Archive for category Bet Angel

The birth of a strategy

I’m always on the lookout for something new, preferably complimentary, to what I already do. But the path to a new strategies always starts with low expectations and its often a bumpy path. I think it’s probably the same for people starting out. In fact the first part, low expectations, is probably essential.

I recently headed off again down the path of blind alleys but on this occasion the blind alley turned out to be a new path and the results are shown below. The reason for putting this up is to give you some encouragement to try something new, but also to be warn you about how you do it.

The top image is the ‘nice’ one. When trying out this strategy I went in low with, £10, then £20 stakes and you can see by the end of Feb it had produced £250 in profits. The second graph tells the ‘true’ story however and the fate that often befalls new strategies or starters in a market.

The second graph plots the day to day totals. You can see it got off to a good start so I raised stakes and immediately ran into trouble. In hindsight I should have kept stakes at the same level to see if it was luck that was producing the results or some real underlying reason. In short, I got ahead of myself. Week two was a mare as you can see and it forced my hand. I chopped and changed my original strategy, a typically stupid error. As I exited the week, I went back to square one and started again and the market responded by giving me a clean bill of health going forward. With that decided, I could again increase stakes gradually until I find the tolerable staking limit for this strategy. I knew all this before, but for some reason I got carried away when I got off to a good start. It was a useful reminder though, which is why I am posting it up for everybody to see.

The summary is: -

If you try something, give it time to work through. Second, don’t raise stakes too quickly if you get off to a good start, it could be luck. Third, while it may take some time, always make sure you increase your stakes, even slowly. This will allow you to eventually reach bigger numbers in a safe and controlled manner, without the emotional baggage that comes with it!

100228 - Strategy birth

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Madness and wisdom

Are the racing markets becoming more or less volatile?

I can answer that with a definite YES. Yes they are becoming more and less volatile. Let me explain.

A few years ago I could pop an order in the market and wait for it to get filled. Now, if I go into a weaker than average race, like many this week, that doesn’t happen in the same manner anymore. If I get my staking wrong, the market takes one look at my order and runs away from it. I can almost sense the panic in the market when my order sits there. On a macro basis the market is jumpier, more volatile, than it used to be. It is the madness of crowds, people reacting too much to a short term situation. However, that shouldn’t stop you from trading effectively, you may just have to change your tack a little. Like everything on the exchanges if you spot something or suffer due to something, you can simply invert it. Exchanges markets are beautiful, if temperamental, beasts.

Longer term the markets are getting more efficient at pricing risk. Each year that passes, it gets ever so slightly more efficient. We have also noticed that the long term volatility in the markets is narrowing slightly. This would appear to be a reflection on the wisdom of crowds.

So there you have it, the markets are more volatile, but less. This appears to reflect the dual, or should I say duel, madness and wisdom of this particular crowd. When you look at it from a broad perspective, wisdom is winning.

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Backhim?

2-3 is an interesting score line for Mr Beckham to bring to Old Trafford. I thought Beckham was anonymous in the first match. I am sure he will want to do better in this leg. Two away goals is a killer for AC Milan and therefore Man U are at very short prices to qualify. Milan need a clear two goal win to stand any chance so they must score.

The market is pricing in just short of three goals with a .75 goal advantage to Man Utd. Similar to yesterdays Arsenal match. Would be a surprise to see a similar score line! I sense a tentative start by Man U who will wait to pick a hole in the Milan defence and try and catch them on the break. It’s Milan who have to make things happen!

Real Madrid are priced to comfortably over turn Lyon in their match. Priced at 3.20 goals with a 2.20 advantage. They only have one goal to overcome, but a Lyon away goal would really throw the cat among the pigeons. I think both matches show a lack of clear cut opportunties so I fancy making a little money before the off and picking some outside chances in both.

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Return of the hulk

I like this stage of the champions league. Something has to happen for a team to go through.

