Financial Services Committee and Probability: Difference between pages

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imported>Doug Williamson
(Link with Confidence interval page.)
 
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1. ''US''.
The study of chance providing an objective measure of uncertainty.


Informal name for the United States House Committee on Financial Services, also known as the House Banking Committee, with responsibility for oversight of the US financial services industry.
Probabilities range between 1 (=100%) and 0 (=0%).  


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


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


The EU committee whose responsibilities include providing a forum for cross-sectoral strategic reflection, and providing political advice and oversight on both internal (such as the single market) and external (such as the World Trade Organization) issues.


It works closely with the EU's Economic and Financial Committee.
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:
 
#The coin landing on its side 'more often than it's supposed to'.
#The underlying assumption of an unbiased coin not being valid.




== See also ==
== See also ==
* [[Bank supervision]]
* [[Black swan]]
* [[Dodd-Frank]]
* [[Conditional probability]]
* [[Economic and Financial Committee]]
* [[Confidence interval]]
* [[Financial Services Authority]]
* [[Frequency distribution]]
* [[National Economic Council]]
* [[Poisson distribution]]
* [[Single Market]]
* [[World Trade Organization]]
 
[[Category:Accounting,_tax_and_regulation]]
[[Category:The_business_context]]

Revision as of 19:48, 23 March 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 side 'more often than it's supposed to'.
  2. The underlying assumption of an unbiased coin not being valid.


See also