The question is on page 221 of book1:
Portfolio A has a safety-ratio of 1.3 with a thresthold return of 2 percent. What is the shortfall risk for a target return of 2 percent?
I intuitively chose P(Z<1.3)=.903 (wrong)
The correct answer is mentioned by the poster above: 1-N(SFRatio)= 1-.903= 0.0968 (correct)
My question is why are we taking the right tail? To my understanding, P(Z<1.3) represents the probability our returns would be less than threshold(of 2%) while P(Z>1.3) represent our returns above threshhold. I guess I'm going this the wrong way, anyone care to enlighten me?
Portfolio A has a safety-ratio of 1.3 with a thresthold return of 2 percent. What is the shortfall risk for a target return of 2 percent?
I intuitively chose P(Z<1.3)=.903 (wrong)
The correct answer is mentioned by the poster above: 1-N(SFRatio)= 1-.903= 0.0968 (correct)
My question is why are we taking the right tail? To my understanding, P(Z<1.3) represents the probability our returns would be less than threshold(of 2%) while P(Z>1.3) represent our returns above threshhold. I guess I'm going this the wrong way, anyone care to enlighten me?