Arsenal are priced to beat Porto but there are many permutations available which mean that both sides have a big incentive to score. The market has been pretty accurate as a reflection of that. It is pricing in just under three goals with nearly a goal advantage to Arsenal. Usually you would expect these to be tight contests, but an early goal would create a significant incentive for another goal hence the pricing.

Arsenal have not turned around a first leg deficit in Europe since November 1 1978 but do have the advantage of the away goal. Wenger confirmed the importance of the away goal in a recent interview. ““Having the away goal is massive,” he said. “When you don’t have it you think that if we concede we are nearly dead.” On the flip side Porto don’t have a great record at the Emirates.

Porto have been patchy since the first leg. They thrashed second-place Braga 5-1 but then lost to Sporting Lisbon 3-0 and only salvaged 2-2 draw at lowly Olhanense thanks to an injury time goal. Should be a good game, Arsenal can’t afford to sit back and Porto need that away goal. My biggest ever win on champions league match came courtesy of Porto at Man Utd, so I’ll have above average interest in the game.

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Classic set up

A wonderful set up occurred in the FA Cup clash between Reading and Aston Villa this afternoon. Against the odds,  Reading took a 2-0 lead againsts premiership outfit Villa. The teams went off for half time in distinctly different moods. A break in play is the perfect opportunity for teams to turn things around and that Villa did. Rejuvenated from their half time talk it wasn’t look before Villa were suddenly 3-2 in the lead. You could have backed them in the teens only to green up at 1.29 after a few minutes. Doesn’t happen that often, usually it’s just a case of looking for the one goal, but three in ten minutes left any half time Villa backers with a stunning 10 fold return on their stake.

The interest in this set up was multiple. Non favourite leading, half time break, incentive to score, plenty of time left. Normally you are only looking for a goal, but now and again things just work much better than expected!

100307 - Reading vs Aston Villa - 3-2 Villa three goals ten mintues after half time 57mins

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Greener grass?

For some time I’ve watched the Aussie horse racing and admired that they seem to often do a better job than the UK. Then of course the weather, it’s just so much better down under. It’s enough to tempt me to head out to Aus during the winter and work from there for a little while. I had thought about doing that this year, but circumstances dictated otherwise.

This week has been a little different and three meetings have been lost to the rain. As I write this one of the commentators is sheltering from hail the size of golf balls at Flemington in what he describes as ‘The worst storm in Flemington for 30 years’. Probably an exageration in the heat of the moment, but it just goes to show you that nowhere is immune to acts of god.

EDIT – He wasn’t wrong, the meeting has been abandoned!

Here is a video of the chaos: -

http://video.au.msn.com/watch/video/freak-storm-ends-flemington-race-day/x2eqbzb

100306 - Melbourne weather

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February

Spring is in the air and not a moment too soon! Those bleak winters months are almost behind us, the garden is starting to bud and the birds are munching through the feed faster than I can replace it. March brings us Cheltenham and that is always interesting, to say the least.

It’s difficult to accurately compare last month against previous years as I wasn’t really around much last February. But overall I was above my previous best Feb by around 11%.  Generally, I was pretty happy with things.

Feel is difficult to compare sometimes. The markets always shift and slide around and I think that if your change your view on  something, then others will probably change also. It’s like being in a crowd of people who want to get a good view, one person goes on tip toes so you have to do the same, before long everybody is standing on tip toes and no one has a better view. One important part of your activity in any market is to try and find new ways to get a better view. Each time I do a talk I’m always amending it to bring it up to date. Some things that worked really well only a couple of years ago, are less effective now or have changed in some way, so it’s a constant process keeping things up to date.

I’ve started March just fine and I put in a good day yesterday, but the whole month really hinges around Cheltenham and I’ll only really know how that’s going well when I am in the thick of it. Last year was good, the prior year tough, thanks to the weather. The weeks before and after Cheltenham are often no great shakes, so the whole of the month really does hinge on that one week. Its basically all up in the air until we arrive at the start line.

Lets hope Betfair have put their recent system issues firmly in the past. I know its the fear of many, that Betfair goes down during such an important meeting. Good luck for March!

