Scripophilist
- 27 Oct 2004 23:40

How would you like to trade a market where you get large regular price swings every 10 minutes in the afternoon, seven days a week. A
market where all prices are set purely by supply and demand, few transaction costs, no middle men and you only pay commission if you win? Where you can freely act as a market maker and where you have direct market access and where you can create a spread for others to take?
Betfair has revolutionised the betting market and created an open platform for exchanging risk on sports events. This market is now viewed much more like a traditional financial risk market than an old fashioned betting market. Smart users have realised that there are huge opportunities on Betfair because they can buy and sell risk in much the same way they would in a normal financial market but without the burden of cost or the restricted access that is usually associated with traditional financial markets.
Click here to learn more
fade
- 03 Mar 2005 14:22
- 1528 of 10502
I had the experience that Bones mentioned on the Arsenal game, coming into the 2nd half they upped a gear (and when was the last time Arsenal didn't score) so I backed them thinking that sooner or later Sheffield would buckle. Naturally they didn't.
One lesson here is that I shouldn't bet on Arsenal games, even if I think there is no emotional attachment there is bound to be some effect on an unconscious level.
Other than that I find these situations emotionally disconcerting as the risk 2 reward seems all wrong, I suppose once I have more eyeball evidence that the probability of coming out on top is enough to overturn the bad r2r I'll feel more comfortable with this strategy
Other than that its been an up and down experience since the course, I am a victim of itchy fingers and not enough discipline. Anyway the best way to learn is to fail, and the best way to fail is with small stakes :-)
Scripophilist
- 03 Mar 2005 14:49
- 1529 of 10502
Site stalled again there. Betfair really need to sort this out.
kernow
- 03 Mar 2005 15:24
- 1530 of 10502
Script - fwiw - I've been on all day without any glitches at all here.
Scripophilist
- 03 Mar 2005 15:34
- 1531 of 10502
What broadband provider are you with?
Fundamentalist
- 03 Mar 2005 15:42
- 1532 of 10502
Scrip
i have had 3 or 4 occasions where it has stalled for at least 10-15 seconds at a time - still having a very good afternoon but it is getting annoying (im on tiscali broadband)
Copper
- 03 Mar 2005 16:43
- 1533 of 10502
None of you really thought that Spurs were gonna draw or lose surely??
That was a certain back for me especially knowing that Mido would come on at some point!
kernow
- 03 Mar 2005 16:54
- 1534 of 10502
Script - sorry for the delay - been playing with the attheraces site - very big delay on the video makes it almost useless.
I'm with Onetel broadband - a BT line of course but I can't remember the last time it failed.
Scripophilist
- 03 Mar 2005 17:03
- 1535 of 10502
"still having a very good afternoon" - I am glad somebody is!! I haven't really recovered from that early issue when Betfair went AWOL.
Scripophilist
- 03 Mar 2005 17:03
- 1536 of 10502
And right on que its gone AWOL again!
Scripophilist
- 03 Mar 2005 17:05
- 1537 of 10502
But only briefly. It's very annoying.
Scripophilist
- 04 Mar 2005 09:18
- 1538 of 10502
My guess is that the probability of a horse is less volatile than the price. If it drifts you get better value than something that is shorter.
------------------
BACKING horses that drift in the market is more profitable than backing those whose odds shorten, according to Betfair.
The betting exchange's claim represents the latest ingredient in Betfair's attempt to counteract allegations that exchanges pose a threat to racing's integrity, with non-triers allegedly being laid on the exchanges, where their price drifts before the horse involved loses.
On the basis of an analysis of six months' data, from the second half of 2004, Betfair concludes: "The evidence of nearly 2,000 races and 20,000 horses shows that more money would have been made backing drifters than backing horses that shortened in price on Betfair."
Defining a "drifter" as a horse whose price moved out by more than 20 per cent during the final five minutes before the official start time of each race, and a "shortener" as a horse for whom the reverse was true, Betfair claims: "The analysis from every runner in 1,864 races over the summer and autumn of 2004 shows categorically that punters who bet on horses that drift in the betting in the final five minutes do better than those who bet on horses that shorten in the market."
A 1 level stake bet immediately before the start of each race produced a loss of 345 on"shorteners" but a profit of 570 from indiscriminately backing "drifters".
According to Betfair: "These results, using a large volume of data, completely contradict the stated view of those who use anecdotal evidence to project the idea that the biggest drifters in the betting market are "prepared to lose," and thus represent bad value bets for punters.
"Detractors of exchanges are keen to highlight horses that drift and lose but conveniently forget those that drift and win. This analysis serves as a timely reminder that there are many reasons why horses drift in the market. It proves beyond doubt that the view that a drift in price indicates some form of skulduggery is not only a lazy and incorrect assumption, but a potentially expensive one.
"The reality is that drifting horses do not drift on the basis of either nefarious activity or inside information; they drift because market forces dictate the price and, as financial markets show, market forces can get it wrong as often as they get it right."
Fundamentalist
- 04 Mar 2005 09:34
- 1539 of 10502
Interesting post scrip
wonder if in the next few weeks we will see money coming for drifters before the off?
Diego
- 04 Mar 2005 10:06
- 1540 of 10502
Anyone finding Betfair pedestrian?
D
kernow
- 04 Mar 2005 10:13
- 1541 of 10502
Broken I'd say. Server problems message just appeared.
Scripophilist
- 04 Mar 2005 10:16
- 1542 of 10502
Looks like that upgrade didn't. It's been a shambles this week in all honesty.
Scripophilist
- 04 Mar 2005 10:28
- 1543 of 10502
Something to keep you entertained while we wait for normal service to be resumed.
http://www.funpic.hu/swf/numanuma.html
Bones
- 04 Mar 2005 11:02
- 1544 of 10502
Very good Scrip, you've lost some weight since recording that one!
DocProc
- 04 Mar 2005 11:31
- 1545 of 10502
Fantastic, Scrip! Where can we get the words from to learn it?
Copper
- 04 Mar 2005 12:57
- 1546 of 10502
Scrip's is it worth laying Norwich at 10 @ odds of 10?
Surley they won't beat chelsea??
Harlosh
- 04 Mar 2005 13:25
- 1547 of 10502
Copper,
You could do. You have to decide whether to risk 90 to win 10.