What do you think about the purchase price?

Evaluating performance of the existing process to help with the last point you might need detail about problem areas, number of failures, and frequencies for areas of in treats.
August 5, 2017
Write a 2 page (double spaced, stapled, 500 word essay, summarizing the main argument/point of the chapter, followed by your own critical reflection on the chapter).
August 5, 2017
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What do you think about the purchase price?

Read the case study below write an essay that answers the CASE DISCUSSION QUESTIONS. Support your answers using at least two sources in APA Format.

 

Your paper must be well-written, 2-3 pages in length not including title and reference pages, 12 Point Double Spaced Times New Roman with one inch margins.

 

Plagerism check will be performed. Do not repost previous answers to this question.

Gwendolyn Bonnefille, a single mother, is barely scraping by. Although she earns a fair salary working in the accounts receivable department of a local business, she has to pay for child care for her two children,
Samantha who is 5 and Merlin who is 3. While surfing the Web, under a listing titled “businesses that can be moved,” she found for sale a business that makes a great hot sauce called Caterwauling Coyote, with the slogan, “You’ll howl at the moon!” The sauce is made in the kitchen of the owner, bottled, labeled, and then delivered to gift and specialty shops in south Texas. The equipment to make the sauce is commercial quality and appears to be in good condition. The business financial statements and the owner’s 1040 C business tax
returns do not agree. The financial statements show that in the most recent year the business earned $60,000 on sales of $200,000. The 1040 C shows a profit of only $10,000, and a zero tax liability because of deducting losses suffered in prior years. The sellers are asking $240,000 for the business. They are willing to finance
$190,000 at 10 percent for 15 years. When Gwendolyn sat down with the owner, Sylvester Gatos, he attempted to explain the discrepancy between the accounting and the tax returns.“You see,” Sly said, “there are two things. First, some of the expenses on the schedule C aren’t really business expenses, if you know what I mean. Second, when we did the income statement, we took out depreciation, interest, property tax, and the money that we used from the business because a buyer will not have those expenses.”
CASE DISCUSSION QUESTIONS
1. What do you think about Sly’s explanation of the differences between his income statement and
his 1040 Schedule C?
2. Suppose that the income statement is reasonably accurate. What do you think about the
purchase price?

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