subject
Business, 20.12.2019 19:31 hayleedowney0143

Motorola obtains cell phones from its contract manufacturer located in china to supply the u. s. market, which is served from a warehouse located in memphis, tennessee. daily demand at the memphis warehouse is normally distributed, with a mean of 5,000 and a standard deviation of 4,000. the warehouse aims for a fill rate of 99 percent. the company is debating whether to use sea or air transportation from china. sea transportation results in a lead time of 36 days and costs $0.50 per phone. air transportation results in a lead time of 4 days and costs $1.50 per phone. each phone costs $100, and motorola uses a holding cost of 20 percent. given the minimum lot sizes, motorola would order 100,000 phones at a time (on average, once every 20 days) if using sea transport and 5,000 phones at a time (on average, daily) if using air transport. to begin with, assume that motorola takes ownership of the inventory on delivery.

a) assuming that motorola follows a continuous review policy, what reorder point and safety inventory should the warehouse aim for when using sea or air transportation? how many days of safety and cycle inventory will motorola carry under each policy?
b) how many days of cycle inventory does motorola carry under each policy?
c) under a continuous review policy, do you recommend sea or air transportation if motorola does not own the inventory while it is in transit? does your answer change if motorola has ownership of the inventory while it is in transit?

ansver
Answers: 2

Another question on Business

question
Business, 21.06.2019 14:00
Njuly, noel & vang company purchased materials costing $23,100 and incurred direct labor cost of $19,800. manufacturing overhead totaled $35,200 for the month. information on inventories was as follows: july 1 july 31 materials $6,820 $7,810 work in process 770 1,320 finished goods 3,630 2,970 what was the cost of goods sold for july? a. $71,300 b. $71,100 c. $69,600 d. $77,220
Answers: 3
question
Business, 22.06.2019 02:00
Precision dyes is analyzing two machines to determine which one it should purchase. the company requires a rate of return of 15 percent and uses straight-line depreciation to a zero book value over the life of its equipment. ignore bonus depreciation. machine a has a cost of $462,000, annual aftertax cash outflows of $46,200, and a four-year life. machine b costs $898,000, has annual aftertax cash outflows of $16,500, and has a seven-year life. whichever machine is purchased will be replaced at the end of its useful life. which machine should the company purchase and how much less is that machine's eac as compared to the other machine's
Answers: 3
question
Business, 22.06.2019 03:00
5. profit maximization and shutting down in the short run suppose that the market for polos is a competitive market. the following graph shows the daily cost curves of a firm operating in this market. 0 2 4 6 8 10 12 14 16 18 20 50 45 40 35 30 25 20 15 10 5 0 price (dollars per polo) quantity (thousands of polos) mc atc avc for each price in the following table, calculate the firm's optimal quantity of units to produce, and determine the profit or loss if it produces at that quantity, using the data from the previous graph to identify its total variable cost. assume that if the firm is indifferent between producing and shutting down, it will produce. (hint: you can select the purple points [diamond symbols] on the previous graph to see precise information on average variable cost.) price quantity total revenue fixed cost variable cost profit (dollars per polo) (polos) (dollars) (dollars) (dollars) (dollars) 12.50 135,000 27.50 135,000 45.00 135,000 if the firm shuts down, it must incur its fixed costs (fc) in the short run. in this case, the firm's fixed cost is $135,000 per day. in other words, if it shuts down, the firm would suffer losses of $135,000 per day until its fixed costs end (such as the expiration of a building lease). this firm's shutdown price—that is, the price below which it is optimal for the firm to shut down—is per polo.
Answers: 3
question
Business, 22.06.2019 07:10
9. tax types: taxes are classified based on whether they are applied directly to income, called direct taxes, or to some other measurable performance characteristic of the firm, called indirect taxes. identify each of the following as a “direct tax,” an “indirect tax,” or something else: a. corporate income tax paid by a japanese subsidiary on its operating income b. royalties paid to saudi arabia for oil extracted and shipped to world markets c. interest received by a u.s. parent on bank deposits held in london d. interest received by a u.s. parent on a loan to a subsidiary in mexico e. principal repayment received by u.s. parent from belgium on a loan to a wholly owned subsidiary in belgium f. excise tax paid on cigarettes manufactured and sold within the united states g. property taxes paid on the corporate headquarters building in seattle h. a direct contribution to the international committee of the red cross for refugee relief i. deferred income tax, shown as a deduction on the u.s. parent’s consolidated income tax j. withholding taxes withheld by germany on dividends paid to a united kingdom parent corporation
Answers: 2
You know the right answer?
Motorola obtains cell phones from its contract manufacturer located in china to supply the u. s. mar...
Questions
question
Mathematics, 14.01.2021 23:10
question
Mathematics, 14.01.2021 23:10
question
Mathematics, 14.01.2021 23:10
question
Mathematics, 14.01.2021 23:10
question
Mathematics, 14.01.2021 23:10
question
Mathematics, 14.01.2021 23:10
Questions on the website: 13722359