0% found this document useful (0 votes)
37 views

Sampling Distribution Assignment Help

This document discusses sampling distributions and Bayesian analysis of normal distributions. It contains 4 examples: 1) Quantile-quantile plots are used to identify 4 distributions from random samples. 2) Stock betas from the S&P 500 are examined. A histogram and normal Q-Q plot show the data are consistent with a normal distribution, though the extremes differ slightly. 3) For a stock with beta of 1.6, a Bayesian analysis is done assuming a normal prior and likelihood. 4) The posterior distribution for the stock's true beta is normal, with mean a weighted average of the prior and observation, and variance less than the prior.
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PPTX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
0% found this document useful (0 votes)
37 views

Sampling Distribution Assignment Help

This document discusses sampling distributions and Bayesian analysis of normal distributions. It contains 4 examples: 1) Quantile-quantile plots are used to identify 4 distributions from random samples. 2) Stock betas from the S&P 500 are examined. A histogram and normal Q-Q plot show the data are consistent with a normal distribution, though the extremes differ slightly. 3) For a stock with beta of 1.6, a Bayesian analysis is done assuming a normal prior and likelihood. 4) The posterior distribution for the stock's true beta is normal, with mean a weighted average of the prior and observation, and variance less than the prior.
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PPTX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 9

For any Homework related queries, call us at- +1 678 648 4277

You can mail us at:- [email protected] or


reach us at- https://www.statisticshomeworksolver.com/

Sampling Distribution Assignment Help


1. Probability Plots

Random samples of size n = 100 were simulated from four


distributions:

• Uniform(0, 1)
• Exponential(1)
• Normal(50, 10)
• Student’s t (4 degrees of freedom).

The quantile-quantile plots are plotted for each of these 4 samples:

Uniform QQ Plot Normal QQ Plot


Exponential QQ Plot t Dist. QQ Plot

For each sample, the values were re-scaled to have sample mean
zero and sample standard deviation 1

The Normal QQ plot for each set of standardized sample values is


given in the next display but they are in a random order. For each
distribution, identify the corresponding Normal QQ plot, and explain
your reasoning.
• Uniform(0, 1) = Plot
• Exponential(1) = Plot
• Normal(50, 10) = Plot
• Student’s t (4 degrees of freedom) = Plot
Solution:

The Student’s t sample has two extreme high values and one
extreme low value which are evident in Plot A, so

Plot A = t distribution

Plot B is the only plot that has a bow shape which indicates larger
observations are higher than would be expected for a normal
sample and smaller observations are less small than would be
expected for a normal sample. This is true for the Exponential
distribution which is asymmetric with a right-tail that is heavier
than a normal distribution.

Plot B = Exponential.

The Uniform(0, 1) sample has true mean 0.5 and true variance
equal to E[X2] − (E[X])2 = 1/3 − (1/2)2 = 1/12. For a typical sample,
the standardized sample values will be bounded (using the true
mean and standa d rd deviation to standardize, the values would no
larger than +(1 − .5)/ 1/12 = 1.73). For Plot C the range of the
standardized values is smallest, consistent with what would be
expected for a sample from a uniform distribution.

Plot C = Uniform distribution.


The QQ Plot for the normal distribution is unchanged and follows a
straight-line pattern indicating consistency of the ordered
observations with the theoretical quantiles – distribution

Plot D = Normal

2. Betas for Stocks

In S&P 500 Index. In financial modeling of stock returns, the Capital


Asset Pricing Model associates a “Beta” for any stock which
measures how risky that stock is compared to the “market
portfolio”. (Note: this name has nothing to do with the beta(a,b)
distribution!) Using monthly data, the Beta for each stock in the
S&P 500 Index was computed. The following display gives an index
plot, histogram, Normal QQ plot for these Beta values.

Index Plot of 500 Stock Betas (X)


Histogram

Normal Q−Q Plot

For the sample of 500 Beta values, x =1.0902 and sx =0.5053.

(a). On the basis of the histogram and the Normal QQ plot, are the
values consistent with being a random sample from a Normal
distribution?
Solution:

Yes, the values are consistent with being a random sample from a
Normal distribution. The normal QQ-plot is quite straight.

(b). Refine your answer to (a) focusing separately on the extreme


low values (smallest quantiles) and on the extreme large values
(highest quantiles).

Solution:

Consider the extremes of the distribution. The high positive points


appear a bit higher than would be expected for a normal sample
suggesting there are some outlier stocks with higher betas than
would be expected under a normal model. The lowest values near
zero appear a bit above the straight line through most of the
ordered points, suggesting that the stocks with lowest beta values
aren’t as low as might be expected under a normal model.

Bayesian Analysis of a Normal Distribution.

For a stock that is similar to those that are constituents of the S&P
500 index above, let X = 1.6 be an estimate of the Beta coefficient θ.
Suppose that the following assumptions are reasonable:
• The conditional distribution X given θ is Normal with known
variance:

• As a prior for θ, assume that θ is Normal with mean and variance


equal to those in the sample

(c). Determine the posterior distribution of θ given X = 1.6.

Solution:
This is the case of a normal conjugate prior distribution for the
normal sample observation. The posterior distribution of θ is given
by

where

and
Plugging in values we get

(d). Is the posterior mean between X and µprior? Would this


always be the case if a different value of X had been observed?

(e). Is the variance of the posterior distribution for θ given X


greater or less than the variance of the prior distribution for θ?
Does your answer depend on the value of X?

Solution:

(d). Yes, the posterior mean is a weighted average of X and µprior


which will always be between the two values.

(e). The variance of the posterior distribution τ 2 = (0.186)2 ∗ is


less than (.5053)2 = σ2 prior. From part (c), the posterior variance
does not vary with the outcome X = x

You might also like