Hello,
One of the aims tells us we need to "determine the amount of data required to estimate percentiles of loss distributions"
The one example of this in the notes (and in the source reading) is extrmemly confusing. Is there any way to sum up what they are looking for in a clean formula or algorithm?
The chapter just throws numbers around and its impossible to tell where they are coming from. Is there any way you could show how they came up with (for instance) 277,500 for the pareto or 8400 for the exponential?
Also, from the notes, does the 100,000 samples come from the fact that there are 100 losses per year and to find the 99.9% we need to somehow be 100 times more acurate and that is why we need the 99.999%?
Thanks!
Shannon
One of the aims tells us we need to "determine the amount of data required to estimate percentiles of loss distributions"
The one example of this in the notes (and in the source reading) is extrmemly confusing. Is there any way to sum up what they are looking for in a clean formula or algorithm?
The chapter just throws numbers around and its impossible to tell where they are coming from. Is there any way you could show how they came up with (for instance) 277,500 for the pareto or 8400 for the exponential?
Also, from the notes, does the 100,000 samples come from the fact that there are 100 losses per year and to find the 99.9% we need to somehow be 100 times more acurate and that is why we need the 99.999%?
Thanks!
Shannon