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what is the 1 minus in this formula actual doing
The formula below has a "1 minus" in part of it. Does anyone know what this
means or is doing. I understand the whole formula except that. ="Base B/E = Fixed Expense ÷ (1 minus (Variable Cost ÷ Sales))" |
what is the 1 minus in this formula actual doing
Well this is obviously a break even formula. Though this question doesn't
exactly apply as an Excel question, it the "(1 minus (Variable Cost ÷ Sales))" portion of the formula, you are subtracting the "Variable Cose devided by Sales" from 1. Why, I don't exactly know. However the link below may explain a little more. https://www.agecon.purdue.edu/planne.../breakeven.pdf Regards, Paul "Kim Shelton at PDC" wrote in message ... The formula below has a "1 minus" in part of it. Does anyone know what this means or is doing. I understand the whole formula except that. ="Base B/E = Fixed Expense ÷ (1 minus (Variable Cost ÷ Sales))" |
what is the 1 minus in this formula actual doing
Hi Kim
With Sales of 500,000 and VC of 300,000, then the VC represents 300000/500000 = 60% of Sales or 0.6 In order to get the reciprocal of that, i.e. the 40% that is the Gross Contribution from Sales, we need to subtract the result from 1 (or 100%) so the 1-(VC/Sales) in the example above would return 0.4 or 40%. So if Fixed Costs were 100,000 the Sales required to Break Even would be 100000 / 0.4 = 250,000 -- Regards Roger Govier "Kim Shelton at PDC" wrote in message ... The formula below has a "1 minus" in part of it. Does anyone know what this means or is doing. I understand the whole formula except that. ="Base B/E = Fixed Expense ÷ (1 minus (Variable Cost ÷ Sales))" |
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