Statistical Techniques in Business and Economics, 16th Edition
Statistical Techniques in Business and Economics, 16th Edition
16th Edition
ISBN: 9780078020520
Author: Douglas A. Lind, William G Marchal, Samuel A. Wathen
Publisher: McGraw-Hill Education
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Chapter 2, Problem 38CE

The numbers of outstanding shares for 24 publicly traded companies are listed in the following table.

Chapter 2, Problem 38CE, The numbers of outstanding shares for 24 publicly traded companies are listed in the following

  1. a. Using the number of outstanding shares, summarize the companies with a frequency distribution.
  2. b. Display the frequency distribution with a frequency polygon.
  3. c. Create a cumulative frequency distribution of the outstanding shares.
  4. d. Display the cumulative frequency distribution with a cumulative frequency polygon.
  5. e. Based on the cumulative relative frequency distribution, 75% of the companies have less than “what number” of outstanding shares?
  6. f. Write a brief analysis of this group of companies based on your statistical summaries of “number of outstanding shares.”

a.

Expert Solution
Check Mark
To determine

Construct a frequency distribution for the given table.

Answer to Problem 38CE

The frequency distribution for the publicly traded companies is given below:

Outstanding shares

Number of

companies

0–40010
400–8008
800–1,2004
1,200–1,6001
1,600–2,0001
Total24

Explanation of Solution

Selection of number of classes:

The “2 to the k rule” suggests that the number of classes is the smallest value of k, where 2k is greater than the number of observations.

It is given that the data set consists of 24 observations. The value of k can be obtained as follows:

24=16<2425=32>24

Here, k=5 is the smallest value for which 2k is greater than the number of observations.

Therefore, the number of classes for the given data set is 5.

From the given data set, the maximum and minimum values are 1,957 and 22, respectively.

The formula for the class interval is given as follows:

i(Maximum valueMinimum value)k

where i is the class interval and k is the number of classes.

Therefore, the class interval for the given data can be obtained as follows:

i(Maximum valueMinimum value)k1,9572251,9355387

In practice, the class interval size is usually rounded up to some convenient number. Therefore, the reasonable class interval is 400.

Frequency distribution:

The frequency table is a collection of mutually exclusive and exhaustive classes, which shows the number of observations in each class.

Since the minimum value is 22 and the class interval is 400, the first class would be 0–400. The frequency distribution for the publicly traded companies can be constructed as follows:

Outstanding shares

Number of

companies

0–40010
400–8008
800–1,2004
1,200–1,6001
1,600–2,0001
Total24

b.

Expert Solution
Check Mark
To determine

Create a frequency polygon for the frequency distribution.

Answer to Problem 38CE

The frequency polygon for the given data is as follows:

Statistical Techniques in Business and Economics, 16th Edition, Chapter 2, Problem 38CE , additional homework tip  1

Explanation of Solution

For the given data set, the frequency table with mid-points of classes is obtained as follows:

Outstanding sharesMid-point

Number of

companies

0–4000+4002=20010
400–800400+8002=6008
800–1,200800+1,2002=1,0004
1,200–1,6001,200+1,6002=1,4001
1,600–2,0001,600+2,0002=1,8001
Total 24

The frequency polygon for the given data can be drawn using EXCEL.

Step-by-step procedure to obtain the frequency polygon using EXCEL:

  • Enter the column of midpoints along with the frequency column.
  • Select the total data range with labels.
  • Go to Insert > Charts > line chart.
  • Select the appropriate line chart.
  • Click OK.

c.

Expert Solution
Check Mark
To determine

Create a cumulative frequency distribution for the given table.

Answer to Problem 38CE

The cumulative frequency distribution is given below:

Outstanding shares

Number of

companies

Cumulative

frequency

0–4001010
400–800818
800–1,200422
1,200–1,600123
1,600–2,000124
Total24 

Explanation of Solution

The cumulative frequency distribution for the frequency table in Part (a) can be constructed as follows:

Outstanding shares

Number of

companies

Cumulative

frequency

0–4001010
400–800810+18=18
800–1,200418+4=22
1,200–1,600122+1=23
1,600–2,000123+1=24
Total24 

d.

Expert Solution
Check Mark
To determine

Create a cumulative frequency polygon for the frequency distribution.

Answer to Problem 38CE

The cumulative frequency polygon for the given data is as follows:

Statistical Techniques in Business and Economics, 16th Edition, Chapter 2, Problem 38CE , additional homework tip  2

Explanation of Solution

For the given data set, the cumulative frequency table with mid-points of classes is obtained as follows:

Outstanding sharesMid-point

Cumulative frequency for

Number of companies

0–4000+4002=20010
400–800400+8002=60018
800–1,200800+1,2002=1,00022
1,200–1,6001,200+1,6002=1,40023
1,600–2,0001,600+2,0002=1,80024

The cumulative frequency polygon for the given data can be drawn using EXCEL.

Step-by-step procedure to obtain the frequency polygon using EXCEL:

  • Enter the column of midpoints along with the cumulative frequency column.
  • Select the total data range with labels.
  • Go to Insert > Charts > line chart.
  • Select the appropriate line chart.
  • Click OK.

e.

Expert Solution
Check Mark
To determine

Find the number of outstanding shares that 75% of the companies have below than it.

Answer to Problem 38CE

Approximately 75% of the companies have less than 600 outstanding shares.

Explanation of Solution

75% of the total 24 companies are 18 companies. From the given cumulative frequency polygon, the value on the outstanding shares axis corresponding to 18 on the number of companies’ axis is 600. Therefore, approximately 75% of the companies have less than 600 outstanding shares.

f.

Expert Solution
Check Mark
To determine

Give an explanation about the analysis of the number of outstanding shares.

Explanation of Solution

From the cumulative frequency distribution in Part (d), 18 out of 24 companies have less than 600 million shares. Only 2 companies have more than 1200 million shares. Thus, the distribution of number of outstanding shares is positively skewed.

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Chapter 2 Solutions

Statistical Techniques in Business and Economics, 16th Edition

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