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     1 // Main Part 1 about a really dumb investment strategy  | 
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     2 //===================================================  | 
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     3   | 
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     4 object M1 { | 
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     5   | 
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     6 //two test portfolios  | 
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     7   | 
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     8 val blchip_portfolio = List("GOOG", "AAPL", "MSFT", "IBM", "FB", "AMZN", "BIDU") | 
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     9 val rstate_portfolio = List("PLD", "PSA", "AMT", "AIV", "AVB", "BXP", "CCI",  | 
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    10                             "DLR", "EQIX", "EQR", "ESS", "EXR", "FRT", "HCP")   | 
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    11   | 
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    12   | 
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    13 // (1) The function below takes a stock symbol and a year as arguments.  | 
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    14 //     It should read the corresponding CSV-file and then extract the January   | 
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    15 //     data from the given year. The data should be collected in a list of  | 
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    16 //     strings (one entry for each line in the CSV-file).  | 
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    17   | 
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    18 import io.Source  | 
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    19 import scala.util._  | 
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    20   | 
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    21 def get_january_data(symbol: String, year: Int) : List[String] = ???  | 
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    22   | 
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    23   | 
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    24 // (2) From the output of the get_january_data function, the next function   | 
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    25 //     should extract the first line (if it exists) and the corresponding  | 
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    26 //     first trading price in that year with type Option[Double]. If no line   | 
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    27 //     is generated by get_january_data then the result is None; and Some if   | 
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    28 //     there is a price.  | 
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    29   | 
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    30   | 
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    31 def get_first_price(symbol: String, year: Int) : Option[Double] = ???  | 
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    32   | 
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    33   | 
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    34 // (3) Complete the function below that obtains all first prices  | 
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    35 //     for the stock symbols from a portfolio (list of strings) and   | 
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    36 //     for the given range of years. The inner lists are for the  | 
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    37 //     stock symbols and the outer list for the years.  | 
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    38   | 
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    39   | 
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    40 def get_prices(portfolio: List[String], years: Range) : List[List[Option[Double]]] = ???  | 
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    41   | 
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    42   | 
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    43   | 
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    44 // (4) The function below calculates the change factor (delta) between  | 
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    45 //     a price in year n and a price in year n + 1.   | 
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    46   | 
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    47 def get_delta(price_old: Option[Double], price_new: Option[Double]) : Option[Double] = ???  | 
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    48   | 
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    49   | 
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    50   | 
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    51 // (5) The next function calculates all change factors for all prices (from a   | 
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    52 //     portfolio). The input to this function are the nested lists created by   | 
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    53 //     get_prices above.  | 
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    54   | 
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    55 def get_deltas(data: List[List[Option[Double]]]) :  List[List[Option[Double]]] = ???  | 
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    56   | 
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    57   | 
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    58   | 
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    59 // (6) Write a function that given change factors, a starting balance and an index,  | 
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    60 //     calculates the yearly yield, i.e. new balance, according to our dumb investment   | 
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    61 //     strategy. Index points to a year in the data list.  | 
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    62   | 
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    63 def yearly_yield(data: List[List[Option[Double]]], balance: Long, index: Int) : Long = ???  | 
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    64   | 
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    65   | 
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    66 // (7) Write a function compound_yield that calculates the overall balance for a   | 
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    67 //     range of years where in each year the yearly profit is compounded to the new   | 
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    68 //     balances and then re-invested into our portfolio. For this use the function and   | 
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    69 //     results generated under (6). The function investment calls compound_yield  | 
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    70 //     with the appropriate deltas and the first index.  | 
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    71   | 
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    72 def compound_yield(data: List[List[Option[Double]]], balance: Long, index: Int) : Long = ???  | 
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    73   | 
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    74 def investment(portfolio: List[String], years: Range, start_balance: Long) : Long = ???  | 
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    75   | 
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    76   | 
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    77   | 
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    78   | 
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    79 //Test cases for the two portfolios given above  | 
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    80   | 
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    81 //println("Real data: " + investment(rstate_portfolio, 1978 to 2019, 100)) | 
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    82 //println("Blue data: " + investment(blchip_portfolio, 1978 to 2019, 100)) | 
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    83   | 
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    84   | 
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    85 }  |