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Pricing

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Title: Accounting Principles 8th Edition Subject: Chapter 22 Author: Dan & Suzanne Ward Last modified by: bob gutschick Created Date: 3/28/1997 6:03:02 PM – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Pricing


1
  • Pricing

Chapter 22
Learning Objectives After studying this chapter,
you should be able to 1 Compute a target cost
when the market determines a product price. 2
Compute a target selling price using cost-plus
pricing. 3 Use time-and-material pricing to
determine the cost of services provided. 4
Determine a transfer price using the negotiated,
cost-based, and market-based approaches. 5
Explain issues involved in transferring goods
between divisions in different countries.
2
Pricing Objectives
There are three main objectives to be considered
in setting prices Cost Profit Pricing must
be set sufficient to cover costs and generate a
sufficient profit to support and grow the
business.  
3
There are three main objectives to be considered
in setting prices Market Positioning Prices
are a key signal to buyers of a products market
position.  If a car sells for 90,000 while
another sells for 15,000, buyers have a certain
image of what one car is versus the other. 
4
There are three main objectives to be considered
in setting prices Market Share Pricing can
affect the rate at which a product penetrates a
market.  In general, cheaper pricing creates less
buyer resistance during the sale process and
promotes faster product adoption and share
growth. 
5
Pricing Strategies
The way in which it decides how to blend the
tradeoffs between the price objectives (cost
profit market positioning market share).  The
most common price strategies are Predatory
Pricing The company prices its product at very
low margin, or even at cost in order to gain
entry into a new market. Over time, it
increases prices to be more in line with its
target brand position. 
6
Pricing Strategies
The way in which it decides how to blend the
tradeoffs between the price objectives (cost
profit market positioning market share).  The
most common price strategies are Skimming The
company prices at a premium to capture the high
end segments first.  Then as it saturates a buyer
segment, it drops prices to appeal to new buyer
segments. 
7
Pricing Strategies
Bundling The company groups together different
products and features in such a way that it can
offer variations at different prices.  Ex
auto industry by bundling together desirable
but costly features (automatic trans) with less
desirable but more profitable features ("all
weather" pkg), the overall profitability of the
car can be optimized.
8
Pricing Strategies
Multi-tier The company offers distinct product
categories at different price segments to appeal
to different buyers.  Ex auto industry
Toyota used to offer a mainstream (Toyota) and
luxury (Lexus) model under different brands for
substantially the same car (Camry vs. ES300). 
9
Pricing Goods for External Sales
  • The price of a good or service is affected by
    many factors.
  • IF - products are not easily differentiated from
    competitors prices are not set by the company,
    but rather by supply and demand.
  • IF - products are unique or clearly
    distinguishable from competitors prices are set
    by the company.

10
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11
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12
Pricing Goods for External Sales
Target Costing
  • Target cost Cost that provides the desired
    profit when the market determines a products
    price.
  • If a company can produce its product for the
    target cost or less, it will meet its profit goal.

13
Pricing Goods for External Sales
Target Costing
  • 1st, identify its market niche where it wants to
    compete (niche markets can be left-handed
    users, stay-home dads, tweens, college
    students, old folk, foodies, techies,
    gamers, shoe-aholics, cat-people).
  • 2nd, determine the target selling price the
    price where company believes consumers will buy
    to maximize sales.
  • 3rd, determines its target cost by target
    selling price - the desired profit target
    cost.
  • Then, company assembles a team to develop a
    product to meet the companys goals. If not
    possible NEXT !

14
  • FL phones considering a fashion cover for its
    phones. Research indicates that 200,000 units
    can be sold if price is 20 max.
  • If FL makes items, it must invest 1,000,000 in
    new equipment.
  • FL requires a 25 profit (return). What is
    target cost per unit.

