Smartgambler
Pro-Punter

Go Back   OZmium Sports Betting and Horse Racing Forums > Public Forums > General Topics
User Name
Password
Register FAQ Search Today's Posts Mark all topics as read

To advertise on these
forums, e-mail us.

Reply
 
Thread Tools Search this Thread Display Modes
  #1  
Old 30th March 2017, 04:24 PM
Every Topic Every Topic is offline
Member
 
Join Date: Jan 1970
Location: Adelaide
Posts: 146
Default Betfair trading system notes

I have always wondered about Betfair trading as it appeals to my personality to place my bets, close them and not worry about who does or doesn't win the race.
I have tried it a few times, but like most people I ultimately fail when I stuff up and a big loss comes along.

The last few weeks have been slow for my normal systems with too many races washed out and the other selections just breaking even.
I decided to use this time to give BF trading another go.

One of the issues for me engaging in BF trading has been the lack of real information about what bet sizes should be, what kind of target to aspire to etc... There are lots of people having their two cents on the subject but rarely do you come across anything really useful.

And then I came across a post in some forum in a land far, far away and the guy stated, clearly, what he considered your bets would need to be to meet a profit of $2,500 per month.
Assuming one tick betting he described how one might aspire to having a bank of $1200 with $50 bet sizes and aim for a target, generally speaking, of $100 a day. He was suggesting betting on 30 races a day. He was allowing for blowing your entire bet on 5 races.

This was the sort of info I wanted...

I decided to start with $5 bets, the minimum, as I didn't want to waste money if it didn't work out.
This meant I wanted to make a profit of 30 cents per race, for 30 races per day, at least.

I started a week ago and so far I have won every day, winning around 90% of all races I bet on, and I am just under the overall target for the week.
The only times I have lost have been when I am not sticking to my own rules and not paying attention.
If I feel myself getting a bit cocky or distracted I get up and leave the next few races until I am hungry to give it a go again.

I feel I am getting the hang of it and will try to increase the bet size each week based on bank. I have seen in a few places people mentioning that once you get to a bank of around $2,000 it becomes harder to trade as you don't have your bets matched as easily.
I think I would be happy to sit on bet sizes of $50 if I get there. A few grand a month extra would be fine by me :-)

Now I want to give those who are curious some info into what I am doing, some observations I have made and some suggestions for anyone wanting to try this.

Tools - you need the right tools. I have never used the right tools before. It has changed things for me.

Tool number 1 - you need some trading software. I use Bet Trader and I am happy with it. Its fast enough, the ladder is a nice visual and I have a good feel for it now. I would suggest anyone trying these forms of software, read ALL the instructions and look for videos on youtube on how to use it.

Tool number 2 - you need a tool that shows you all the fixed prices for all major bookies/tabs at a glance. I was recently introduced to dynamic odds and it is brilliant for what I want. Make sure you set your prices tool up so price changes are easy to discern - like colour coded.

Tool number 3 - if you can afford it, use two laptops or computers or two screens. It is a lot easier if some of the information is on one screen and the rest on another. It just saves you those crucial milliseconds.

Tool number 4 - READ as much as you can on the subject. If you want to trade, look at youtube vids on trading and scalping. Even though a lot of the info is repeated, you can't read too much on other peoples experiences.

Technique - there are many different ways of trading. Some people engage in one tick trading, others in two tick or more, its up to you. I would strongly recommend you use the tick offset tool in your software set to the ticks you want, with hedging. I believe it takes a profit for me faster than I could, at times. It also allows you to fire in many bets at once if need be and I couldn't hedge them as fast as the software.
I chose one tick betting as I wanted to minimise risk.

