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Reading 11: Correlation and Regression - LOS f, (Part 2):

Q15. Craig Standish, CFA, is investigating the validity of claims associated with a fund that his company offers. The company advertises the fund as having low turnover and, hence, low management fees. The fund was created two years ago with only a few  uncorrelated assets. Standish randomly draws two stocks from the fund, Grey Corporation and Jars Inc., and measures the variances and covariance of their monthly returns over the past two years. The resulting variance covariance matrix is shown below. Standish will test whether it is reasonable to believe that the returns of Grey and Jars are uncorrelated. In doing the analysis, he plans to address the issue of spurious correlation and outliers.

 

Grey

Jars

Grey

42.2

20.8

Jars

20.8

36.5

Standish wants to learn more about the performance of the fund. He performs a linear regression of the fund’s monthly returns over the past two years on a large capitalization index. The results are below:

ANOVA

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df

SS

MS

F

Regression

1

92.53009

92.53009

28.09117

Residual

22

72.46625

3.293921

 

Total

23

164.9963

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Coefficients

Standard Error

t-statistic

P-value

Intercept

0.148923

0.391669

0.380225

0.707424

Large Cap Index

1.205602

0.227467

5.30011

2.56E-05

Standish forecasts the fund’s return, based upon the prediction that the return to the large capitalization index used in the regression will be 10%. He also wants to quantify the degree of the prediction error, as well as the minimum and maximum sensitivity that the fund actually has with respect to the index.

He plans to summarize his results in a report. In the report, he will also include caveats concerning the limitations of regression analysis. He lists four limitations of regression analysis that he feels are important: relationships between variables can change over time, the decision to use a t-statistic or F-statistic for a forecast confidence interval is arbitrary, if the error terms are heteroskedastic the test statistics for the equation may not be reliable, and if the error terms are correlated with each other over time the test statistics may not be reliable.

Given the variance/covariance matrix for Grey and Jars, in a one-sided hypothesis test that the returns are positively correlated H0: ρ = 0 vs. H1: ρ > 0, Standish would:

A)   reject the null at the 5% but not the 1% level of significance.

B)   need to gather more information before being able to reach a conclusion concerning significance.

C)   reject the null at the 1% level of significance.

答案和详解如下:

Q15. Craig Standish, CFA, is investigating the validity of claims associated with a fund that his company offers. The company advertises the fund as having low turnover and, hence, low management fees. The fund was created two years ago with only a few  uncorrelated assets. Standish randomly draws two stocks from the fund, Grey Corporation and Jars Inc., and measures the variances and covariance of their monthly returns over the past two years. The resulting variance covariance matrix is shown below. Standish will test whether it is reasonable to believe that the returns of Grey and Jars are uncorrelated. In doing the analysis, he plans to address the issue of spurious correlation and outliers.

 

Grey

Jars

Grey

42.2

20.8

Jars

20.8

36.5

Standish wants to learn more about the performance of the fund. He performs a linear regression of the fund’s monthly returns over the past two years on a large capitalization index. The results are below:

ANOVA

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< > td>

< > td>

 

df

SS

MS

F

Regression

1

92.53009

92.53009

28.09117

Residual

22

72.46625

3.293921

 

Total

23

164.9963

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Coefficients

Standard Error

t-statistic

P-value

Intercept

0.148923

0.391669

0.380225

0.707424

Large Cap Index

1.205602

0.227467

5.30011

2.56E-05

Standish forecasts the fund’s return, based upon the prediction that the return to the large capitalization index used in the regression will be 10%. He also wants to quantify the degree of the prediction error, as well as the minimum and maximum sensitivity that the fund actually has with respect to the index.

He plans to summarize his results in a report. In the report, he will also include caveats concerning the limitations of regression analysis. He lists four limitations of regression analysis that he feels are important: relationships between variables can change over time, the decision to use a t-statistic or F-statistic for a forecast confidence interval is arbitrary, if the error terms are heteroskedastic the test statistics for the equation may not be reliable, and if the error terms are correlated with each other over time the test statistics may not be reliable.

Given the variance/covariance matrix for Grey and Jars, in a one-sided hypothesis test that the returns are positively correlated H0: ρ = 0 vs. H1: ρ > 0, Standish would:

A)   reject the null at the 5% but not the 1% level of significance.

B)   need to gather more information before being able to reach a conclusion concerning significance.

C)   reject the null at the 1% level of significance.

Correct answer is C)

First, we must compute the correlation coefficient, which is 0.53 = 20.8 / (42.2 × 36.5)0.5.

The t-statistic is: 2.93 = 0.53 × [(24 - 2) / (1 − 0.53 × 0.53)]0.5, and for df = 22 = 24 − 2, the t-statistics for the 5 and 1% level are 1.717 and 2.508 respectively.

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