Limited partner and Probability: Difference between pages

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1. ''Private equity.''
The study of chance providing an objective measure of uncertainty.


(LP).


A partner in a private equity limited partnership that invests in a fund, but that does not have day-to-day responsibility for managing the partnership.
Probabilities range between 1 (=100%) and 0 (=0%).


Limited partners' maximum losses are generally the amount of their capital contribution only.
A probability of 100% means that an event is considered certain to occur.  


Contrasted with general partners.
A probability of 0% means that an event is considered certain not to occur.




2. ''Partnership.''
For example, flipping an unbiased coin, the probability of getting a head is often modelled as 50%.


More broadly, any partner having limited liability in a partnership, the limit generally being the amount of their investment.


Unlike general partners.
This simple model of a coin flip assumes that the only two possibilities are a head or a tail.  Applying such simple models to financial situations, and treating financial outcomes as simple coin flips, may lead to errors resulting from:
 
#The coin landing on its edge 'more often than it's supposed to'.
#The underlying assumption of an unbiased coin not being a valid one. This kind of assumption is usually much too simple.




== See also ==
== See also ==
* [[General partner]]
* [[Black swan]]
* [[Limited liability]]
* [[Conditional probability]]
* [[Limited partnership]]
* [[Confidence interval]]
* [[Partnership]]
* [[Frequency distribution]]
* [[Private equity]]
* [[Mutually exclusive]]
* [[Venture capital]]
* [[Poisson distribution]]
 
[[Category:Accounting,_tax_and_regulation]]
[[Category:The_business_context]]
[[Category:Identify_and_assess_risks]]
[[Category:Manage_risks]]
[[Category:Risk_frameworks]]
[[Category:Risk_reporting]]

Revision as of 15:19, 8 June 2016

The study of chance providing an objective measure of uncertainty.


Probabilities range between 1 (=100%) and 0 (=0%).

A probability of 100% means that an event is considered certain to occur.

A probability of 0% means that an event is considered certain not to occur.


For example, flipping an unbiased coin, the probability of getting a head is often modelled as 50%.


This simple model of a coin flip assumes that the only two possibilities are a head or a tail. Applying such simple models to financial situations, and treating financial outcomes as simple coin flips, may lead to errors resulting from:

  1. The coin landing on its edge 'more often than it's supposed to'.
  2. The underlying assumption of an unbiased coin not being a valid one. This kind of assumption is usually much too simple.


See also