writing service on Business Report paper
Research Methods Requirements
Dear writer in addition to the required instructions below please take also these points into your account when you doing this statistical report:
- The first page should be the cover page which includes the Report Topic.
- The second page should include a good executive SUMMARY (the most important information, results and points).
- My date of Birth is 02/10/1987 , as some parts of this statistical report should be based on it.
- [This case study is adopted from the case at the end of the 1st chapter of the 6th edition of Aczel and Sounderpandian – Complete Business Statistics]
- References should be used carefully and the majority coming from practitioner/business sources (www, the press, etc) and any technical details /analysis should be in an appendix
- Marking scheme: 50% of the mark comes from the aforementioned ten questions (5% for each), and 50% from the overall presentation of the ‘business’ report.
- A ‘business’ report must have a nice cover, a good executive summary, an introduction and a main body that reads through smoothly and uses ‘lay terms’, not using statistical jargon and be printed, bound and formatted with the highest possible quality. It must contain a lot of graphs and as much ‘colour’ as possible. No assumptions should be made on the academic background and experience of the potential readership. References should be used carefully and the majority coming from practitioner/business sources (www, the press, etc) and any technical details /analysis should be in an appendix. Overall the main body should not be more than 2500.
- This Statistical Report should be based on the REAL CASE STUDY below:
Real Case study:
NASDAQ, S&P, DJIA 2009, in the more distant past and now.
Case: The NASDAQ index is a measure of the aggregate value of technological stocks. During the year 2009, the index moved up and down considerably, indicating the rapid changes that took place in that year and the high uncertainty in the profitability of the respective companies. Historical data for the index are available in many websites, including http://www.google.com/finance and http://finance.yahoo.com/ as well as the very site of NASDAQ
1.Download the weekly data of the index for the calendar year 2009 and make a time plot of the data. Comment on the variability of the index looking at the plot. Report the standard deviation and the range of the data and any other measures of uncertainty you feel are suitable and appropriate.
- Download the weekly data of the index for the calendar year 1999 and compare the data for 1999 and 2009 on a single plot. Which year has been more volatile? Calculate the respective standard deviations and ranges of the two sets of data as well as and any other measures of uncertainty you feel are suitable and appropriate. Do these numbers confirm your observations about the relative volatility of the two years?
- Download the weekly data of the index S&P 500 for the calendar year 2009 and compare the data for same year for NASDAQ on a single plot. Which index has been more volatile? Calculate the respective standard deviations and ranges of the two sets of data as well as and any other measures of uncertainty you feel are suitable and appropriate. Do these numbers confirm your observations about the relative volatility of the two indices?
- Download the weekly data of the index Dow Jones Industrial Average (DJIA) for the calendar year 2009 and compare the data for same year for NASDAQ on a single plot. Which index has been more volatile? Calculate and draw the respective Boxplots and Histograms. Do these graphs confirm your observations about the relative volatility of the two indices?
- Download the weekly data of the DJIA index for the calendar year 2013, year YYYY+10 (where DD/MM/YYYY your date of birth) and compare the data for 2013, YYYY and 2009 on a single plot. Which year has been more volatile?
[This case study is adopted from the case at the end of the 1st chapter of the 6th edition of Aczel and Sounderpandian – Complete Business Statistics]
Is this the question you were looking for? If so, place your order here to get started!