Special-Order Pricing Barry’s Bar-B-Que is a popular lunch-time spot. Barry is conscientious about the quality of his meals, and he has a regular crowd of 400 patrons for his $9.20 lunch. His variable cost for each meal is about $2.70, and he figures his fixed costs, on a daily basis, are about $1,900. From time to time, bus-tour groups with 50 patrons stop by. He has welcomed them because he has capacity to seat 500 diners in the average lunch period, and his cooking and wait staff can easily handle the additional load. The tour operator generally pays for the entire group on a single check to save the wait staff and cashier the additional time. Due to competitive conditions in the tour business, the operator is now asking Barry to lower the price to $4.20 per meal for each of the 50 bus-tour members. (Negative amounts should be indicated by a minus sign. Round your answers to 2 decimal places.)
Required:
1-a. What is the incremental profit (loss) per bus-tour meal?
1-b. Should Barry accept the bus-tour offer?
2-a. What is the incremental profit (loss) for each meal if the tour company were willing to guarantee 200 patrons (or four bus loads) at least once a month for $4.00 per meal?
2-b. Is the offer financially attractive?
1- | |||
incremental profit (loss) per bus-tour meal | (selling price-variable cost) | (4.2-2.7) | 1.5 |
2- | |||
Yes offer should be accepted as it results in 1.5 incremental profit per meal | |||
3- | |||
selling price | 4 | ||
variable cost | 2.7 | ||
fixed cost per unit | 1900/500 | 3.8 | |
net profit or loss per meal | -2.5 | ||
4- | |||
no offer is not attractive as it results in loss of -2.5 per meal. |
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