100303 - P&L Day_edit

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At the adverts

Hmm, since Monday At The Races has not been showing extended coverage behind the red button. This is a real pain as the coverage from ATR is sketchy at the best of times, hence the title of this post. If they have decided to stop this coverage then ATR will be useless for a lot of people. As most people who are involved in racing know, getting a good look at a horse before it runs is a damn good idea. If all we see are car insurance adverts for the build up to the race the value of this channel is significantly decreased.

I hope this move is temporary, I’ve emailed ATR but had no response as yet. If you don’t like this I suggest you do the same as well.

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When a negative is a postive

No this isn’t a maths questions, it’s about horses ! See a horse playing up and most people will lay it, feeling that it’s chances of winning the race are decling. That’s probably correct, as a horse that is not behaving itself before the start is unlikely to perform better during the race. That re-adjustment of opinion though is a huge opportunity for the astute trader. Look at the following graph from a race at Southwell last week. As they tried to load the horse it reared not just once but twice, throwing the jockey into the dirt. Anybody trading this without pictures probably wondered what on earth was going on.

100226 - 1540 - Horse rears twice at the start

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Day of the drifter

Sounds like a documentary of some sort, but this was the predominant feature in Monday’s horse racing markets.

In our etenral quest for knowledge, we run strategies in the back ground all the time. These can be to test new ideas or simply to explore certain aspects in the market. One of the strategies we often run is to test how ’swingy’ the markets are. It’s simple, every minute from four minutes out we pop an order in the market to back at the current price and then green / red up at post time. This tells us how much markets are moving around during this period and how stable they are and the general direction they travel. On it’s own it doesn’t say much but over time, using this and other strategies, we have accumulated a vast amount of knowledge on how the markets act and, more importantly, why.

Monday was an unusual day, which generated this post. On Monday the markets just wanted to drift, drift, drift. The favourites were loveless. As long as your opening position was a lay you would almost certainly have made money . It was especially unusual in that, of the 19 races we covered, only three showed a profit. Two of those profits were less than £1 and one was a reasonable profit, two broke even and the rest were clear losers.

If you were actively trading these races you would have probably picked up this trend early on and cut losses. But our objective was simply to measure activity. I did OK myself, quite good for a Monday, but having been on the right side of most of these drifts I got too aggressive eventually and dropped somewhere around £200 from my potential profit on the day just because I over traded, grrr.

What does this day mean for the next trading session? Nothing unfortunately, the clock gets reset to zero. So don’t start laying everything after reading this post, please. The next session could be as equally unusual in the other direction.

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Mercedes unlikely to win first GP

Anybody who can remember my ‘We are not competitive’ tip for formula one last year may be interested in the following article coming out of the Mercedes camp at the moment. Full story here: -

http://news.bbc.co.uk/sport1/hi/motorsport/formula_one/8539826.stm

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Europa league matches

Had some fun last Thursday messing around on the Europa league matches. I like the Europa league as they break down the matches into two blocks. One going off at 18:00 UK time and the remainder at 20:05. This gives you two cracks at the whip at trading them. This week was also the second leg of a knockout competition, which I prefer. I also tried an experimental strategy to small stakes on Thursday and that is what this post is about.

Basically I was trying a variation on the strategy I detailed here. Football is one of few sports available where you have multiple ways to hedge risk. All football markets are very tightly integrated and that allows you to offset risk across a variety of markets if you wish. This shifts your focus, less to managing downside and more to looking for upside opportunities. Even if you place positions at random, as long as you think about your hedged bet it’s difficult to lose substantially. Use Soccer Mystic to work out your counter positions in secondary markets.

Because football matches all go off at the same time you can use the guardian tool on Bet Angel to skip between markets in a flash. It also allows you to place orders quickly with automated trading functions which are managed in the background as you skip around the different markets. This allows you to easily trade many markets at once without fear of losing control of things.

For my experiment I used £10 stakes with a maximum risk of £30. I took positions before the off and hedged positions when a goal was scored or at half time. It was a fairly painless strategy but yielded some useful information and a profit to! It’s always useful to play around with these types of hedging strategy, even if you don’t make much you learn a lot and the commission generated across multiple markets is a useful way to offset the premium charge.

