Showing posts with label CVP ANALYSIS. Show all posts
Showing posts with label CVP ANALYSIS. Show all posts

Thursday, December 4, 2025

Cost Volume Profit Analysis, Break Even Point sales



📘 CVP ANALYSIS (Cost–Volume–Profit Analysis)

Definition

A technique that studies the relationship between costs, sales volume, selling price, and profit.

Key Assumptions

  • Selling price per unit is constant.
  • Variable cost per unit is constant.
  • Total fixed costs remain constant within the relevant range.
  • All output produced is sold.
  • Sales mix remains constant (if multiple products).

Key Uses

  • Determining BEP (Break-even point)
  • Measuring margin of safety
  • Profit planning
  • Making short-term decisions (pricing, product mix, etc.)

📘 MARGINAL COSTING

Definition

A costing technique where:

  • Variable costs are charged to cost units.
  • Fixed costs are treated as period costs (charged to P&L directly).

Marginal Cost

Marginal Cost = Variable Cost per Unit

Contribution

Contribution = Selling Price – Variable Cost

Contribution helps cover fixed costs and profit.

Profit

Profit = Total Contribution – Fixed Costs

Advantages

  • Helps in decision making (pricing, shutdown, special orders)
  • Simple to apply
  • Helps measure profitability of products

Disadvantages

  • Ignores fixed costs in valuation
  • Not accepted for external financial reporting

📘 BREAK-EVEN ANALYSIS

Break-even Point (BEP)

The level of sales where Total Contribution = Fixed CostProfit = 0

Formulas

1. BEP (Units)

BEP Units = Fixed Cost / Contribution per Unit

2. BEP (Sales Value)

BEP Sales = Fixed Cost / C/S Ratio

C/S Ratio (Contribution/Sales Ratio)

Also called P/V ratio (Profit–Volume Ratio).

C/S Ratio = Contribution / Sales

or

C/S Ratio = (Selling Price – Variable Cost) / Selling Price


📘 MARGIN OF SAFETY (MOS)

Definition

The difference between actual (or budgeted) sales and break-even sales.

Formula

Margin of Safety = Actual Sales – BEP Sales

MOS %

MOS % = (Actual Sales – BEP Sales) / Actual Sales × 100

Interpretation

  • High MOS = Low risk of loss
  • Low MOS = High risk of going into loss

📘 RELATIONSHIPS & KEY FORMULAS

1. Profit Formula

Profit = (Sales × C/S Ratio) – Fixed Costs

2. Required Sales for Target Profit

Sales (Units)

Required Units = (Fixed Costs + Target Profit) / Contribution per Unit

Sales (Value)

Required Sales = (Fixed Costs + Target Profit) / C/S Ratio


📘 SIMPLE NUMERICAL EXAMPLE

  • SP = $50
  • VC = $30
  • Contribution = $20
  • Fixed Cost = $2,00,000
  • C/S ratio = 20/50 = 40%

BEP Units

= 2,00,000 / 20 = 10,000 units

BEP Sales

= 2,00,000 / 0.40 = $5,00,000

If Actual Sales = 8,00,000 → MOS

MOS = 8,00,000 – 5,00,000 = 3,00,000

MOS% = (3,00,000 / 8,00,000) × 100 = 37.5%


CVP (Cost-Volume-Profit) Analysis

CVP analysis is a method used to determine how changes in costs and sales volume affect a company's profit. It helps businesses understand the relationship between costs, volume, and profit.


Break-Even Point (BEP) Sales

The break-even point is the sales level at which a company's total revenue equals its total costs, resulting in zero profit. It's calculated as:

BEP (units) = Fixed Costs / Contribution Margin per unit

BEP (sales) = Fixed Costs / Contribution Margin Ratio


Contribution Margin (CM)

Contribution margin is the difference between sales revenue and variable costs. It's the amount available to cover fixed costs and generate profit.

CM = Sales - Variable Costs

CM Ratio = (CM / Sales) x 100


Expected Sales

Expected sales refer to the sales revenue a company anticipates generating during a specific period.


Target Profit

Target profit is the desired profit level a company aims to achieve. It's used to determine the required sales level to achieve that profit.


Marginal Analysis

Marginal analysis is a decision-making tool used to evaluate the additional costs and benefits of a specific action or decision. It focuses on the incremental changes in costs and revenue.


Features of CVP Analysis

- *Assumes a linear relationship between costs and sales volume*

- *Helps determine the break-even point and target profit*

- *Analyzes the impact of changes in costs and sales volume on profit*

- *Used for decision-making and planning*

- *Assumes a constant sales mix and selling price*


Some common applications of CVP analysis include:

- *Determining the optimal sales mix*

- *Evaluating the impact of price changes*

- *Identifying the most profitable products or services*

- *Making decisions about production and pricing*

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