| author | Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk> | 
| Fri, 22 Jan 2021 10:35:50 +0000 | |
| changeset 387 | d0f90515407a | 
| parent 356 | 35c75b594459 | 
| child 396 | ea39bbc8d98d | 
| permissions | -rw-r--r-- | 
| 276 | 1 | % !TEX program = xelatex | 
| 6 | 2 | \documentclass{article}
 | 
| 11 
417869f65585
updated
 Christian Urban <christian dot urban at kcl dot ac dot uk> parents: 
9diff
changeset | 3 | \usepackage{../style}
 | 
| 195 | 4 | \usepackage{disclaimer}
 | 
| 199 | 5 | \usepackage{../langs}
 | 
| 6 | 6 | |
| 335 | 7 | |
| 8 | ||
| 6 | 9 | \begin{document}
 | 
| 10 | ||
| 356 | 11 | \section*{Main Part 1 (Scala, 7 Marks)}
 | 
| 199 | 12 | |
| 345 | 13 | \IMPORTANT{This part is about Scala. It is due on \cwSIXa{} at 5pm and worth 7\%.}
 | 
| 195 | 14 | |
| 127 | 15 | \noindent | 
| 195 | 16 | Also note that the running time of each part will be restricted to a | 
| 199 | 17 | maximum of 30 seconds on my laptop. | 
| 192 | 18 | |
| 196 | 19 | \DISCLAIMER{}
 | 
| 6 | 20 | |
| 201 | 21 | \subsection*{Reference Implementation}
 | 
| 6 | 22 | |
| 199 | 23 | Like the C++ assignments, the Scala assignments will work like this: you | 
| 24 | push your files to GitHub and receive (after sometimes a long delay) some | |
| 25 | automated feedback. In the end we take a snapshot of the submitted files and | |
| 266 | 26 | apply an automated marking script to them.\medskip | 
| 199 | 27 | |
| 266 | 28 | \noindent | 
| 306 | 29 | In addition, the Scala coursework comes with a reference implementation | 
| 30 | in form of \texttt{jar}-files. This allows you to run any test cases
 | |
| 199 | 31 | on your own computer. For example you can call Scala on the command | 
| 335 | 32 | line with the option \texttt{-cp drumb.jar} and then query any
 | 
| 199 | 33 | function from the template file. Say you want to find out what | 
| 345 | 34 | the function \code{get_january_data}
 | 
| 35 | produces: for this you just need to prefix them with the object name | |
| 36 | \texttt{CW6b} and call them with some arguments: 
 | |
| 199 | 37 | |
| 38 | \begin{lstlisting}[language={},numbers=none,basicstyle=\ttfamily\small]
 | |
| 345 | 39 | $ scala -cp drumb.jar | 
| 199 | 40 | |
| 345 | 41 | scala> CW6b.get_january_data("FB", 2014)
 | 
| 42 | val res2: List[String] = List(2014-01-02,54.709999,....) | |
| 199 | 43 | \end{lstlisting}%$
 | 
| 44 | ||
| 201 | 45 | \subsection*{Hints}
 | 
| 46 | ||
| 47 | \noindent | |
| 356 | 48 | \textbf{For the Main Part:} useful string functions:
 | 
| 266 | 49 | \texttt{.startsWith(...)} for checking whether a string has a given
 | 
| 50 | prefix, \texttt{\_ ++ \_} for concatenating two strings; useful option
 | |
| 51 | functions: \texttt{.flatten} flattens a list of options such that it
 | |
| 52 | filters way all \texttt{None}'s, \texttt{Try(...).getOrElse ...} runs
 | |
| 53 | some code that might raise an exception---if yes, then a default value | |
| 54 | can be given; useful list functions: \texttt{.head} for obtaining the
 | |
| 55 | first element in a non-empty list, \texttt{.length} for the length of
 | |
| 56 | a list; \texttt{.filter(...)} for filtering out elements in a list;
 | |
| 57 | \texttt{.getLines.toList} for obtaining a list of lines from a file;
 | |
| 58 | \texttt{.split(",").toList} for splitting strings according to a
 | |
| 59 | comma.\bigskip | |
| 201 | 60 | |
| 61 | \noindent | |
| 266 | 62 | \textbf{Note!} Fortunately Scala supports operator overloading. But
 | 
| 63 | make sure you understand the difference between \texttt{100 / 3} and
 | |
| 201 | 64 | \texttt{100.0 / 3}!
