In: Accounting
Construction on the Bonita Full-Service Car Wash is nearing
completion. The owner is Dave Kear, a retired accounting professor.
The car wash is strategically located on a busy street that
separates an affluent suburban community from a middle-class
community. It has two state-of-the-art stalls. Each stall can
provide anything from a basic two-stage wash and rinse to a
five-stage luxurious bath. It is all “touchless,” that is, there
are no brushes to potentially damage the car. Outside each stall,
there is also a 400 horse-power vacuum. Dave likes to joke that
these vacuums are so strong that they will pull the carpet right
out of your car if you aren’t careful.
Dave has some important decisions to make before he can open the
car wash. First, he knows that there is one drive-through car wash
only a 10-minute drive away. It is attached to a gas station; it
charges $5.00 for a basic wash, and $4.20 if you also buy at least
8 gallons of gas. It is a “brush”-type wash with rotating brush
heads. There is also a self-serve “stand outside your car and spray
until you are soaked” car wash a 15-minute drive away from Dave’s
location. He went over and tried this out. He went through $3.00 in
quarters to get the equivalent of a basic wash. He knows that both
of these locations always have long lines, which is one reason why
he decided to build a new car wash.
Dave is planning to offer three levels of wash service—Basic,
Deluxe, and Premium. The Basic is all automated; it requires no
direct intervention by employees. The Deluxe is all automated
except that at the end an employee will wipe down the car and will
put a window treatment on the windshield that reduces glare and
allows rainwater to run off more quickly. The Premium level is a
“pampered” service. This will include all the services of the
Deluxe, plus a special wax after the machine wax, and an employee
will vacuum the car, wipe down the entire interior, and wash the
inside of the windows. To provide the Premium service, Dave will
have to hire a couple of “car wash specialists” to do the
additional pampering.
Dave has pulled together the following estimates, based on data he
received from the local Chamber of Commerce and information from a
trade association.
Per Unit | Total | |||||
Direct materials per Basic wash | $0.29 | |||||
Direct materials per Deluxe wash | $0.77 | |||||
Direct materials per Premium wash | $1.02 | |||||
Direct labor per Basic wash | NA | |||||
Direct labor per Deluxe wash | $0.40 | |||||
Direct labor per Premium wash | $2.40 | |||||
Variable overhead per Basic wash | $0.10 | |||||
Variable overhead per Deluxe and Premium washes | $0.16 | |||||
Fixed overhead | $115,920 | |||||
Variable selling and administrative expenses all washes | $0.10 | |||||
Fixed selling and administrative expenses | $131,460 |
The total estimated number of washes of any type is 42,000. Dave
has invested assets of $390,600. He would like a return on
investment (ROI) of 20%.
Answer each of the following questions.
1 ) Dave estimates that of the total 42,000 washes, 18,000 will be Basic, 18,000 will be Deluxe, and 6,000 will be Premium. Calculate the selling price, using cost-plus pricing, that Dave should use for each type of wash to achieve his desired ROI of 20%. (Round answers to 2 decimal places, e.g. 52.75.)
Basic Wash | Deluxe Wash | Premium Wash | |||||
Selling price | $ | $ | $ |
2) During the first year, instead of selling 42,000 washes, Dave sold 40,000 washes. He was quite accurate in his estimate of first-year sales, but he was way off on the types of washes that he sold. He sold 4,000 Basic, 26,000 Deluxe, and 10,000 Premium. His actual total fixed expenses were as he expected, and his variable cost per unit was as estimated. Calculate Dave’s actual net income and his actual ROI. (Round ROI to 2 decimal places, e.g. 52.75%.)
Net income | $ | |||
ROI | % |