100226 - Europa league

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Portsmouth go into administration

Further to my post some time ago Portsmouth officially went into administration this afternoon and almost certain relegation. Hopefully you jumped on board following my post a little while ago. One of the lowest risk trades of the season!

While it’s not pleasant to see clubs get into trouble, the economics of football are astonishing. It’s quite amazing to see how poor the economics of most clubs are, but even the top teams are not in a very good shape. LBO’s put a huge burden on clubs and drain resources as people borrow money from the future to pay for success today. The problem is that while money does, generally, buy success. In an effort to keep up new teams join in card game and up the ante. This makes the return on investment and general economics decline overall. It’s not a viable path long term.

I remember watching my local team when I was young and the feeling then was that, on their day, your team could beat anybody. The feeling now is if your team isn’t £10bn in debt then they have no hope of challenging for any honours. I also would see local players on the pitch that had come through the youth system, this fuelled the dream that maybe one day I could be out there as well. I don’t believe that is remotely realistic nowadays. I think both points have taken the soul out of football as a grass roots level, that’s not the best way to encourage future generations.

Will it change? I doubt it!

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Murray suffers shock defeat

1.12 turned over, in a shock defeat.

However, short odds turned over in these sorts of matches are not uncommon. If you limit a match to three sets then the propensity for an upsets shoots up. One break of serve, if you are serving first, wins you the set. A couple of errors in the next set and the match is over. If the prospect of a shock was high, then it was in space yesterday when Tipsy took Murray to a tie break in the first set. After wining that, the maths and Tennis gods were always working against Murray.

The percentage difference of one server winning a point against another is typically quite small. So, thanks to the unique scoring system that tennis has, tiny errors can result in large end results. But this is especially so when there are fewer sets to be played.

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Greyhound racing in step decline

Most people are familiar with how the levy raises money for horse racing, but this also applies to Greyhound racing. Both sets of funding are falling but the most recent decline in the Greyhound funding must be quite worrying for the sport.

Income from off course bookmakers to the British Greyhound Racing Fund is now expected to only reach £8.5m, compared to the 2009 budget of £10m, and £12m in 2008.

Full story here.

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Downhill all the way

I’ve been having some fun trying to get my head around the winter Olympics when I can. I’ve picked on the the sports where a milliseconds lapse in concentration can hand the medal to somebody else. Basically just laying the current leader or red hot favourite in the hope that they make a mistake or somebody gets over the line a tenth of a second faster. I must admit I can’t quite get it right at the moment, but that is how you learn, by making mistakes.

I’ve done some research and listened to some of the legends like Franz Klammer for tips on who’s in form. I traded a fair amount on Brode Miller but he has just missed out on top spot twice with a silver and bronze. But it’s been quite fun and he has provided something good to trade off.

I’ll look again when the next big winter event comes around. Hoepfully I won’t have to wait for another four years as I think there is a lot of potential in these sports which are highly variable.

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Second bite at the cherry

Couldn’t resist the chance to lay Zaynar at Kelso this afternoon. Seeing it priced at 1.09 and having missed out on Denman recently at short odds, it seemed worth a shot. I waited for the opportunity in running and for a horse that didn’t seem to be responding it seemed just too good an opportunity. I laid at 1.10 and backed it back at 10’s for a nice profit. £1.13m was traded at 1.09!

100218 - Zaynar 1.09 Overturned at Kelso

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Ladbrokes results

Not much time to comment on the Ladbroke results but here they are.

An interesting graph in the presentation on UK race meetings that have been abandoned which just seems to be headed in one direction only!!! Your average Ladbrokes punter slaps less than a £10 on the counter per bet. I think this goes to highlight why Betfair will always struggle to reach this type of customer. Ladbrokes e-gaming division had a gross win of £172m vs. Betfair’s £239m. Overall Labrokes gross win is still significantly bigger than Betfair’s at £1.15bn.

