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Measuring Average Changes
So here is what I'm looking at...
December - 100 - N/A January - 200 - 100% change (1.0) February - 300 - 50% change (.5) March - 100 - 66% change (.66) I can tell what the percentage change is from month to month, but I'm not sure what the best way is to figure out the average percentage change, overall. I can't add up the decimal versions of each percentage difference and then divide by the number of months to get some kind of overall average, right? In this case, that would turn out to be an average variance of 72%. Please help - thanks! |
Measuring Average Changes
On Mar 28, 7:38 am, wrote:
So here is what I'm looking at... December - 100 - N/A January - 200 - 100% change (1.0) February - 300 - 50% change (.5) March - 100 - 66% change (.66) I can tell what the percentage change is from month to month, but I'm not sure what the best way is to figure out the average percentage change, overall. I can't add up the decimal versions of each percentage difference and then divide by the number of months to get some kind of overall average, right? In this case, that would turn out to be an average variance of 72%. Please help - thanks! |
Measuring Average Changes
This looks like a math question rather than excel question. I guess it also
depends on what you are lookig for. One suggestion is use the "geometric average". [((Final Value/Initial Value)^ (1/nr of periods))-1]. In your case it is (100/100)^(1/3)-1=0 I hope this helps "joeu2004" wrote: On Mar 28, 7:38 am, wrote: So here is what I'm looking at... December - 100 - N/A January - 200 - 100% change (1.0) February - 300 - 50% change (.5) March - 100 - 66% change (.66) I can tell what the percentage change is from month to month, but I'm not sure what the best way is to figure out the average percentage change, overall. I can't add up the decimal versions of each percentage difference and then divide by the number of months to get some kind of overall average, right? In this case, that would turn out to be an average variance of 72%. Please help - thanks! |
Measuring Average Changes
On Mar 28, 7:38 am, wrote:
So here is what I'm looking at... December - 100 - N/A January - 200 - 100% change (1.0) February - 300 - 50% change (.5) March - 100 - 66% change (.66) I can tell what the percentage change is from month to month, but I'm not sure what the best way is to figure out the average percentage change, overall. I can't add up the decimal versions of each percentage difference and then divide by the number of months to get some kind of overall average, right? In this case, that would turn out to be an average variance of 72%. Actually, 28%. The last change -- "66%" -- is really -67%. The average of the percentages __might__ make sense in some contexts. It answers the question: "what is the expected percentage change month-to-month?". That is indeed the average of the percentages. But I suspect you are more interested in the geometric mean -- that is, the net change over time. In the example above, you went from 100 to 100 over 3 months. You expect a net change of 0%. Right? One way to compute that is the following array formula (commit with ctrl-shift-Enter, not Enter): =geomean(1+B2:B4) - 1 Alternatively, the simple formula (not an array formula): =(B4/B1)^(1/3) - 1 Be sure to format the cell as Percentage, if that is what you want to see. |
Measuring Average Changes
On Mar 28, 12:20 pm, "joeu2004" wrote:
On Mar 28, 7:38 am, wrote: So here is what I'm looking at... December - 100 - N/A January - 200 - 100% change (1.0) February - 300 - 50% change (.5) March - 100 - 66% change (.66) I can tell what the percentage change is from month to month, but I'm not sure what the best way is to figure out the average percentage change, overall. I can't add up the decimal versions of each percentage difference and then divide by the number of months to get some kind of overall average, right? In this case, that would turn out to be an average variance of 72%. Actually, 28%. The last change -- "66%" -- is really -67%. The average of the percentages __might__ make sense in some contexts. It answers the question: "what is the expected percentage change month-to-month?". That is indeed the average of the percentages. But I suspect you are more interested in the geometric mean -- that is, the net change over time. In the example above, you went from 100 to 100 over 3 months. You expect a net change of 0%. Right? One way to compute that is the following array formula (commit with ctrl-shift-Enter, not Enter): =geomean(1+B2:B4) - 1 Alternatively, the simple formula (not an array formula): =(B4/B1)^(1/3) - 1 Be sure to format the cell as Percentage, if that is what you want to see. Thanks for that explanation. What operation does the ^ represent in Excel? |
Measuring Average Changes
On Mar 28, 2:03 pm, wrote:
=geomean(1+B2:B4) - 1 Alternatively, the simple formula (not an array formula): =(B4/B1)^(1/3) - 1 Thanks for that explanation. What operation does the ^ represent in Excel I am so glad you asked, first because it is always good to ask ("there are no dumb questions"), and second because it explains why I prefer to give people solutions that use Excel functions instead of exponential formulas, which others insist are "better" because they more efficient (and they are right). Anyway, to answer your question: in this context, "^" (called caret or circumflex) is an arithmetic operator that means "raise to the power of". That is, "y^n" means "y raised to the power of n", which means multiply y times itself n times. Your next question might be: "what the heck does it mean to raise y to the 1/3 power; that is, to multiply y times itself 1/3 times (huh!!)?". That notation means: take the n-th root -- the "third" or cube root, in this case. We are trying find the percent change which, when applied 3 times to successive results starting with the first number or present value (first 100), will result in the last number or future value (last 100). Of course, in this case, the answer is quite trivial: 0%. For a more interesting result, change the last 100 to 150 for example. HTH. |
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