AQL stands for acceptable quality limit. This is basically the worst tolerable process average in percentage or ratio that is still considered acceptable.
Lift/Drag x Height loss
In most areas 1.5" is an average. k In most areas 1.5" is an average per week. k
The profit or loss would depend on the number of units produced and the number sold. These numbers need not be equal. There is, therefore, not enough information to provide a sensible answer.
It may or may not be acceptable. If the mean is 12, then no it is not acceptable. If the mean is 1000, then it may be acceptable depending on the criteria given.
A win loss ratio is to keep track of records for a season. Ex. 4:3 Ratio. the 4 is the win while the 3 is the loss airgo win loss ratio.
how do we calculate credit loss ratio in banks financials
7% to10% of body weight per month is an acceptable figure for maximum weight loss.
Risk acceptance in composite risk management is a determination of what is an acceptable risk. One needs to determine what loss is acceptable and what loss is probable to determine if the loss is an acceptable risk.
% loss = ((selling price - cost)/cost x 100 Ratio of loss to cost? (selling price - cost)/cost
Loss Ratio in insurance is the ratio of total losses paid out in claims plus adjustment expenses divided by the total earned premiums. If an insurance company, for example, pays out $60 in claims for every $100 in collected premiums, then its loss ratio is 60%.
AQL stands for acceptable quality limit. This is basically the worst tolerable process average in percentage or ratio that is still considered acceptable.
An price to earnings (P/E) ratio shows the number of years to cover the initial capital spent in an equity investment. There is no real acceptable, and therefore unnacceptable P/E ratio, and depends on each investors personal expectations or goals. Except that generally a higher P/E ratio is better than a lower P/E ratio, for obvious reasons.
Loss Ratio in insurance is the ratio of total losses paid out in claims plus adjustment expenses divided by the total earned premiums. If an insurance company, for example, pays out $60 in claims for every $100 in collected premiums, then its loss ratio is 60%.
The ratio of losses paid to premiums earned, usually over a period of one year
I'm not familiar with the term "term claim ratio." Did you mean "claim loss ratio?" If so, a claim loss ratio is the ratio between the amount of claims paid to the amount of policy premium. This can be done on either an individual insured basis, or on an entire "book" of business. Hope this helps.
you add your weighted premiums and divide by your weighted claims. (you do not weight the loss ratios )