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Champions league trading

Porto vs. Arsenal

Priced at a lowly 2.30 goals, this is fairly typical construction for a match of this type. Porto are priced as having a slight edge but only just. The market is pretty much spot on in terms of pricing.

B.Munich vs. Fiorentina

A less competitive clash according to the market. Priced at 2.90 with Munich having a 1.30 goal advantage. Under 2.50 goals offers long term value, I would have priced at 2.14 vs. 2.22 in the market.

League football is where I perform best and where I have most of my data, so I am always quite likely to build a lot more margin of safety into these matches. I suggest you do the same. First legs of the knockout round in this competition tend to be dominated by teams playing safe for the first leg and trying to sneak a goal. Home teams are usually desperate not to concede an away goal. We didn’t see that last night in Italy where Man Utd are in a dominant position for the return leg. When I saw the odds for the match I didn’t really believe that they were so favourble for a Man Utd win, but the market was right.

Don’t forget that in these big games it is quite easy to trade before the off. There is so much money passing through the markets that you can trade quite casually and still manage to get a positive result. When you have done that, you will have some free cash to throw at an outside chance in-play. A good tactic even if you are not into football much. Little risk, plenty of upside.

If you want to view some videos on trading on Soccer / Football. We have a number here. Soccer Mystic is free when you have a subscription to Bet Angel.

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Only a few seconds..

Amazing how a few seconds can make such a difference.

Ahead of the Eon chase we were speculating in the office at how short a price Denman was. In fact it was more like moaning, because we knew it would make getting anything out of the race pretty difficult. Our conclusion was that the incredibly skinny odds of 1.17 or thereabouts really represented the fact that Denman was going to win easy, except if he fell. We watched the race and witnessed Denman just trotting around the Newbury circuit with ease. We still continued our discussions as the race was underway. At which point I piped up and said, “I’m going to lay him”. I already had a reasonable, though not spectacular, profit on the race and just fancied my chances. No sooner had I said that than he stumbled, I never got filled at 1.05. Then he clattered into the next and it was all over. A few seconds early and I could have possibly had my biggest ever single daily total! Isn’t hindsight a wonderful thing.

I switched quickly to the gold cup market but it seems many others had already and his price had already drifted enough.

100213 - 1430 - Denman price movement

100213 - 1430 - Denman gold cup

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FA CUP fifth round

I like the later stages of knockout competitions. There is lots to play for and when a goal down and ten minutes are left , it’s all or nothing. These are the places you not only find value but plenty of opportunity and teams playing out of their skin, I love it! Wembley stadium is only a few games away today and anything can happen.

I’ve checked through the odds and nothing wierd has been thrown up. But consider the general picture if you are going to have a play today. With Chelsea and Man City at home it would be a shock to see an upset there, but you may want to be with Stoke if you are looking for one. They have nothing to lose and Man City seem a little fragile. Backing Chelsea at 1.16 is more of a punt than a trade, so look to secondary markets for an opportunity. Cardiff will probably fight a rearguard action and hope to nick something on the break.

Derby, Reading and Southampton are all matches with similar traits. Weaker team playing at home with strong away teams. Both Reading and Southampton will fancy their chances but I’m not so sure about Derby. These matches will probably be played with caution by the stronger away team who don’t want to concede and give the home side an advantage. So I suspect not making mistakes will be the order of the day for the away sides. The longer the match goes on the more the quality should show. An early goal by either side will upset the apple cart.

Both Derby and Southampton’s matches are priced in as low scoring affairs, with little advantage to either side. Usually these matches turn out to scrappy draws. I think the price on the draw should be a little shorter.

Whatever happens, I’ll be on the lookout for late goals, as that is the key characteristic of knockout competitions.

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Chelsea vs.  Cardiff    Goals: 3.4   Supremacy: 2.8

Man City vs.  Stoke    Goals: 2.8   Supremacy: 1.8

Reading vs.  West Brom    Goals: 2.7   Supremacy: -0.1

Southampton vs.  Portsmouth    Goals: 2.5   Supremacy: -0.1

Derby vs.  Birmingham    Goals: 2.4   Supremacy: -0.2

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Are sports markets like financial markets?

