Exercise
Insurance companies A and B each earn an annual profit that is normally distributed with the same positive mean. The standard deviation of company A’s annual profit is one half of its mean. In a given year, the probability that company B has a loss (negative profit) is 0.9 times the probability that company A has a loss.
Calculate the ratio of the standard deviation of company B’s annual profit to the standard deviation of company A’s annual profit.
- 0.49
- 0.90
- 0.98
- 1.11
- 1.71
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,
Therefore company B’s probability of a loss is 0.9(0.0228) = 0.02052. Then,
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.