dhwanit2412
Yes, Option A seems very vague and confusing. With respect to conclusion the answer should not be A. Someone pls explain.
Yup, I totally agree that (A) is confusing. Initially, I interpreted the word "stock" to mean "equity," which would not make a whole lot of sense. So I did what we should all do when we encounter a confusing answer choice -- I kept moving.
The remaining options all seem like pretty straightforward conclusions from the prompt. Well, if everything else is out, and (A) is confusing, I guess we'll have to pick (A)!
On second read, this question appears to be using "stock" to mean "inventory." We don't really know anything about how quickly inventory is replenished after the early sale begins, and we know nothing about how this might translate to inventory costs. So (A) is the one conclusion we couldn't necessarily draw, and it appears to be the best of the bunch.
But the better takeaway is about the strategy for when you encounter confusing answer choices. If you don't understand one option, but the other four are clearly wrong, your job is to pick the one you don't understand. If you don't understand one option, but one of the other four options is clearly correct, your job is to pick THAT option.
In other words, it's not an ideal scenario, but you don't have to understand every answer choice completely to get the question right. Keep moving and evaluate the answer choices you do understand, and then see what you're left with.
I hope that helps!