Fundamentals of Statistics (5th Edition)
5th Edition
ISBN: 9780134508306
Author: Michael Sullivan III
Publisher: PEARSON
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Textbook Question
Chapter 8.1, Problem 42AYU
Bull Markets A bull market is defined as a market condition in which the price of a security rises for an extended period of time. A bull market in the stock market is often defined as a condition in which a market rises by 20% or more without a 20% decline. The data on the next page represent the number of months and percentage change in the S&P500 (a group of 500 stocks) during the 25 bull markets dating back to 1929 (the year of the famous market crash).
- a. Treating the length of the bull market as the explanatory variable, draw a
scatter diagram of the data. - b. Determine the linear
correlation coefficient between months and percent change. - c. Does a linear relation exist between duration of the bull market and market performance?
- d. Find the least-squares regression line treating length of the bull market as the explanatory variable.
- e. Interpret the slope.
- f. Did the bull market that lasted 50.4 months have a percent change above or below what would be expected? Explain.
- g. Draw a residual plot. Any outliers?
- h. Would you consider the bull market from December 4, 1987 through March 24, 2000, which lasted 149.8 months and saw a 582.15% rise in stock prices, influential? Explain. Note: After this bull market, the market entered a bear market that lasted 18.2 months and saw the stock market decline 37%. This era is often referred to as the ”Tech Bubble.”
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Fundamentals of Statistics (5th Edition)
Ch. 8.1 - The _____ _____ of the sample mean, x, is the...Ch. 8.1 - Suppose a simple random sample of size n is drawn...Ch. 8.1 - The standard deviation of the sampling...Ch. 8.1 - True or False: The distribution of the sample...Ch. 8.1 - True or False: The distribution of the sample...Ch. 8.1 - True or False: To cut the standard error of the...Ch. 8.1 - A simple random sample of size n = 10 is obtained...Ch. 8.1 - A simple random sample of size n = 40 is obtained...Ch. 8.1 - In Problems 912, determine x and x from the given...Ch. 8.1 - In Problems 912, determine x and x from the given...
Ch. 8.1 - In Problems 912, determine x and x from the given...Ch. 8.1 - In Problems 912, determine x and x from the given...Ch. 8.1 - Answer the following questions for the sampling...Ch. 8.1 - Answer the following questions for the sampling...Ch. 8.1 - A simple random sample of size n = 49 is obtained...Ch. 8.1 - A simple random sample of size n = 36 is obtained...Ch. 8.1 - A simple random sample of size n = 12 is obtained...Ch. 8.1 - A simple random sample of size n = 20 is obtained...Ch. 8.1 - NW Gestation Period The length of human...Ch. 8.1 - Upper Leg Length The upper leg length of 20- to...Ch. 8.1 - Reading Rates The reading speed of second grade...Ch. 8.1 - Old Faithful The most famous geyser in the world....Ch. 8.1 - Rates of Return in Stocks The SP 500 is a...Ch. 8.1 - Winning Poker A very good poker player is expected...Ch. 8.1 - NW Oil Change The shape of the distribution of the...Ch. 8.1 - Time Spent in the Drive-Through The...Ch. 8.1 - Insect Fragments The Food and Drug Administration...Ch. 8.1 - Burger Kings Drive-Through Suppose that cars...Ch. 8.1 - Watching Television The amount of time Americans...Ch. 8.1 - ATM Withdrawals According to Crown ATM Network,...Ch. 8.1 - Sampling Distributions The following data...Ch. 8.1 - Sampling Distributions The following data...Ch. 8.1 - Putting It Together: Playing Roulette In the game...Ch. 8.1 - Explain what a sampling distribution is.Ch. 8.1 - State the Central Limit Theorem.Ch. 8.1 - We assume that we are obtaining simple random...Ch. 8.1 - Without doing any computation, decide which has a...Ch. 8.1 - For the three probability distributions shown,...Ch. 8.1 - Suppose Jack and Diane are each attempting to use...Ch. 8.1 - Sleepy Suppose you want to study the number of...Ch. 8.1 - Sleepy Again Suppose you want to study the number...Ch. 8.1 - Bull Markets A bull market is defined as a market...Ch. 8.2 - In a town of 500 households, 220 have a dog. The...Ch. 8.2 - The _____ _____, denoted p, is given by the...Ch. 8.2 - True or False: The population proportion and...Ch. 8.2 - True or False: The mean of the sampling...Ch. 8.2 - Describe the circumstances under which the shape...Ch. 8.2 - What happens to the standard deviation of p as the...Ch. 8.2 - In Problems 710, describe the sampling...Ch. 8.2 - In Problems 710, describe the sampling...Ch. 8.2 - In Problems 710, describe the sampling...Ch. 8.2 - In Problems 710, describe the sampling...Ch. 8.2 - A simple random sample of size n = 75 is obtained...Ch. 8.2 - A simple random sample of size n = 200 is obtained...Ch. 8.2 - Prob. 13AYUCh. 