each activity
  • Enables product costs to be calculated in a
    predictable manner throughout the year
  • Eliminates fluctuations in product costs caused
    by variations in actual spending, resource usage,
    and activity levels
  • Activity cost driver rates are based on the
    practical capacity of each of the four plants
  • Rates reflect the underlying efficiency and
    productivity of the plants without being
    influenced by fluctuations in forecasted or
    actual usage
  • Transfer prices are calculated in two different
    procedures
  • Assigns unit and batch-level costs
  • Product-specific and plant-level costs

23
Q5. Ongoing benefits from ABC Transfer Pricing
System
  • Highlighted unused capacity shows where
    production can be expanded without spending
    additional money
  • Capacity released by ceasing production of
    unprofitable products
  • Investment decision for a new production line
    incorporates the cost and assignment of
    responsibility for the unused capacity in the
    early periods provides valuable realism to the
    demand forecasts provided by the marketing
    division
  • Motivates cost reduction and production
    efficiencies in the manufacturing plant
  • Identify ways to reduce unit and batch-level
    expenses
  • Conduct common searches for lower-cost, more
    reliable, higher-quality suppliers to reduce
    variable materials costs
  • Helps to determine which manufacturing facility
    is appropriate for different types of products
  • Plant A has a relatively inflexible (high
    capital intensive) cost structure with high
    percentage of plant-level costs and low
    percentage of unit cost plant most appropriate
    for high-volume production
  • Plant B is much more flexible and is appropriate
    for small batch sizes and test runs of newly
    introduced products

24
Q5. Benefits of ABC - Unused Capacity
  • Unused capacity occurs in two ways
  • Declines in demand for products manufactured on
    an existing line
  • Partial usage when a new production line is added
    because existing production lines cannot produce
    the additional quantities requested by one of the
    marketing divisions
  • Marketing divisions are charged a lump-sum for
    the cost of maintaining the unused production
    capacity in an existing line
  • Fosters a send of responsibility among marketing
    managers
  • Increments in production capacity or
    manufacturing technology are paid for by the
    initiating marketing division
  • Bears the costs of all additional resources
    supplied
  • If the increment begins to be used by another
    marketing division then each marketing division
    would be charged based on its percentage of
    capacity used.

25
Q5. Benefits to the Marketing Division
  • Integrated budget process lets marketing managers
    plan their product mix with knowledge of the cost
    impact of their decisions
  • Proposed increases in variety and complexity will
    be charged accordingly based on the increased
    demands on manufacturing facilities
  • Marketing managers are given the flexible to
    decide when to accept small order from a customer
    or how much of a discount to grant for large
    orders based on cost details
  • Marketing mangers can monitor closely the costs
    incurred in the manufacturing plants (fixed
    costs) because of separating out the unit and
    batch-level costs
  • Responsibility for the fixed costs increment is
    clearly assignable to the requesting division
  • Marketing managers can distinguish between
    products that cover all manufacturing costs
    versus those that cover only the unit and
    batch-level expenses
  • Able to incorporate information about available
    capacity when they make decisions about pricing,
    product mix, and product introduction
  • Led to decisions to sell 30 low-volume products
    to another company so Teva was able to freed-up
    capacity to handled production of new products or
    existing profitable products

26
Q5. The Best News Harmony is Growing
  • Unexpected benefit of activity-based transfer
    price system is the ability to measure profit
    performance under changing organizational
    structures
  • Forecast potential impact of newly created profit
    centers by understanding cost behaviors at the
    activity and product level
  • Enables executives to measure profit performance
    across organizational cost and profit centers
    boundaries
  • ABC are not the primary information used for
    short-term operational decision making
  • Current bottlenecks and lead-time considerations
    are the focus
  • ABC provides guidance and insights about where to
    look
  • ABC-based transfer prices has lead to a dramatic
    reduction in conflicts among marketing and
    manufacturing managers
  • Managers have confidence in the production cost
    economics reported by the transfer price system

27
Table 1.
28
Table 2 Batch Level Transfer Price
  • Cost of production for a packaging batch can
    vary among different products and among different
    plants
  • Batch costs assigned to a particular order
    include two components
  • A pro-rata share of the batch cost of production
    setup
  • The full batch cost of the packaging setup

29
Table 3. Monthly Debit May 1995
30
Table 4. Annual Debit - 1995
31
Table 5. 10 Leading Products
  • Shows the profitability of a significant product
    family whose individual products are manufactured
    in different plants and are sold by more than one
    marketing division
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