Using the McDonald's Financial Analysis (FY 2011 FY 2008) and...

80.2K

Verified Solution

Question

Accounting

Using the McDonald's Financial Analysis (FY 2011 FY 2008) and Key Ratio Comparison, calculate the missing values. (Enter your answers in thousands of dollars. Round your answers to 2 decimal place. Omit the "$" & "%" signs in your response.)

McDonald's Financial Analysis
(data in thousands [000s], excluding per share data and financial ratios) FY 2012
Revenue $ 27,567,000
Cost of Revenue 15,348,500

Gross Profit

Gross Profit Margin

EBIT 8,361,100
Income Tax 2,614,200
NOPAT (Net Operating Profit After Taxes) 5,746,900
Net Income (includes discontinued operations) $ 5,464,800

Diluted Weighted Average Shares 1,020,200
Dividends per Share
Diluted Normalized EPS (continuing operations) 5.36
Cash Cycle FY 2012
Revenue per day
Accounts Receivable 1,375,300
Receivable Days
Inventory 121,700
Inventory Days
Accounts Payable 1,141,900
Payable Days

Cash Cycle (days)

Key Ratios FY 2012
Market Value of Book Equity
Price per share* 88.21
Earnings per share (continuing operations)
P/E Ratio
Return on Invested Capital 0.16
Return on Assets
Return on Equity
Return on Revenue
Total Assets 35,386,500
Current Assets 4,922,100
Current Liabilities 3,403,100
Current Ratio
Total Liabilities
Liabilities/Equity Ratio
Total Equity (book value) 15,293,600.0
Shareholders' Equity (minority interests) -
Market to Book Value
Per Employee FY 2012
Number of Employees (continuing operations) 440.0
Revenue
Net Income
Market Value

Answer & Explanation Solved by verified expert
Get Answers to Unlimited Questions

Join us to gain access to millions of questions and expert answers. Enjoy exclusive benefits tailored just for you!

Membership Benefits:
  • Unlimited Question Access with detailed Answers
  • Zin AI - 3 Million Words
  • 10 Dall-E 3 Images
  • 20 Plot Generations
  • Conversation with Dialogue Memory
  • No Ads, Ever!
  • Access to Our Best AI Platform: Flex AI - Your personal assistant for all your inquiries!
Become a Member

Other questions asked by students