The desired profit in for this new product
line is 1,000,000 x 25 250,000 Each
cover must result in profit of 250,000
200,000 units 1.25 Market price Desired
profit Target cost per unit 20 1.25
18.75 per unit
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15
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16
Pricing Goods for External Sales
Cost-Plus Pricing
  • When there is no competition, a company may have
    to set its own price.
  • When a company sets price, the price is normally
    a function of product cost cost-plus pricing.
  • Approach requires establishing a cost base and
    adding a markup to determine a target selling
    price.

17
  • Illustration JCo. is in the process of setting
    a selling price on its new video pen. It will
    record up to 2 hours of audio-video. The per unit
    variable cost estimates for the new pen are

JCo also has fixed costs per unit at a sales of
10,000 units.
18
  • JCo needs to price its pen to earn a 20 return
    on its investment (ROI) of 1,000,000.

Markup 20 ROI of 1,000,000 Expected ROI
200,000 10,000 units 20 Sales price per
unit
19
  • Use markup on cost to set a selling price
  • Compute the markup percentage to achieve a
    desired ROI of 20 per unit
  • Compute the target selling price

20
Limitations of Cost-Plus Pricing
  • Advantage of cost-plus pricing Easy to compute.
  • Disadvantages
  • Does not consider demand side
  • Will the customer pay the price?
  • Fixed cost per unit changes with in sales volume
  • At lower sales, company must charge higher price
    to meet desired ROI.

21
  • Illustration If budgeted sales volume for JCo
    was 8,000 and not 10,000, JCo variable cost per
    unit would remain the same. However, the fixed
    cost per unit would change as follows.

JCo 20 ROI now results in a 25 ROI per unit
(20 x 1,000,000) / 8,000.
22
  • JCo computes the selling price at 8,000 units as
    follows.

At 8,000 units, how much would JCo mark up its
total unit costs to earn a desired ROI of 25 per
unit.
23
Pricing Goods for External Sales
Variable-Cost Pricing
  • Alternative pricing approach
  • Simply add a markup to variable costs.
  • Avoids the problem of uncertain cost information
    related to fixed-cost-per-unit computations.
  • Helpful in pricing special orders or when excess
    capacity exists.
  • Major disadvantage is that managers may set the
    price too low and fail to cover fixed costs.

24
KRC Air Corporation produces air purifiers.
Using a 45 markup percentage on total per unit
cost, compute the target selling price.
25
Pricing Services
  • Time-and-material pricing is an approach to
    cost-plus pricing in which the company uses two
    pricing rates
  • One for labor used on a job - includes direct
    labor time and other employee costs.
  • One for material - includes cost of direct parts
    and materials and a material loading charge for
    related overhead.
  • Widely used in service industries, (auto repair)
    but especially professional services like public
    accounting, law etc.

26
Pricing Services
  • Illustration Assume the following data for Lake
    Holiday Marina, a boat and motor repair shop.

27
Pricing Services
  • Using time-and-material pricing involves three
    steps
  • calculate the per hour labor charge,
  • calculate the charge for obtaining and holding
    materials, and
  • calculate the charges for a particular job.

28
Pricing Services
  • Step 1 Calculate the labor charge.
  • Express as a rate per hour of labor to include
  • Direct labor cost (includes fringe benefits).
  • Selling, administrative, and similar overhead
    costs.
  • Allowance for desired profit (ROI) per hour.
  • Labor rate for Lake Holiday Marina for 2011 based
    on
  • 5,000 hours of repair time.
  • Desired profit margin of 8 per hour.

29
Pricing Services
Step 1 Calculate the labor charge.
Multiply the rate of 38.20 x labor hours
used on a job to determine the labor charges for
the job.
30
Pricing Services
  • Step 2 Calculate the material loading charge.
  • Material loading charge added to invoice cost of
    materials.
  • Covers the costs of purchasing, receiving,
    handling, storing desired profit margin on
    materials.