 | 
| 65 | ||
| 66 | \newpage | |
| 356 | 67 | \subsection*{Main Part (7 Marks, file drumb.scala)}
 | 
| 199 | 68 | |
| 69 | A purely fictional character named Mr T.~Drumb inherited in 1978 | |
| 70 | approximately 200 Million Dollar from his father. Mr Drumb prides | |
| 71 | himself to be a brilliant business man because nowadays it is | |
| 72 | estimated he is 3 Billion Dollar worth (one is not sure, of course, | |
| 73 | because Mr Drumb refuses to make his tax records public). | |
| 74 | ||
| 75 | Since the question about Mr Drumb's business acumen remains open, | |
| 76 | let's do a quick back-of-the-envelope calculation in Scala whether his | |
| 77 | claim has any merit. Let's suppose we are given \$100 in 1978 and we | |
| 78 | follow a really dumb investment strategy, namely: | |
| 79 | ||
| 80 | \begin{itemize}
 | |
| 81 | \item We blindly choose a portfolio of stocks, say some Blue-Chip stocks | |
| 82 | or some Real Estate stocks. | |
| 83 | \item If some of the stocks in our portfolio are traded in January of | |
| 84 | a year, we invest our money in equal amounts in each of these | |
| 85 | stocks. For example if we have \$100 and there are four stocks that | |
| 86 | are traded in our portfolio, we buy \$25 worth of stocks | |
| 306 | 87 | from each. (Be careful to also test cases where you trade with 3 stocks.) | 
| 199 | 88 | \item Next year in January, we look at how our stocks did, liquidate | 
| 89 | everything, and re-invest our (hopefully) increased money in again | |
| 90 | the stocks from our portfolio (there might be more stocks available, | |
| 91 | if companies from our portfolio got listed in that year, or less if | |
| 92 | some companies went bust or were de-listed). | |
| 276 | 93 | \item We do this for 41 years until January 2019 and check what would | 
| 199 | 94 | have become out of our \$100. | 
| 95 | \end{itemize}
 | |
| 96 | ||
| 97 | \noindent | |
| 266 | 98 | Until Yahoo was bought by Altaba a few years ago, historical stock market | 
| 199 | 99 | data for such back-of-the-envelope calculations was freely available | 
| 201 | 100 | online. Unfortunately nowadays this kind of data is more difficult to | 
| 199 | 101 | obtain, unless you are prepared to pay extortionate prices or be | 
| 306 | 102 | severely rate-limited. Therefore this part comes with a number | 
| 199 | 103 | of files containing CSV-lists with the historical stock prices for the | 
| 104 | companies in our portfolios. Use these files for the following | |
| 105 | tasks.\bigskip | |
| 106 | ||
| 201 | 107 | \newpage | 
| 199 | 108 | \noindent | 
| 109 | \textbf{Tasks}
 | |
| 110 | ||
| 111 | \begin{itemize}
 | |
| 112 | \item[(1)] Write a function \texttt{get\_january\_data} that takes a
 | |
| 113 | stock symbol and a year as arguments. The function reads the | |
| 114 | corresponding CSV-file and returns the list of strings that start | |
| 115 | with the given year (each line in the CSV-list is of the form | |
| 116 |   \texttt{someyear-01-someday,someprice}).\hfill[1 Mark]
 | |
| 117 | ||
| 118 | \item[(2)] Write a function \texttt{get\_first\_price} that takes
 | |
| 119 | again a stock symbol and a year as arguments. It should return the | |
| 120 | first January price for the stock symbol in the given year. For this | |
| 121 | it uses the list of strings generated by | |
| 122 |   \texttt{get\_january\_data}.  A problem is that normally a stock
 | |
| 123 | exchange is not open on 1st of January, but depending on the day of | |
| 124 | the week on a later day (maybe 3rd or 4th). The easiest way to solve | |
| 125 | this problem is to obtain the whole January data for a stock symbol | |
| 126 | and then select the earliest, or first, entry in this list. The | |
| 127 | stock price of this entry should be converted into a double. Such a | |
| 128 | price might not exist, in case the company does not exist in the given | |
| 129 | year. For example, if you query for Google in January of 1980, then | |
| 130 | clearly Google did not exist yet. Therefore you are asked to | |
| 131 |   return a trade price with type \texttt{Option[Double]}\ldots\texttt{None}
 | |
| 132 |   will be the value for when no price exists; \texttt{Some} if  there is a
 | |
| 133 | price.\hfill[1 Mark] | |
| 134 | ||
| 135 | \item[(3)] Write a function \texttt{get\_prices} that takes a
 | |
| 136 | portfolio (a list of stock symbols), a years range and gets all the | |
| 137 | first trading prices for each year in the range. You should organise | |
| 138 |   this as a list of lists of \texttt{Option[Double]}'s. The inner
 | |
| 139 | lists are for all stock symbols from the portfolio and the outer | |
| 140 | list for the years. For example for Google and Apple in years 2010 | |
| 141 | (first line), 2011 (second line) and 2012 (third line) you obtain: | |
| 142 | ||
| 143 | \begin{verbatim}
 | |
