Taste Good Chocolates develops a new candy and plans to sell each bar for $1. Tast Good predicts that 1 million candy bars will be sold in the first year if the new candy bar is produced and sold, and includes $1 million of incremental revenues in its capital budgeting analysis. A senior executive in the company believes that 1 million candy bars will indeed be sold, but lowers the estimate of incremental revenue to $700,000. What would explain the change?
a. Cannibalization of 300,000 of Taste Good Chocolate's other candy bars
b. Excessive marketing costs to sell the 1 million candy bars
c. A lower discount rate
d. A higher selling price for the new candy bars