Castle Company is considering the purchase of a new machine. The invoice price of the machine is

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Castle Company is considering the purchase of a new machine. The invoice price of the machine is $150,000, freight charges are estimated to be $6,000, and installation costs are expected to be $4,000. The salvage value of the new equipment is expected to be zero after a useful life of four years. The company could retain the existing equipment and use it for an additional four years if it doesn't purchase the new ma- chine. At that time, the equipment's salvage value would be zero. If Castle purchases the new machine now, it would have to scrap the existing ma- chine. Castle's accountant, Shaida Fang, has accumulated the following data for annual sales and expenses, with and without the new machine:
1. Without the new machine, Castle can sell 15,000 units of product annually at a per-unit selling price of $120. If it purchases the new machine, the number of units produced and sold would increase by 20%, and the selling price would remain the same.
2. The new machine is faster than the old machine, and it is more efficient in its use of materials. With the old machine, the gross profit rate is 20% of sales, whereas the rate will be 25% of sales with the new machine.
3. Annual selling expenses are $180,000 with the current machine. Because the new machine would produce a greater number of units to be sold, annual selling expenses are expected to increase by 10% if it is purchased.
4. Annual administrative expenses are expected to be $100,000 with the old machine, and $90,000 with the new machine.
5. The current book value of the existing machine is $40,000. Castle uses straight-line depreciation.
Instructions
Prepare an incremental analysis for the four years that shows whether Castle should retain the existing machine or buy the new one. (Ignore income tax effects.)
Salvage Value
Salvage value is the estimated book value of an asset after depreciation is complete, based on what a company expects to receive in exchange for the asset at the end of its useful life. As such, an asset’s estimated salvage value is an important...
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Managerial Accounting Tools for Business Decision Making

ISBN: 978-1118856994

4th Canadian edition

Authors: Jerry J. Weygandt, Paul D. Kimmel, Donald E. Kieso, Ibrahim M. Aly

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