(
)
Estimated purchasing, receiving, handling,
storing costs
Desired profit margin on materials

Estimated costs of parts materials
31
Pricing Services
Step 2 Calculate the material loading charge.
The marina estimates that the total invoice cost
of parts and materials used in 2011 will be
120,000. The marina desires a 20 profit margin
on the invoice cost of parts and materials.
32
Pricing Services
Step 3 Calculate charges for a particular job.
  • Labor charges
  • Material charges (often includes material
    loading charge)
  • Material loading charge (may be included in
    above)
  • Total Charge to customer
    for a particular, specific, job

Often used as an estimate (or a bid) to get a
job such as building you a new fence,
installing sink, car brake job, dental work,
new tires balanced, installed with warranty,
33
Pricing Services
Step 3 Calculate charges for a particular job.
Lake Holiday Marina prepares a price quotation to
estimate the cost to refurbish a used 28-foot
pontoon boat. Lake Holiday Marina estimates the
job will require 50 hours of labor and 3,600 in
parts and materials.
34
Presented below are data for Harmon Electrical
Repair Shop for next year. The desired profit
margin per labor hour is 10. The material
loading charge is 40 of invoice cost. Harmon
estimates that 8,000 labor hours will be worked
next year. Compute the rate charged per hour of
labor.
35
If Harmon repairs a TV that takes 4 hours to
repair and uses parts of 50, compute the bill
for this job.
36
Pricing Services
Review Question
  • Crescent Electrical Repair has decided to price
    its work on a time-and-material basis. It
    estimates the following costs for the year
    related to labor.
  • Technician wages and benefits 100,000
  • Office employees salary/benefits 40,000
  • Other overhead 80,000
  • Crescent desires a profit margin of 10 per labor
    hour and budgets 5,000 hours of repair time for
    the year. The office employees salary,
    benefits, and other overhead costs should be
    divided evenly between time charges and material
    loading charges. Crescent labor charge per hour
    would be

a. 42 b. 34 c. 32 d. 30
37
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38
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39
Transfer Pricing for Internal Sales
  • Vertically integrated companies
  • Grow in either direction of its suppliers or its
    customers.
  • Frequently sells (transfers) goods to other
    divisions as well as outside customers.

How do you price goods sold within the company?
40
You are marketing manager for Disney Cruises
  • To offer a vacation package including
  • 7-day Disney cruise,
  • 7-days at Disney-World with a
  • 7-night stay in Disney-World hotel
  • you must
  • Negotiate a transfer price (your cost) with
  • ????

41
You are marketing manager for Disney Cruises
  • To offer a vacation package including
  • 7-day Disney cruise,
  • 7-days at Disney-World with a
  • 7-night stay in Disney-World hotel
  • you must
  • Negotiate a transfer price (your cost) with
  • Disney Parks Division (for 7-day
    park-hopper pass)
  • Disney Hotel Division (for the 7 night hotel
    stay)
  • Plus others (busses for transport from
    ship to hotel)
  • to offer the vacation package

42
Transfer Pricing for Internal Sales
  • Transfer price price used to record the
    transfer between two divisions of the same
    company or corporation.
  • Ways to determine a transfer price
  • Negotiated transfer prices.
  • Cost-based transfer prices.
  • Market-based transfer prices.
  • Conceptually - a negotiated transfer price is
    best.
  • Due to practical considerations, companies often
    use the other two methods.

43
Transfer Pricing for Internal Sales
Negotiated Transfer Prices
  • Illustration Alberta Company makes rubber soles
    for work hiking boots.
  • Two Divisions
  • Sole Division - sells soles externally.
  • Boot Division - makes leather uppers for hiking
    boots which are attached to purchased
    soles.
  • Division managers compensated on division
    profitability.
  • Management now wants Sole Division to provide at
    least some soles to the Boot Division.

