p.s. along with question, if i'm missing any solvable data in the chart let me know. thanks so much
\begin{tabular}{lccccccc} \hline State of the economy & Probability & T-Bill & \begin{tabular}{c} High \\ Tech \end{tabular} & Collections & \begin{tabular}{c} U.S. \\ Rubber \end{tabular} & \begin{tabular}{c} Market \\ Portfolio \end{tabular} & \begin{tabular}{c} 2-Stock \\ Portfollio \end{tabular} \\ \hline Recession & 1 & 3% & 29.5% & 24.5% & 3.5% & 19.5% & 2.5% \\ Below Average & 2 & 3 & -9.5 & 10.5 & -16.5 & -5.5 & \\ Average & 4 & 3 & 12.5 & -1.0 & 0.5 & 7.5 & 5.8 \\ Above Average & 2 & 3 & 27.5 & -5.0 & 38.5 & 22.5 & 11.3 \\ Boom & 1 & 3 & 42.5 & -20.0 & 23.5 & 35.5 & 1.5 \\ \hline fexpected rate & & 3 & 9.9 & 1.2 & 7.3 & 10.5 & \\ standard dev. & & 0 & 20 & 11.2 & 18.8 & 15.2 & 4.6 \\ CV coef of variation & & 0 & 2.02 & 9.8 & 2.6 & 1.45 & \\ Risk(Beta, ) & & 0 & 1.30 & -0.5 & 0.88 & & \\ \hline \end{tabular} Draw a graph that roughly shows the shape of the probability distributions for High-Tech US Rubber and T-bills. Either these can be histograms (discrete) or normal curves (continuous) noting that the data you are looking at is better represented with a histogram. Normal curves look pretty. \begin{tabular}{lccccccc} \hline State of the economy & Probability & T-Bill & \begin{tabular}{c} High \\ Tech \end{tabular} & Collections & \begin{tabular}{c} U.S. \\ Rubber \end{tabular} & \begin{tabular}{c} Market \\ Portfolio \end{tabular} & \begin{tabular}{c} 2-Stock \\ Portfollio \end{tabular} \\ \hline Recession & 1 & 3% & 29.5% & 24.5% & 3.5% & 19.5% & 2.5% \\ Below Average & 2 & 3 & -9.5 & 10.5 & -16.5 & -5.5 & \\ Average & 4 & 3 & 12.5 & -1.0 & 0.5 & 7.5 & 5.8 \\ Above Average & 2 & 3 & 27.5 & -5.0 & 38.5 & 22.5 & 11.3 \\ Boom & 1 & 3 & 42.5 & -20.0 & 23.5 & 35.5 & 1.5 \\ \hline fexpected rate & & 3 & 9.9 & 1.2 & 7.3 & 10.5 & \\ standard dev. & & 0 & 20 & 11.2 & 18.8 & 15.2 & 4.6 \\ CV coef of variation & & 0 & 2.02 & 9.8 & 2.6 & 1.45 & \\ Risk(Beta, ) & & 0 & 1.30 & -0.5 & 0.88 & & \\ \hline \end{tabular} Draw a graph that roughly shows the shape of the probability distributions for High-Tech US Rubber and T-bills. Either these can be histograms (discrete) or normal curves (continuous) noting that the data you are looking at is better represented with a histogram. Normal curves look pretty