Yes and no. There are some similarities, most certainly in a number of aspects. Forex markets are pretty similar in their appearance.  But when it comes to trading certain types of markets, there are many differences.

When I first looked at the markets I thought there may be some commonalities, but I discovered that a number of popular technical indicators in financial markets just don’t wash as well in sports markets. Looking closer, there are some clear underlying reasons for this.

Sports markets are very reliant on underlying activity, there is a definite cause and effect on odds. While sentiment can drive prices higher or lower, too high or too low creates an arbitrage opportunity for anybody who has studied or analysed the markets well enough. Sentiment can only go so far in pushing the prices around before arbitrage against well established models limit certain types of price movement. One of the biggest differences though, is that in a betting market all prices are directly related. The same can’t be said of the financial markets which rise or fall based upon their mood that day. Ice cream sellers and umbrella manufacturers can rise and fall together in the short term even if the weather is sunny, on sports markets that’s impossible.

All prices are related on a sports market so you can’t get a permanently rising price without something adjusting elsewhere. No technical indicator will tell you that a horse has bolted to the start, is refusing to load or is being gambled. Using technical indicators in-play is a complete nonsense as in-play odds are determined by the underlying event and the time left to finish. What would I recommend? Lots of things, but keeping an eye on general market activity is one of the most useful indicators. Keeping an eye on non techincal indicators is a definite advantage, staring at some complex indicator that is designed for a different market and can’t possibly work on a sport, not so helpful.

This is one of the reason we introduced the market overview screen. It allows you to see market wide activity at a glance and quickly spot anything that could be having an effect on your current position. Something that’s critically important given the characteristics of a modern sports market.

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Losing money

Today I went into some markets and deliberately lost money. Have I gone mad?

Over the weekend I was at my gym chilling in the outdoor hot tub when I had a crazy idea that I thought may just work if I threw enough money at it. When I put it into practice today it showed me that my initial thoughts were wrong, I lost money and quite heavily if I am honest. Was it a disastrous experiment? We have to give that a very firm “No.” Whether you win or lose money with a strategy is not important, it’s what you learn when you do it.

When I first started on Betfair my first objective was not to lose to much money. I knew when I was experimenting that losing money was almost inevitable, so first on my list was not to lose to much of it. Second on my list was minimising the losses by striking out errors. Because of the way the market is constructed, before commission, its net level if you are a complete fool, especially when trading. So all you are doing is looking for a strategty to tip things slightly in your favour. Striking out errors is the path to tipping that balance.

If there is one thing I have learnt in life, it’s not to be afriad to make mistakes. But this only works if you are prepared to learn from them. This is why I have a slush account, an account where I can lose money but ‘pay’ for the experiance without upsetting my normal activity. I accept that I will make mistakes and lose money on this account, but I know that I am effectively paying for that knowledge. That is always a good way to view any loss, as long as you learn from it.

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Trading from the beach

I’ve traded from many, many locations around the world. Next to swimming pools, at airport lounges, from hotels and in cars. But it seems we are slowly moving towards that ideal scenario of completely portable trading.

Thanks to Bet Angel user Rob for sending me the latest update on Slinging over 3G. It looks like, in America at least, Apple are going to allow slinging over 3G for the iPhone. This would be a decent leap forward to getting pictures where ever you are. Currently I’ve had to sling pictures over wireless when I reach a location but over 3G would be very useful, even if it is a little delayed. I’ve been using a VPS for some years now as the bandwidth requirements are tiny but the consistency of connection excellent and the speed very high when trading remotely. It’s made trading via 3G very possible, but lack of pictures have always been a nuisance.

Now we are moving forward with slinging over 3g and with products like the MiFi from three the possibility of trading from the beach is definitely looking a reality!

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January etc.

All things considered January went OK, but it was a very tough month.

