The BTC Horse Racing Thread
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@nathan-cooke said in The BTC Horse Racing Thread:
Hey team, bit of a random one. I was digging online and found an article that suggested where there was a short priced fav, backing the 5th fav has a positive ROI.
We'll add this to the software. Probably makes sense to include nth fave with a max of 6 (6 being the max number of official "places" in any race).
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Unfortunately the fav criteria only goes to 4th fav, otherwise it would of been an easy one to test.
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@emily-knowles
Not seen the thread but you can easilty test this out yourself with the software if i get what you are asking. You can test laying to stake, liability by flat stake or by % bank.
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@david-milligan I can't find the thread that's what got me thinking if I really did read it or not!
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@emily-knowles I have read this somewhere too, can you post a link? Would love to see some data
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Unless I'm going mad, I'm sure I saw a thread to say that laying fixed stakes is more profitable than fixed liability as long as the bank management is good.
I'm wondering whether to change my staking from 2.5% bank as a liability to 1% flat stake
What's everyone's thoughts on this?
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Hey team, bit of a random one. I was digging online and found an article that suggested where there was a short priced fav, backing the 5th fav has a positive ROI. It was something like in races with 10 to 12 runners where the fav is between $1-$2, back the 5th fav. I'm a bit of a noob and still learning the software, but is this a strategy I can back test?
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@martin said in The BTC Horse Racing Thread:
Anyone got any sweepstakes going?
At work, Back on The Lash and Galvin but nothing real ..
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@john-folan ...Dunboyne, Galvin and Back on the Lash for me!!
Just drawn last horse in the sweep ...Any Second Now last 3 out were
Rambler, Delta and MIne, obviously nobody in pub keeping track of what was left!! -
Just read that historically horses starting the national at single figure prices don’t have a great SR in the national! Worth a lay on any if they start short?
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@john-folan said in The BTC Horse Racing Thread:
Noble Yeats
Le Milos
Ain’t that a Same
Any Second NowBacking each way in the National Later.
I was going E/W on Le Milos and Mister Coffey.
The trouble with laying horses is the names I recognise are usually because I want them to lose. Let’s see how I get on without the software to help.
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@emily-knowles said in The BTC Horse Racing Thread:
Does a huge race like the Grand National affect the other races in any way? Anything unusual I need to factor in to my trades today?
Probably but I never worry. Business as usual apart from massively higher scalping stakes at Aintree as so much more liquidity.
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Does a huge race like the Grand National affect the other races in any way? Anything unusual I need to factor in to my trades today?
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Noble Yeats
Le Milos
Ain’t that a Same
Any Second NowBacking each way in the National Later.
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@richard-coxon well put. I used to think the same thing when I was making pennies. Then once I was confident in my ability to scalp I had to take the leap of faith. Then you find out you don’t need to take as many ticks. On the flip side you tend to get out a lot quicker on losses as the numbers are bigger. I failed to see a downside with it.
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@john-folan said in The BTC Horse Racing Thread:
@joseph-henderson said in The BTC Horse Racing Thread:
Apologies if this is a [SNIP]
I use good size stakes now so really don’t need that much movement to make what I want off of a race. I go in a few times depending on what is going on for smaller movements. But to answer your question I’m normally out 2 or 3 ticks the wrong way as that usually indicates I’ve got it wrong. Sometimes it recovers but most of the time that Red keeps on growing
I think that is a very good point, a lot of us 'newbies' forget this aspect, when your 1% of bank roll is, for example, £100 then you dont really need too many ticks movement to make a decent anount of green a day (or obviously equally a large red in the opposite direction). But it means you can be fairly happy with a one or two tick move. I think a lot of us - me included - used to get frustrated with green values of pennies and wondering how on earth you'd ever make a living or at the very least a decent amount trading. So we take too much risk and look for larger tick movements in order to increase the green - usually though ending up with too much red LOL. Since I have started using percentages of net stake and points - so never thinking of stakes as 'money' - I've found it a lot easier all round. If I have a certain percentage green or red I'm out. So now I measure everything as points / percentages of up or down rather than thinking about cash.
So how much percentage of my stake am I prepared to loose, what percentage profit am I happy with is what I go with. Has helped me tremdously.
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A quiet day for me today with nothing meeting my criteria for a trade. To be honest I quite enjoyed watching the opening day of Aintree with no ££ on the line
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@joseph-henderson said in The BTC Horse Racing Thread:
Apologies if this is a silly question but I was wondering if anyone has any guidance on staking and risk management when scalping? In several videos online people refer to targeting a certain number of ticks for example, however I haven't read anything about how to manage risk and when to exit if the trade goes against you in order to remain profitable in the long run. Thanks
I use good size stakes now so really don’t need that much movement to make what I want off of a race. I go in a few times depending on what is going on for smaller movements. But to answer your question I’m normally out 2 or 3 ticks the wrong way as that usually indicates I’ve got it wrong. Sometimes it recovers but most of the time that Red keeps on growing
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Apologies if this is a silly question but I was wondering if anyone has any guidance on staking and risk management when scalping? In several videos online people refer to targeting a certain number of ticks for example, however I haven't read anything about how to manage risk and when to exit if the trade goes against you in order to remain profitable in the long run. Thanks