44
Negotiated Transfer Prices
Computation of the contribution margin per unit
for each division when the Boot Division
purchases soles from an outside supplier.
What would be a fair transfer price if the Sole
Division sold 10,000 soles to the Boot Division?
45
Negotiated Transfer Prices
No Excess Capacity
  • If Sole sells to Boot,
  • payment must at least cover variable cost per
    unit plus
  • its lost contribution margin per sole
    (opportunity cost).
  • The minimum transfer price acceptable to Sole is

46
Negotiated Transfer Prices
  • Maximum Boot Division will pay is
  • what the sole would cost from an
  • outside buyer 17

47
Negotiated Transfer Prices
Excess Capacity
  • Can produce 80,000 soles, but can sell only
    70,000.
  • Available capacity of 10,000 soles.
  • Contribution margin of 7 per unit is not lost.
  • Minimum transfer price acceptable to Sole

48
Negotiated Transfer Prices
  • Negotiate a transfer price between 11
  • (minimum acceptable to Sole) and 17
  • (maximum acceptable to Boot)

49
Negotiated Transfer Prices
Summary of Negotiated Transfer Pricing
  • Transfer prices established
  • Minimum by selling division.
  • Maximum by the purchasing division.
  • Often not used because
  • Market price information sometimes not easily
    obtainable.
  • Lack of trust between the two divisions.
  • Different pricing strategies between divisions.

50
Transfer Pricing for Internal Sales
Market-Based Transfer Prices
  • Based on existing market prices of competing
    goods.
  • Often considered best approach because it is
    objective and generally provides the proper
    economic incentives.
  • It is indifferent between selling internally and
    externally if can charge/pay market price.
  • Can lead to bad decisions if have excess
    capacity.
  • Why? No opportunity cost.
  • Where there is not a well-defined market price,
    companies use cost-based systems.

51
Market-Based Transfer Prices
Review Question
  • The Plastics Division of Weston Company
    manufactures plastic molds and then sells them
    for 70 per unit. Its variable cost is 30 per
    unit, and its fixed cost per unit is 10.
    Management would like the Plastics Division to
    transfer 10,000 of these molds to another
    division within the company at a price of 40.
    The Plastics Division is operating at full
    capacity. What is the minimum transfer price
    that the Plastics Division should accept?

a. 10 c. 40 b. 30 d. 70
52
Transfer Pricing for Internal Sales
Effect of Outsourcing on Transfer Pricing
  • Outsourcing - Contracting with an external party
    to provide a good or service, rather than doing
    the work internally.
  • Virtual companies outsource all of their
    production.
  • Use incremental analysis to determine if
    outsourcing is profitable.
  • As companies increasingly rely on outsourcing,
    fewer components are transferred internally
    thereby reducing the need for transfer pricing.

53
Transfer Between Divisions in Different Countries
  • Companies globalize their operations
  • Going global increases transfers between
    divisions located in different countries.
  • 60 of trade between countries is estimated to be
    transfers between divisions.
  • Different tax rates make determining appropriate
    transfer price more difficult.

54
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55
  • FL phones considering a fashion cover for its
    phones. Research indicates that 200,000 units
    can be sold if price is 20 max.
  • If FL makes items, it must invest 1,000,000 in
    new equipment.
  • FL requires a 25 profit (return). What is
    target cost per unit.

The desired profit in for this new product
line is 1,000,000 x 25 250,000 Each
cover must result in profit of 250,000
200,000 units 1.25 Market price Desired
profit Target cost per unit 20 1.25
18.75 per unit
-

56
  • Illustration JCo. is in the process of setting
    a selling price on its new video pen. It will
    record up to 2 hours of audio-video. The per unit
    variable cost estimates for the new pen are

JCo also has fixed costs per unit at a sales of
10,000 units.
57
  • JCo needs to price its pen to earn a 20 return
    on its investment (ROI) of 1,000,000.

Markup 20 ROI of 1,000,000 Expected ROI
200,000 10,000 units 20 Sales price per
unit
58
KRC Air Corporation produces air purifiers.
Using a 45 markup percentage on total per unit
cost, compute the target selling price.
59
Presented below are data for Harmon Electrical
Repair Shop for next year. The desired profit
margin per labor hour is 10. The material
loading charge is 40 of invoice cost. Harmon
estimates that 8,000 labor hours will be worked
next year. Compute the rate charged per hour of
labor.
60
If Harmon repairs a TV that takes 4 hours to
repair and uses parts of 50, compute the bill
for this job.
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