The thing to remember if this is your first winter, is that the winter months can be punishing. This year was an even sterner test that usual though. With the weather conspiring against us you will have done well to survive the month with your mindset intact. Volumes were low, markets weak and the racing un-inspiring. I imagine that January cost the racing industry a fair few bucks.

I managed to end up about 5% on last year, but the number of races was well down on last year. So on a like for like basis I actually performed pretty well. The number of races I completed was less than half that in the summer. Therefore, I use the winter months for experimenting, chilling out, research and trying new things.

I did a lot of work in January putting into practice some research from did last year which trailed into this year. It confirmed the old adage that the harder you look at the something the more and more youlearn. I think this is the thing I enjoy most if I am honest. It’s like being a child again and walking down an untrodden route through a forest. Most routes fade out and lead to nothing, but every now and again you head down a path with leads to a new way forward.  You look back and think, hmm, I wonder why I didn’t see that before? But, as always life is best understood backwards but you have to live it forwards.

I hope you survived January, unfortunately February usually isn’t much better. After taking February off last year I am very relaxed about what I want to achieve this year and will be taking the time to pick up and start some projects for later this year. After ten years in the market, I am very focused on preparing the ground for my next adventure. When I start that depends on how the market shapes up. I’ve run out of space and need to see some real growth or else things start to become self limiting by default. Maybe I’ll post up more on this at some other point.

Till then, good luck whatever you do and however you do it!

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Custom designed trading

On version 1.23 and above on Bet Angel we now have one of the most customisable and flexible trading screens on the market. You can move elements around the screen and custom define your own columns and layouts. When you have done this, you can save your layouts to a custom profile for later recall.

This is particularly handy if you want switch quickly between different markets and need some elements of the screen but not others. You can put as much or as little on the screen as you wish. This means you can drop features you find unnecessary and add ones you do! You now also have the ability to have custom columns which will inherit characteristics you define in advance. A clever feature that adds even more flexibility to your trading.

Also, if you trading pre-off and then in-play you can quickly switch between two different layouts and trading styles with a couple of clicks. These features are just the first of a number we have planned for 2010. Watch the video for an overview: -

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Six more weeks of winter?

As legend would have it today is Groundhog day when a small(ish) furry animal predicts to residents if they are in for six more weeks of winter. While this is a north American tradition it seems to have its roots in Europe. Given the poor start to the year lets hope the various ceremonies around the world don’t see a shadow or if they do it’s a region forecast that won’t affect the UK.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Groundhog_Day

http://news.yahoo.com/s/livescience/20100201/sc_livescience/punxsutawneyphilthegroundhogbehindthemyth

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Quiet transfer deadline day

Often the transfer deadline throws up a few opportunities, due to the high correlation between wages and league position. A buy or sell can translate to a corresponding improvement or decline between now and the end of the season. This year it was very quiet. The only thing of note was Portsmouth net sale which isn’t going to help their prospects of avoiding the drop. If you followed my advice of a little while ago you should have a healthy profit, I suspect it will get healthier after today.

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Connection modes on Bet Angel

We have had lots of questions emailed in about API and non API modes on Bet Angel.

Here is a very quick video I recorded back in September last year outlining what a connection mode is. This should enable you to understand how to set up Bet Angel to use connection modes and it also specifically refers to what you should do if you are unable, or unwilling, to connect to the Betfair’s standard API.

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More Betfair problems today

Last night there was a significant site outage, followed by issues for international customers. At 11am this morning the API went offline again.

It’s been a terrible week for Betfair.  I know that due to the measures Betfair have taken in recent years the stress on their servers much be much lower on a like for like basis than in years gone by. So I am not sure why these issues have been occurring on such a frequent basis this year? While possible, it seems unlikely that all these issues occurred in isolation without some fundamental underlying, more general issue? I am aware that Betfair face many technical challenges, but I think it would be good if they came forward with a detailed explanation of what is behind all these problems to help restore confidence.

Just a reminder that you can still use Bet Angel even without the API. A small investment at less than 41p a day to have access if you are not a Bet Angel user already.

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