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Transcript of TRANSFER PRICING rights reserved.. Class Announcements Service Learning Assignment: Schedule a...
Class Announcements Service Learning Assignment:
Schedule a meeting with Danika Leblanc ([email protected]) prior to contacting your organization
See Service Learning Project on-line See M Oxner if not assigned to a project
Next class – In lieu of class (both sections) – Leadership Forum at 2:15pm in SCHW 110. Speaker – Richard Peddie, Former CEO Maple Leaf Sports and Entertainment
Assignment #2 due February 10, available on-line Midterm February 19th (Wednesday)- discussed at end of class Office hours on Wednesday 9:00am-12:00noon Business Banquet - April 2nd – 5:45-8pm, Catering - Gabrieau's
Bistro; Keynote Speaker - Annette Verschuren, Past President of Home Depot for Canada and Asia
Class Objectives
1. Understanding transfer pricing as an internal pricing mechanism
2. Understanding transfer pricing as a means for evaluation
3. Consider the implications of transfer pricing on behaviour
Transfer Pricing
When evaluations are based on profit, etc. we need to establish price for internal transfers
“Transfer price is the price one subunit (department or division) charges for a product or service supplied to another subunit of the same organization.” p. 780
Transfer prices can have a dramatic effect on the reported profitability of a division but not on overall profit
In a well designed transfer pricing system a manager focuses on optimizing subunit performance and in doing so optimizes the performance of the whole company.© 2012 Pearson Prentice Hall.
Aill rights reserved.i
Transfer Pricing: Internal Price Management control systems use transfer prices
to coordinate the actions of subunits and to evaluate their performance.
The transfer price creates revenues for the selling subunit and purchase costs for the buying subunit affecting each subunit’s operating income.
When segments sell to one another, a benefit to one segment may have a negative impact on another segment (internal transfer)
Transfer price becomes a cost to the buying division and revenue to the selling division.
© 2012 Pearson Prentice Hall. All rights reserved.
Transfer Pricing: Purposes
1) Promote goal congruence 2) To guide managers to decide whether to buy
internally or externally a good transfer price is one that induces division
managers to do whatever is in the best interest of the entire company otherwise sub optimization (i.e. each division manager makes a decision to maximizes the company’s profit).
3) To evaluate segment performance 4) To minimize taxes, duties & tariffs for
multinationals 5) Preserve autonomy
Transfer Pricing: Rule
Transfer Price = Incremental Cost+ Opportunity Cost Incremental cost is additional cost of producing
ad transferring a product or service Opportunity cost is the maximum contribution
margin foregone by selling if product or service is transferred internally.
Transfer price depends on capacity Excess capacity – TP=Incremental Cost No excess capacity – TP= Incremental Cost+ Opp
Cost
Transfer Pricing: Methods
Difficulty in implementing this rule yielded three approaches to determining transfer price.1.Market-based transfer prices2.Cost-based transfer prices3.Hybrid transfer prices
i. Prorated transfer pricesii. Dual transfer pricesiii. Negotiated transfer prices
© 2012 Pearson Prentice Hall. All rights reserved.
Transfer Pricing: 1.Market-Based
Top management chooses to use the price of similar product or service that is publicly available. Sources of prices include trade associations,
competitors, and so on. Lead to optimal decision-making when three
conditions are satisfied:1. The market for the intermediate product is perfectly
competitive.2. Interdependencies of subunits are minimal.3. There are no additional costs or benefits to the
company as a whole from buying or selling in the external market instead of transacting internally.
© 2012 Pearson Prentice Hall. All rights reserved.
Transfer Pricing: 1.Market-Based
A perfectly competitive market exists when there is a homogeneous product with buying prices equal to selling prices and no individual buyer or seller can affect those prices by their own actions.
Allows a firm to achieve goal congruence, motivating management effort, subunit performance evaluations, and subunit autonomy.
Perhaps should not be used if the market is currently in a state of “distress pricing.”
Because not based on costs, motivates each division manager to exert management effort to maximize his or her own division’s operating income (cost management)
© 2012 Pearson Prentice Hall. All rights reserved.
Transfer Pricing: 1.Market-Based
Advantages: i) avoids routinely bogging down negotiations ii) if no idle capacity, market price is the
perfect choice iii) external segmented reporting using market
price Disadvantages:
i) market prices are not always known ii) may reduce possibility of generating benefits
through cooperation
Transfer Pricing: 2.Cost-Based Top management chooses a transfer price
based on the costs of producing the intermediate product. Examples include: Variable production costs Variable and fixed production costs Full costs (including life-cycle costs)/absorption
costing One of the above, plus some markup
Useful when market prices are unavailable, inappropriate, or too costly to obtain
© 2012 Pearson Prentice Hall. All rights reserved.
Transfer Pricing: 2.Cost-Based Advantages:
i) commonly used in practice ii) easily understood and convenient to use
Disadvantages: i) distinction between fixed and variable
costs are blurred (absorption cost leads to dysfunctional behavior)
ii) since inefficiencies are passed on, lacks incentive to control expenditures/assets (standards avoid this)
Transfer Pricing: 3.Hybrid
Takes into account both cost and market information
Types of hybrid transfer prices: Prorating the difference between
maximum and minimum transfer prices Dual pricing Negotiated pricing (most common)
© 2012 Pearson Prentice Hall. All rights reserved.
Transfer Pricing: 3.Hybrid
Dual-pricing transfer prices charge the buying division for the cost of the
transferred product (however the cost might be determined) and credits the selling division with the cost plus some profit allowance.
using two separate transfer-pricing methods to price each transfer from one subunit to another.
not used much in practice example: selling division receives full cost
pricing, and the buying division pays market pricing.
© 2012 Pearson Prentice Hall. All rights reserved.
Transfer Pricing: 3.Hybrid
Negotiated transfer prices: Occasionally, subunits of a firm are free to
negotiate the transfer price between themselves and then to decide whether to buy and sell internally or deal with external parties.
May or may not bear any resemblance to cost or market data.
Often used when market prices are volatile. Represent the outcome of a bargaining process
between the selling and buying subunits. Promotes autonomy
© 2012 Pearson Prentice Hall. All rights reserved.
Transfer Pricing: 3.Hybrid
Disadvantages of Negotiated Transfer Price: i) time consuming ii) may lead to bad “blood” between mangers of
different subunit; Given the disputes that often accompany the negotiation process, most companies rely on some other means of setting transfer prices.
iii) If managers are pitted against each other rather than against their past performance or reasonable benchmarks, a non-cooperative atmosphere is almost guaranteed.
Note: The principles of decentralization suggest that companies should grant managers autonomy to set transfer prices and to decide whether to sell internally or externally, even is this may occasionally result in suboptimal decisions.
Transfer Pricing: International
Transfer Pricing Objectives
Domestic• Greater divisional autonomy• Greater motivation for managers• Better performance evaluation• Better goal congruence
International• Less taxes, duties, and tariffs• Less foreign exchange risks• Better competitive position• Better governmental relations
Friday, Wednesday February19th(in-class) Worth: 30% Coverage: Chpts. 6, 7, 8 , 22 (p. 780-791), 23 (p.
808-814) Format:
Short answer questions with multiple parts No – multiple choice, journal entries, ethics Answer for only THREE of the four questions; each
question is worth 25 points. Preparation:
Problems On-line Lecture Notes On-line Additional Office Hours:
Tuesday 18th – 11:00am – 1:00pm (normally none) Wednesday 19th – 9:00am – 2:00pm (normally 11:00am –
2:00pm)
Midterm