Strathclyde Graduate Business School Resit Coursework International Finance & Decision Making BAF_7_IFD Business 2018-19 7 2 The Case of Morden Engineering Last year Morden Engineering purchased new...

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Strathclyde Graduate Business School Resit Coursework International Finance & Decision Making BAF_7_IFD Business 2018-19 7 2 The Case of Morden Engineering Last year Morden Engineering purchased new machinery for £45000 for use in manufacture of a part used in manufacturing the final product. The current level of output is 100000 items per year and the production will last another eight years. The direct manufacturing cost per unit is 50 pence and the raw material input costs another 40 pence per unit. Clyde Engineers, a competitive manufacturer of the above part, has developed new technology to manufacture the part and has offered to supply Morden Engineering at 83 pence per unit on one year renewable contract basis. As a part of contract it has also offered to fulfil the entire requirement of Morden Engineering but each batch of supplies would consist of no less than 30000 items. Morden Engineering Purchasing Manager believes that the offer is very attractive. In the departmental meeting he argues that, with cost of own manufacturing running at 95 pence per unit which, of course, includes the capital cost of machine, the savings will total £96000 over 8 years. He, therefore, proposes that the indigenous manufacturing should be completely stopped, sell the machinery purchased only last year and accept the Clyde Engineers offer. The Production Manager, who was responsible for decision of buying and installing the machinery last year, has just come back after attending a Short Course on Project Appraisal in a prestigious Business School. He asserts that apart from problems of quality control and security of supplies, there is no economic case for purchasing the part from Clyde Engineers. To support his assertion he argues that machinery is virtually new and still has an economic life of eight years, and being of specialised nature has no alternative uses and could be sold only for £5000 in the market. With capital allowance at 25 per cent on declining balance method on plant and machinery its current book value is £40000, and if sold in the market now would result in a loss of £35000. He claims that this initial loss of £35000 combined with an annual savings of £7000 over next eight years will give a return on 'buy rather than make' of only 12 per cent whereas the company's required rate of return is estimated at 20 per cent. He reinforces his claim by pointing out that this was a highly conservative analysis since other serious problems have been ignored. The parts produced by the Clyde Engineers using new technology may vary in length by 4 mm, which may not cause a quality problem in the final product but would not only involve some redesign in the subassembly but also need supplementing the subassembly with another machine costing £8000. Even allowing for the tax allowances on the new machine, this in his view represents an unnecessary expenditure. The corporation tax rate currently is 25 per cent. Furthermore the supply of large batches of the part by Clyde Engineers would cause an average stockholding of 15000 parts throughout the year as against the current stocks of two weeks supplies of materials and the finished part, and ten per cent more of warehouse space would be occupied. The operator on the machine cannot be made redundant for another eight years as specified in his contract. The only alternative is to transfer him to another department at his current salary of £8000 per annum against the advertised post of an operator at £7000 per annum. The Purchasing Manager considered the problem of operator as a minor but perceived the increase in inventory as a real issue. The warehouse is only 60 per cent utilised and an 3 extension of the warehouse is planned only in another four years’ time. This would cost £50000 and the expected life of warehouse extension is estimated at 25 years for depreciation purposes. Since the use of this capacity would not involve any cash outlay, the Purchasing Manager maintains that cost of inventory could be ignored. He claims that he could be spending just £8000 and would be saving £96000 which is an excellent opportunity. Assume yourself as the Chairperson of the meeting, with your recently acquired knowledge of project appraisal as a part of your course; you will need to resolve the stalemate. Clearly you will need to clarify the issues involved and arbiter which manager is correct and what decision is in the best interest of Morden Engineering. To help you to do your job effectively, we believe that you may need to find answers at least to the following questions: i. Evaluate (critically) the arguments utilized by the Purchasing and the Production Managers to support their cases. Which is correct? (If either of two!) (15 marks) ii. What do you believe are the important issues involved and which factors should (or should not) be taken into account while doing financial analysis? (20 marks) iii. What should be the decision of Morden Engineering? Support your recommendation with financial appraisal. (50 marks) iv. What are the possible risks of adopting your recommendation? What other alternatives might be considered by Morden Engineering? (15 marks) (Total 100 marks) Submission Date: Monday 8th April 2019 Slide 1 1 Morden Engineering by Shashi Kumar Abstract of the Case • Case is based on make versus buy decision faced by Morden Engineering. • Switch from Manufacture to Purchase will: – Affect costs – Have personnel implications – Release a recently purchased machine – Require some additional capital expenditure – Change the amount of stocks held; and – Hence the space required – Have consequential tax considerations Abstract of the Case • A debate between production and purchasing managers emanated about the importance and relevance of these issues • Your precious judgement needed on which manager is correct; and • What decision Morden Engineering should take? Learning Objectives of the Case • Provide practice in structuring problem formulating decisions in financial language; • Practice the use of DCF techniques in decision making and problem solving; • Help clarify the difference between cash flows and accounting numbers in context of decision making; • Help identifying the items and cash flows that are relevant or not relevant to the decision using with or without rule; • Help understand the concepts of net incremental cash flows, sunk costs, opportunity costs, problem boundaries, and the cost of capacity; and • Help understand the importance of correct treatment of tax in a project appraisal. The Managers Arguments • Depreciation • Profits versus cash flow: • Book Losses: • Why value of old machine has fallen so sharply?: • Was the original decision to buy the machine was bad? • Book versus market values: • Inventory: • Opportunity costs Relevant Factors • Cost Savings: • Chief Operator: • Purchase of New Machine: • Working Capital: • Warehouse Extension • Old Machine Risks and Alternatives • Contract renewal price: • Reversibility of the decision: • Alternative suppliers: Are there other suppliers, the competition between them. • Buy-in new technology:
Answered Same DayApr 03, 2021

Answer To: Strathclyde Graduate Business School Resit Coursework International Finance & Decision Making...

Shakeel answered on Apr 05 2021
155 Votes
Sheet1
        Given Information
        Machinery Cost    £45,000.00        On own production
        Output per year    100,0
00            Year 0    Year 1    Year 2    Year 3    Year 4    Year 5    Year 6    Year 7    Year 8
        Time period of production (Yrs)    8        Initial Investment    £45,000
        Direct manufacturing cost per unit    £0.50        Direct Material Costs        50,000    50,000    50,000    50,000    50,000    50,000    50,000    50,000
        Raw material cost per unit    £0.40        Raw Material Costs        £40,000    £40,000    £40,000    £40,000    £40,000    £40,000    £40,000    £40,000
                    Total costs        £90,000    £90,000    £90,000    £90,000    £90,000    £90,000    £90,000    £90,000
        Product cost per unit if buy from Clyde Engineers    £0.83        Tax shield @25%        £22,500    £22,500    £22,500    £22,500    £22,500    £22,500    £22,500    £22,500
        Batch size in...
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