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Today, 10:44

Stuart Company, which produces and sells a small digital clock, bases its pricing strategy on a 25 percent markup on total cost. Based on annual production costs for 20,000 units of product, computations for the sales price per clock follow: Unit-level costs $ 420,000 Fixed costs 60,000 Total cost (a) 480,000 Markup (a * 0.25) 120,000 Total sales (b) $ 600,000 Sales price per unit (b : 20,000) $ 30

Stuart has excess capacity and receives a special order for 7,000 clocks for $24 each. Calculate the contribution margin per unit. Based on this, should Stuart accept the special order?

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  1. Today, 11:16
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    Stuart should accept the offer because the contribution margin os positive.

    Explanation:

    Giving the following information:

    Units = 20,000

    Total variable cost = 420,000

    Total fixed cost = 60,000

    Mark up = 25%

    Special offer = 7,000 units for $24

    To determine whether the offer is profitable or not, we need to calculate the unitary variable cost and the unitary contribution margin:

    Unitary variable cost = 420,000/20,000 = $21

    Because it is a special offer and there is unused capacity we won't take into account the fixed costs:

    Contribution margin = 24 - 21 = $3 per unit

    Stuart should accept the offer because the contribution margin os positive.
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