| 314 | 144 | List(List(Some(312.204773), Some(26.782711)), | 
| 315 | 145 | List(Some(301.0466), Some(41.244694)), | 
| 314 | 146 | List(Some(331.462585), Some(51.464207)))) | 
| 201 | 147 | \end{verbatim}\hfill[1 Mark]
 | 
| 266 | 148 | |
| 149 | ||
| 150 | %\end{itemize}
 | |
| 199 | 151 | |
| 266 | 152 | %\subsection*{Advanced Part 3 (4 Marks, continue in file drumb.scala)}
 | 
| 153 | % | |
| 154 | %\noindent | |
| 155 | %\textbf{Tasks}
 | |
| 199 | 156 | |
| 266 | 157 | %\begin{itemize}  
 | 
| 199 | 158 | |
| 159 | \item[(4)] Write a function that calculates the \emph{change factor} (delta)
 | |
| 160 | for how a stock price has changed from one year to the next. This is | |
| 161 | only well-defined, if the corresponding company has been traded in both | |
| 162 | years. In this case you can calculate | |
| 163 | ||
| 164 | \[ | |
| 165 |   \frac{price_{new} - price_{old}}{price_{old}}
 | |
| 166 | \] | |
| 167 | ||
| 168 | If the change factor is defined, you should return it | |
| 169 |   as \texttt{Some(change\_factor)}; if not, you should return
 | |
| 170 |   \texttt{None}.\mbox{}\hfill\mbox{[1 Mark]}
 | |
| 171 | ||
| 172 | \item[(5)] Write a function that calculates all change factors | |
| 266 | 173 | (deltas) for the prices we obtained in Task (2). For the running | 
| 199 | 174 | example of Google and Apple for the years 2010 to 2012 you should | 
| 175 | obtain 4 change factors: | |
| 176 | ||
| 266 | 177 | \begin{verbatim}
 | 
| 178 | List(List(Some(-0.03573991804411003), Some(0.539974575389325)), | |
| 179 | List(Some(0.10103414222249969), Some(0.24777764141006836))) | |
| 199 | 180 | \end{verbatim}
 | 
| 181 | ||
| 182 | That means Google did a bit badly in 2010, while Apple did very well. | |
| 183 | Both did OK in 2011. Make sure you handle the cases where a company is | |
| 184 |   not listed in a year. In such cases the change factor should be \texttt{None}
 | |
| 266 | 185 | (recall Task~(4)). | 
| 199 | 186 |   \mbox{}\hfill\mbox{[1 Mark]}
 | 
| 187 | ||
| 188 | \item[(6)] Write a function that calculates the ``yield'', or | |
| 189 | balance, for one year for our portfolio. This function takes the | |
| 190 | change factors, the starting balance and the year as arguments. If | |
| 191 | no company from our portfolio existed in that year, the balance is | |
| 192 | unchanged. Otherwise we invest in each existing company an equal | |
| 193 | amount of our balance. Using the change factors computed under Task | |
| 266 | 194 | (2), calculate the new balance. Say we had \$100 in 2010, we would have | 
| 199 | 195 | received in our running example involving Google and Apple: | 
| 196 | ||
| 197 |   \begin{verbatim}
 | |
| 266 | 198 | $50 * -0.03573991804411003 + $50 * 0.539974575389325 | 
| 199 | = $25.21173286726075 | |
| 199 | 200 |   \end{verbatim}
 | 
| 201 | ||
| 202 | as profit for that year, and our new balance for 2011 is \$125 when | |
| 203 |   converted to a \texttt{Long}.\mbox{}\hfill\mbox{[1 Mark]}
 | |
| 204 | ||
| 205 | \item[(7)] Write a function that calculates the overall balance | |
| 206 | for a range of years where each year the yearly profit is compounded to | |
| 207 | the new balances and then re-invested into our portfolio. | |
| 208 | For this use the function and results generated under (6).\\ | |
| 209 |   \mbox{}\hfill\mbox{[1 Mark]}
 | |
| 210 | \end{itemize}\medskip  
 | |
| 211 | ||
| 212 | ||
| 213 | ||
| 214 | \noindent | |
| 215 | \textbf{Test Data:} File \texttt{drumb.scala} contains two portfolios
 | |
| 216 | collected from the S\&P 500, one for blue-chip companies, including | |
| 217 | Facebook, Amazon and Baidu; and another for listed real-estate | |
| 218 | companies, whose names I have never heard of. Following the dumb | |
| 266 | 219 | investment strategy from 1978 until 2019 would have turned a starting | 
| 220 | balance of \$100 into roughly \$39,162 for real estate and a whopping | |
| 221 | \$462,199 for blue chips. Note when comparing these results with your | |
| 199 | 222 | own calculations: there might be some small rounding errors, which | 
| 223 | when compounded lead to moderately different values.\bigskip | |
| 224 | ||
| 225 | ||
| 226 | \noindent | |
| 227 | \textbf{Moral:} Reflecting on our assumptions, we are over-estimating
 | |
| 228 | our yield in many ways: first, who can know in 1978 about what will | |
| 229 | turn out to be a blue chip company. Also, since the portfolios are | |
| 230 | chosen from the current S\&P 500, they do not include the myriad | |
| 231 | of companies that went bust or were de-listed over the years. | |
| 232 | So where does this leave our fictional character Mr T.~Drumb? Well, given | |
| 233 | his inheritance, a really dumb investment strategy would have done | |
| 234 | equally well, if not much better.\medskip | |
| 235 | ||
| 236 | \end{document}
 | |
| 237 |