8.2 - A simple random sample of size n = 1460 is...Ch. 8.2 - Foreign Language According to a study done by...Ch. 8.2 - Are You Satisfied? According to a study done by...Ch. 8.2 - NW Marriage Obsolete? According to a study done by...Ch. 8.2 - Credit Cards According to creditcard.com, 29% of...Ch. 8.2 - Afraid to Fly According to a study conducted by...Ch. 8.2 - Having Children? The Pew Research Center recently...Ch. 8.2 - Election Prediction Exit polling is a popular...Ch. 8.2 - Acceptance Sampling A shipment of 50,000...Ch. 8.2 - Social Security Reform A researcher studying...Ch. 8.2 - Prob. 24AYUCh. 8.2 - Reincarnation Suppose 21% of all American teens...Ch. 8.2 - Assessments Consider the homeowners association...Ch. 8.2 - Airline Reservations In Chapter 6, We learned that...Ch. 8.2 - Finite Population Correction Factor In this...Ch. 8.2 - Fumbles The New England Patriots made headlines...Ch. 8 - In your own words, explain what a sampling...Ch. 8 - Prob. 2RECh. 8 - Under what conditions is the sampling distribution...Ch. 8 - Prob. 4RECh. 8 - Energy Need during Pregnancy The total energy need...Ch. 8 - Copper Tubing A machine at KA Tube Manufacturing...Ch. 8 - Number of Televisions Based on data obtained from...Ch. 8 - Entrepreneurship A Gallup survey indicated that...Ch. 8 - Advanced Degrees According to the U.S. Census...Ch. 8 - Variability in Baseball Suppose, during the course...Ch. 8 - Prob. 1CTCh. 8 - Prob. 2CTCh. 8 - The charge life of a certain lithium ion battery...Ch. 8 - A machine used for filling plastic bottles with a...Ch. 8 - Prob. 5CTCh. 8 - Prob. 6CTCh. 8 - Prob. 7CTCh. 8 - Using statistical software, generate 250 samples...Ch. 8 - Prob. 2CSCh. 8 - Prob. 3CSCh. 8 - Prob. 4CSCh. 8 - Prob. 5CSCh. 8 - Prob. 6CSCh. 8 - Prob. 7CSCh. 8 - Prob. 8CSCh. 8 - Prob. 9CSCh. 8 - Prob. 10CSCh. 8 - Prob. 11CSCh. 8 - Prob. 12CSCh. 8 - Repeat parts 11 and 12 for samples of size 20...Ch. 8 - Prob. 14CSCh. 8 - How do the averages of your sample means compare...Ch. 8 - Prob. 16CSCh. 8 - Prob. 17CSCh. 8 - Construct histograms for each column of summary...Ch. 8 - Prob. 19CS
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- Use this data for the exercises that follow: In 2013, there were roughly 317 million citizens in the United States, and about 40 million were elderly (aged 65 and over).[34] 60. It is predicted that by 2030, one in five U.S. citizens will be elderly. How much greater will the chances of meeting an elderly person be at that time? What policy changes do you foresee if these statistics hold true?arrow_forwardPopulation Genetics In the study of population genetics, an important measure of inbreeding is the proportion of homozygous genotypesthat is, instances in which the two alleles carried at a particular site on an individuals chromosomes are both the same. For population in which blood-related individual mate, them is a higher than expected frequency of homozygous individuals. Examples of such populations include endangered or rare species, selectively bred breeds, and isolated populations. in general. the frequency of homozygous children from mating of blood-related parents is greater than that for children from unrelated parents Measured over a large number of generations, the proportion of heterozygous genotypesthat is, nonhomozygous genotypeschanges by a constant factor 1 from generation to generation. The factor 1 is a number between 0 and 1. If 1=0.75, for example then the proportion of heterozygous individuals in the population decreases by 25 in each generation In this case, after 10 generations, the proportion of heterozygous individuals in the population decreases by 94.37, since 0.7510=0.0563, or 5.63. In other words, 94.37 of the population is homozygous. For specific types of matings, the proportion of heterozygous genotypes can be related to that of previous generations and is found from an equation. For mating between siblings 1 can be determined as the largest value of for which 2=12+14. This equation comes from carefully accounting for the genotypes for the present generation the 2 term in terms of those previous two generations represented by for the parents generation and by the constant term of the grandparents generation. a Find both solutions to the quadratic equation above and identify which is 1 use a horizontal span of 1 to 1 in this exercise and the following exercise. b After 5 generations, what proportion of the population will be homozygous? c After 20 generations, what proportion of the population will be homozygous?arrow_forward
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