There are no possible numbers that round that way. 1.1 is at most 1.15, and 1.0 is at most 1.05, so the total of those three numbers should be at most 3.25. Even if the numbers are exactly something-five, and even if you improperly round 5s up sometimes and down sometimes, the rounded value of the sum should be at most 3.3 . The only way I can think of to get those numbers is if some of the numbers are actually truncated and some are rounded, but that’s all kinds of wrong.
[quote=“dracoi, post:19, topic:695577”]
Is it possible the 15% difference is a difference in tax rate or after-tax yields or something, /QUOTE]
When they say the difference between A and B is 15%,
it may be that the process was to deduct 15% from B. You might be able to assume this where B is before tax and A is after tax…depending on exactly what is being done.
Previously the discussioned assumed that the 15% was 15% of A.
It might also be the before and after of adjusting something else 15% - 15% more tax payers , for example.