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Prepared by Diane Tanner University of North Florida

Chapter 10. Operating Leverage. Prepared by Diane Tanner University of North Florida. Cost Structure and Risk. 2. What is cost structure? The relative proportion of fixed and variable costs in an company Higher proportions of fixed costs compared to variable costs

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Prepared by Diane Tanner University of North Florida

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  1. Chapter 10 Operating Leverage Prepared by Diane Tanner University of North Florida
  2. Cost Structure and Risk 2 What is cost structure? The relative proportion of fixed and variable costs in an company Higher proportions of fixed costs compared to variable costs More sensitive to changes in sales More risk Higher proportions of variable costs compared to fixed costs Less sensitive to changes in sales Less risk
  3. Cost Structure Example 3 CopyDisk and ZoomCopy are both in the business of reproducing mass quantities of DVDs. CopyDisk depends on hourly workers to insert disks into the copier, while ZoomCopyuses costly equipment that automatically inserts DVDs to be copied. As a result, ZoomCopyhas higher fixed costs compared to its total costs, while CopyDisk has proportionally higher variable costs. Which cost structures is more risky? ZoomCopy is more risky, because its additional equipment will generate more depreciation, a fixed cost.
  4. Comparing Cost Structures Income statements from two equally profitable companies appear below: Cost structures with higher fixed costs compared to those with lower fixed are more risky
  5. Cost Structure Effect on Sales Increase 5 Company A Profit Increase $7,000 or 38.88% Company B Profit Increase $4,900 or 27.22% Company A’s cost structure leads to a larger increase in net operating income.
  6. Relates to the proportional level of fixed versus variable costs in a firm’s cost structure General rules The higher the degree of fixed costs The more operating leverage a company has The more risk a company possesses Creating greater profit and loss swings as sales increase or decrease Operating Leverage 6
  7. 7 Measuring Operating Leverage A measure of how sensitive net operating income is to percentage changes in sales A risk indicator Contribution MarginNet Operating Income Degree of Operating Leverage = Company ACompany B $70,000 $18,000 $49,000 $18,000 = 3.89 = 2.72 Higher degree of operating leverage indicates higher proportion of fixed costs and higher risk.
  8. The End
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