I wonder if the following statement is true: Suppose you have a probability space $(\Omega,\mathcal{F}, \mathbb{P})$ and random variables $(X_n)_{n \in \mathbb{N}},X,(Y_n)_{n \in \mathbb{N}},Y$. If for all $\omega \in \Omega$ it holds [$X_n(\omega) \to X(\omega)$ $\Rightarrow Y_n(\omega) \to Y(\omega)$], can we then conclude that the same implication holds for stochastic convergence, so [$X_n \overset{\mathbb{P}}{\to} X \Rightarrow Y_n \overset{\mathbb{P}}{\to} Y$] ? My intuition is that this sounds useful, but i couldn't make up a sufficient proof yet.
I'm not actually asking for a proof, maybe just an answer by someone experienced, because i guess it is either trivial or not true at all (which perhaps can be seen by a counter example). Thanks in advance.
If you want a sensible answer you have to do the work of formulating a sensible question.
– Rhys Steele Sep 06 '22 at 13:51