In: Finance
General Meters is considering two mergers. The first is with Firm A in its own volatile industry, the auto speedometer industry, while the second is a merger with Firm B in an industry that moves in the opposite direction (and will tend to level out performance due to negative correlation).
| 
General Meters Merger with Firm A  | 
General Meters Merger with Firm B  | 
|||||||||||
| 
Possible Earnings ($ in millions)  | 
Probability | 
Possible Earnings ($ in millions)  | 
Probability | |||||||||
| $ | 45 | 0.20 | $ | 45 | 0.15 | |||||||
| 50 | 0.20 | 50 | 0.30 | |||||||||
| 55 | 0.60 | 55 | 0.55 | |||||||||
a. Compute the mean, standard deviation, and coefficient of variation for both investments. (Do not round intermediate calculations. Enter your answers in millions. Round "Coefficient of variation" to 3 decimal places and "Standard deviation" to 2 decimal places.)
Merger A Merger B
Mean
Standard Deviation
Coefficient of Variation
b. Assuming investors are risk-averse, which alternative can be expected to bring the higher valuation?
Merger A
Merger B
NO EXCEL FUNCTION IS USED. SIMPLE CALCULATION IN TABLE
FORM. HAPPY TO HELP YOU. THANK YOU