Entry price - the crucial part of trading is the entry price. Set it wrong and you watch your money go away. During my week of watching most races on BF and looking at its interaction with the fixed prices with bookies there are a number of entry price techniques that are obvious.
For example... there have been a number of races I have looked at where a few minutes out the BF price suddenly heads north and leaves the fixed price on all books far behind. Today I saw a race where it did this. The price with all books was around $3.50 but BF suddenly took off and went up to $5.00. It stayed in that range until a few seconds before the jump and then it plunged down to meet the true price. This occurs in quite a few races.
Similarly, I have noticed it is not uncommon for the BF price to go down under the highest fixed price on books, thereby creating a strong arbing opportunity. It surprises me that these price variations occur when so many people use bots these days.

If you set up your tool for looking at fixed bookie prices and compare these to the BF range of prices in front of you, you should be able to select a reasonable entry point. I have found that the weight of money indicator in the Bet trader software does not correlate to the direction of the next traded bets. The strongest correlation is between the top fixed prices and BF.

When things go wrong.
Do things go wrong? Sure. Don't panic. I don't use a stop loss option, but I do kill a bet sometimes to limit the damage. Even though I believe I understand what is going on price wise, BF does sometimes just take off and go the wrong way against all logic. Usually it comes back to earth but I have been left with a few bets on the wrong side.
What can you do? You can take a loss, and limit it to a dollar or two before the race starts.
Or, if you know a lot about the race and the style of racing, and you feel confident, let the race go live in play and set your price so you can get out as soon as possible.
I try not to go live in play. It is one of my rules to avoid this if possible.

Here are my rules...
1 - stop trading with one minute to go. Sometimes you get caught, but I won't start a new bet in that last minute.
2 - don't go in play. Again, sometimes you get stuck with it, but try to cash out before it happens.
3 - if the horse is paying less than $2 I back it. If the horse is paying more than $2 I lay it. Why? Sometimes you will get stuck with a bet not matched. Statistically a horse below $2 is going to win more often than it loses. (there is a boundary between $1.80 and $2.00 where I may not obey this rule religiously)
4 - have a break regularly. Every ten races I get up and have a walk around, do something else for ten minutes or so. It doesn't matter if you miss a few races.
5 - have a goal but don't worship it - let it guide your actions.

My final rule - be realistic. If you are betting $5 per bet, then a reasonable profit from the race would be somewhere in the 15 -30 cents range. Its not much, but if you win more bets than you lose, your bank will grow, your bet sizes will grow and you will win more.

It is really a game of patience and a slow, accumulating grind through which you will learn every day.

I hope that helps someone.
I will report back in a few weeks to see if I have fallen off the rails :-)
Reply With Quote
  #2  
Old 30th March 2017, 05:50 PM
Thenewguy Thenewguy is offline
Member
 
Join Date: Jul 2014
Posts: 22
Default

Thanks ET, I found that very interesting and helpful. I've tried trading without purchasing proper software and did no good. I found most of the info available relates to UK markets which are active a lot longer than ours.

Using your info I might just give it a go. Its great to get some good local info on how it could work.
Reply With Quote
  #3  
Old 30th March 2017, 06:36 PM
Every Topic Every Topic is offline
Member
 
Join Date: Jan 1970
Location: Adelaide
Posts: 146
Default

I forgot to mention liquidity which is something many people talk about.

I bet on both thoroughbred and harness racing in Australia. Many harness races have all the money on the first two horses. That's fine for me as I am only betting on the first two faves.
Sometimes I come across a race from a smaller venue that has only a few hundred dollars bet on it with a minute to go. I leave those races alone.
If there is $10,000 on the race at the time I am looking, that usually is enough to let me have a bet if I stick to the fave.
Reply With Quote
  #4  
Old 31st March 2017, 09:01 AM
Mark Mark is offline
Member
 
Join Date: Jan 1970
Location: Qld
Posts: 1,408
Thumbs up

Quote:
Originally Posted by Every Topic
My final rule - be realistic. If you are betting $5 per bet, then a reasonable profit from the race would be somewhere in the 15 -30 cents range. Its not much, but if you win more bets than you lose, your bank will grow, your bet sizes will grow and you will win more.

It is really a game of patience and a slow, accumulating grind through which you will learn every day.



