Exercise


ABy Admin
May 03'23

Answer

Solution: C

Let [math]X[/math] and [math]Y[/math] represent the annual profits for companies A and B, respectively and m represent the common mean and s the standard deviation of [math]Y[/math]. Let [math]Z[/math] represent the standard normal random variable.

Then because X’s standard deviation is one-half its mean,

[[math]] \operatorname{P}(X \lt 0) = \operatorname{P} \left( \frac{X-m}{0.5m} \lt \frac{0-m}{0.5m}\right) = \operatorname{P}(Z \lt 2) = 0.0228. [[/math]]

Therefore company B’s probability of a loss is 0.9(0.0228) = 0.02052. Then,

[[math]] 0.02052 = \operatorname{P}(Y \lt 0) = \operatorname{P} \left( \frac{Y-m}{s} \lt \frac{0-m}{s} \right) = \operatorname{P}(Z \lt -m/s). [[/math]]

From the tables, –2.04 = –m/s and therefore s = m/2.04. The ratio of the standard deviations is (m/2.04)/(0.5m) = 0.98.

Copyright 2023. The Society of Actuaries, Schaumburg, Illinois. Reproduced with permission.

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