Questions
BU.230.730.53.SP25 Final Exam- Requires Respondus LockDown Browser
Single choice
I simulate tomorrow’s return from the distribution 𝑁 𝑜 𝑟 𝑚 𝑎 𝑙 ( 0 , ( 1 % ) 2 ) 1000 times. All 1000 simulated returns are positive. What do you think?
Options
A.It is bad luck. Let me re-run code and sample another 1000 numbers.
B.It is bad luck, but ok. I should not re-run code. I should move on with the VaR by calculating the percentile of 1000 simulated numbers.
C.It is abnormal. I should go back and check the code or Excel formula.
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Step-by-Step Analysis
The question presents a scenario of simulating tomorrow’s return from a normal distribution with mean 0 and standard deviation 1%? (the text shows N(0, (1%)^2) and 1000 trials), and notes that all 1000 simulated returns are positive. This prompts evaluation of whether such an outcome is plausible under the stated model and what action to take.
Option 1: 'It is bad luck. Let me re-run code and sample another 1000 numbers.' This response treats the all-positive outcome as mere unlucky sampling. While repeating simulations can help assess randomness, if the underlying model is correct and the distribution is Normal with symmetric support around zero, obtaining 1000 all-positive sam......Login to view full explanationLog in for full answers
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I simulate tomorrow’s return from the distribution 𝑁 𝑜 𝑟 𝑚 𝑎 𝑙 ( 0 , ( 1 % ) 2 ) 1000 times. All 1000 simulated returns are positive. What do you think?
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