Some excellent advice right there.
Unfortunately most people dive straight in, lose, and then give up.
Reply With Quote
  #5  
Old 31st March 2017, 08:08 PM
UselessBettor UselessBettor is offline
Member
 
Join Date: Sep 2011
Posts: 1,522
Default

Are you trading Aus or UK Markets ?

Unfortunately you will be warned off Aus markets eventually due to the turnover tax.

https://www.betfair.com.au/hub/gett...urnover-charge/

Traders eventually not liked on these markets.

So lets say you make 1 tick on a $2.20 shot. So it goes up to $2.22. This means you make less than 1% profit. The turnover charge is 1.2%. You are now losing.

Keep it in mind but you can just exclude the states which are an issue.
Reply With Quote
  #6  
Old 1st April 2017, 08:30 AM
Every Topic Every Topic is offline
Member
 
Join Date: Jan 1970
Location: Adelaide
Posts: 146
Default

Thanks UB.
I am betting Aus markets only.

According to BF this is the current rule...

This charge(turnover charge) will only apply to customers who during a week meet all three of the below criteria:

have matched back bets on 1000 or more markets which Betfair is subject to a turnover fee from a racing body (‘turnover charge markets’);
have matched back bets with an aggregate value of $2000 or greater on turnover charge markets; and
the total commission generated by the customer on turnover charge markets is less than 1.5% of the aggregate value of matched back bets placed by the customer on those markets.

I am betting on up to 30 races/ markets per day. If I do this 7 days a week then I am betting in 210 markets per week.

It also states that the turnover charge only applies to racing in ACT, WA and NSW.

Unless I have this all wrong, it doesnt appear to me that I could be placing bets into 1000 or more markets in a week using my system.
(of course their web page may not be up to date)

ET
Reply With Quote
  #7  
Old 1st April 2017, 05:09 PM
UselessBettor UselessBettor is offline
Member
 
Join Date: Sep 2011
Posts: 1,522
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by Every Topic
Thanks UB.
I am betting Aus markets only.

According to BF this is the current rule...

This charge(turnover charge) will only apply to customers who during a week meet all three of the below criteria:

have matched back bets on 1000 or more markets which Betfair is subject to a turnover fee from a racing body (‘turnover charge markets’);
have matched back bets with an aggregate value of $2000 or greater on turnover charge markets; and
the total commission generated by the customer on turnover charge markets is less than 1.5% of the aggregate value of matched back bets placed by the customer on those markets.

I am betting on up to 30 races/ markets per day. If I do this 7 days a week then I am betting in 210 markets per week.

It also states that the turnover charge only applies to racing in ACT, WA and NSW.

Unless I have this all wrong, it doesnt appear to me that I could be placing bets into 1000 or more markets in a week using my system.
(of course their web page may not be up to date)

ET


Yes it has changed since it was first introduced. It is impossible now to get charges the turnover charge if they do it by a week. Between WA, NSW and ACT there wouldn't be 1000 markets across the codes to bet against.

You should be fine.
Reply With Quote
  #8  
Old 7th April 2017, 03:39 PM
evajb001 evajb001 is offline
Member
 
Join Date: Oct 2009
Posts: 463
Default

Rather than starting my own thread I thought I might just post this here (hope you don't mind ET).

What bots are available or best suited to applying the following type of scenario:

Manually select a horse to lay x seconds before the jump and back in running if once x% profit is made? (or something that can also do the reverse of this). My thinking is that there are opportunities to make trading profit in an automated fashion on some selections however I'm not sure which bot/tool allows you to do it easiest/best. Most bots I'm aware of only let you do what i've described on the x favorite, not on manual selections.
Reply With Quote
Reply


Thread Tools Search this Thread
Search this Thread:

Advanced Search
Display Modes

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

vB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is On
Forum Jump



All times are GMT +10. The time now is 08:08 PM.


Powered by: vBulletin Version 3.0.3
Copyright ©2000 - 2024, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
©2008 OZmium Pty. Ltd. All rights reserved . ACN 091184655