dennis_cmpe
New Member
40. In the Geometric Brown Motion process for a variable S,
I. S is normally distributed
II. d ln(S) is normally distributed
III. dS/S is normally distributed
IV. S is lognormally distributed
a. I only
b. II, III and IV
c. IV only
d. III and IV
To answer this question. I noted that:
1) Price levels are lognormally distributed
2) Price returns are normally distributed
3) If the log of a variable is normally distributed, then the variable is lognormally distributed
So this helps me determined that lll and lV are part of the answer. But I don't understand why ll is part of the answer too. The answer explanation below mentions that dS/S is equal to dln(S). How is this?
ANSWER: B
In the Geometric Brownian Motion (GBM) process for variable S:
dS = µ S dt + s S dz
From the above relation it follows that dS/S, which is equal to d ln(S), is normally distributed, whereas S is lognormally distributed.
I. S is normally distributed
II. d ln(S) is normally distributed
III. dS/S is normally distributed
IV. S is lognormally distributed
a. I only
b. II, III and IV
c. IV only
d. III and IV
To answer this question. I noted that:
1) Price levels are lognormally distributed
2) Price returns are normally distributed
3) If the log of a variable is normally distributed, then the variable is lognormally distributed
So this helps me determined that lll and lV are part of the answer. But I don't understand why ll is part of the answer too. The answer explanation below mentions that dS/S is equal to dln(S). How is this?
ANSWER: B
In the Geometric Brownian Motion (GBM) process for variable S:
dS = µ S dt + s S dz
From the above relation it follows that dS/S, which is equal to d ln(S), is normally distributed, whereas S is lognormally distributed.