Example
In the example shown above, the formula in cell E13 is: where sales (C5:C12), periods (B5:B12), and confidence (J4) are named ranges. With these inputs, the FORECAST.ETS.CONFINT returns 198.92 in cell E13. This formula is copied down the table, and the resulting confidence interval values in column “CI” are used to calculate the upper and lower bounds of the forecast, as explained below. The forecast value in cell D13 is calculated with the FORECAST.ETS function like this: The upper and lower range formulas in F13 and G13 are: The chart below shows Sales, Forecast, Upper, and Lower values data plotted in a scatter plot:
Note: Cells D12, F12, and G12 are set equal to C12 to connect the existing values to the forecast values in the chart.
Argument notes
The target_date argument represents the point on the timeline that a confidence interval prediction should be calculated. The values argument contains the dependent array or range of data, also called y values. These are existing historical values from which a prediction will be calculated. The timeline argument is the independent array or range of values, also called x values. The timeline, must consist of numeric values with a constant step interval. For example, the timeline could be yearly, quarterly, monthly, daily, etc. The timeline can also be a simple list of numeric periods, as in the example shown. The seasonality argument is optional and represents the length of the seasonal pattern expressed in timeline units. For example, in the example shown, data is quarterly, so seasonality is given as 4, since there are 4 quarters in a year, and the seasonal pattern is 1 year. Allowed values are 0 (no seasonality, use linear algorithm), 1 (calculate seasonal pattern automatically), and n (manual season length, a number between 2 and 8784, inclusive). The number 8784 = 366 x 24, the number of hours in a leap year. The data_completion argument is optional and specifies how FORECAST.ETS.CONFINT should handle missing data points. The options are 1 (default) and zero. By default, FORECAST.ETS.CONFINT will provide missing data points by averaging neighboring data points. If zero is provided, FORECAST.ETS.CONFINT will treat missing data points as zero. The aggregation argument is optional, and controls what function is used to aggregate data points when the timeline contains duplicate values. The default is 1, which specifies AVERAGE. Other options are given in the table below. Note: FORECAST.ETS.CONFINT results will be more accurate if aggregation is performed beforehand.
Errors
The FORECAST.ETS.CONFINT function will return errors as shown below.
Dave Bruns
Hi - I’m Dave Bruns, and I run Exceljet with my wife, Lisa. Our goal is to help you work faster in Excel. We create short videos, and clear examples of formulas, functions, pivot tables, conditional formatting, and charts.