Central Limit Theorem (CLT): Definition and Key Characteristics

What Is the Central Limit Theorem (CLT)?

In probability theory, the central limit theorem (CLT) states that the distribution of a sample variable approximates a normal distribution (i.e., a “bell curve”) as the sample size becomes larger, regardless of the population's actual distribution shape.

Put another way, CLT is a statistical premise that, given a sufficiently large sample size from a population with a finite level of variance, the mean of all sampled variables from the same population will be approximately equal to the mean of the whole population. Furthermore, these samples approximate a normal distribution, with their variances being approximately equal to the variance of the population as the sample size gets larger, according to the law of large numbers.

Although this concept was first developed by Abraham de Moivre in 1733, it was not formalized until 1920, when noted Hungarian mathematician George Pólya dubbed it the central limit theorem.

Key Takeaways

  • The central limit theorem (CLT) states that the distribution of sample means approximates a normal distribution as the sample size gets larger, regardless of the population's distribution.
  • Sample sizes equal to or greater than 30 are often considered sufficient for the CLT to hold.
  • A key aspect of CLT is that the average of the sample means and standard deviations will equal the population mean and standard deviation.
  • A sufficiently large sample size can predict the characteristics of a population more accurately.
  • CLT is useful in finance when analyzing a large collection of securities to estimate portfolio distributions and traits for returns, risk, and correlation.
Central Limit Theorem (CLT)

Investopedia / Jiaqi Zhou

Understanding the Central Limit Theorem (CLT)

According to the central limit theorem, the mean of a sample of data will be closer to the mean of the overall population in question, as the sample size increases, notwithstanding the actual distribution of the data. In other words, the data is accurate whether the distribution is normal or aberrant.

As a general rule, sample sizes of 30 are typically deemed sufficient for the CLT to hold, meaning that the distribution of the sample means is fairly normally distributed. Therefore, the more samples one takes, the more the graphed results take the shape of a normal distribution.

The central limit theorem is often used in conjunction with the law of large numbers, which states that the average of the sample means will come closer to equaling the population mean as the sample size grows, which is extremely useful in accurately predicting the characteristics of populations.

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Key Components of the Central Limit Theorem

The central limit theorem is comprised of several key characteristics. These characteristics largely revolve around samples, sample sizes, and the population of data.

  1. Sampling is successive. This means some sample units are common with sample units selected on previous occasions.
  2. Sampling is random. All samples must be selected at random so that they have the same statistical possibility of being selected.
  3. Samples should be independent. The selections or results from one sample should have no bearing on future samples or other sample results.
  4. Large sample size. As sample size increases the sampling distribution approaches the normal distribution.

The Central Limit Theorem in Finance

The CLT is useful when examining the returns of an individual stock or broader indices, because the analysis is simple, due to the relative ease of generating the necessary financial data. Consequently, investors of all types rely on the CLT to analyze stock returns, construct portfolios, and manage risk.

Say, for example, an investor wishes to analyze the overall return for a stock index that comprises 1,000 equities. In this scenario, that investor may simply study a random sample of stocks to cultivate estimated returns of the total index. To be safe, at least 30-50 randomly selected stocks across various sectors should be sampled for the central limit theorem to hold. Furthermore, previously selected stocks must be swapped out with different names to help eliminate bias.

Why Is the Central Limit Theorem Useful?

The central limit theorem is useful when analyzing large data sets because it allows one to assume that the sampling distribution of the mean will be normally-distributed in most cases. This allows for easier statistical analysis and inference. For example, investors can use central limit theorem to aggregate individual security performance data and generate distribution of sample means that represent a larger population distribution for security returns over a period of time.

Why Is the Central Limit Theorem's Minimize Sample Size 30?

A sample size of 30 is fairly common across statistics as the minimum for applying the central limit theorem. The higher your sample size, the more likely the sample will be representative of your population set.

What Is the Formula for Central Limit Theorem?

The central limit theorem doesn't have a formula used in its practical application. Its principle is simply applied. With a sufficiently large sample size, the sample distribution will approximate a normal distribution, and the sample mean will approach the population mean. So if we have a sample size of at least 30, we can begin to analyze the data as if it fit a normal distribution.

Article Sources
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  1. Hans Fischer. "A History of the Central Limit Theorem." Page 1. Springer, 2011.

  2. Stark, Benjamin A. "Studying Moments of the Central Limit Theorem." The Mathematics Enthusiast, Vol 14, No. 1, 2017, pp. 53-76.

  3. Boston University School of Public Health. "Central Limit Theorem."

  4. University of Massachusetts Amherst. "What Is Central Limit Theorem? Properties, Best Practices, Examples & Everything To Know."

  5. Emory University. "Final Summary The Central Limit Theorem."

  6. Chang, H. J., K. Huang, and C. Wu. "Determination of Sample Size in Using Central Limit Theorem for Weibull Distribution." International Journal of Information and Management Sciences, Vol. 17, No. 3. 2006, pp. 153-174.

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