Profitable, or fooled by Randomness?

Fooled by randomness?

Yes, I know I’ve nicked this title from the eponymous book by Nassim Taleb, which is worth a read by the way. But especially in this case and in the text I lay out before you, I think it’s highly appropriate.

I just went through 250,000 markets traded on Betfair, most of which I have collected detailed data on, then archived and analysed it. I use data for a lot of things now. But the main reason I first collected data was to get a base measure with which to trade against. In classical experimental terms, a control sample.

This blog post reveals why knowing that is the key to trading profitably.

Are you lucky or skilful?

It’s very easy when you are Betfair trading
that you can be fooled by randomness. The key concept here is to understand if have
an edge, or that you’ve just been lucky.

When trading, any skill that you thought you may have, may turn out just to be random fluctuations within whatever it was you were doing. If you don’t understand that concept have a watch of this video where I explain how I compare data to underlying metrics: –

Regression to the mean

In essence, it’s a bit like a striker in a football team that’s on form. It seems that every shot they have flies into the back of the net. The striker who is not in form has the opposite problem. Every ball they hit seems to be ricocheting off the defenders, off the post, over the bar. It does everything apart from hittin the back of the net.

Therefore, it’s easy to fall into the trap of assuming that somebody possesses or doesn’t possess skill when the real fact it’s just part of the natural variation of whatever it is that you’re doing. Eventually, both sides will regress to the mean.

Regression to the mean happens all over the
place and there is a great example in this article: –

https://www.spectator.co.uk/2011/12/he-knew-he-was-wrong/

Why you should collect data

I’ve gathered data since day dot on
Betfair. I use it model markets, to compare and contrast and to squeeze insight
out of it. But that’s only possible with vast amounts of data and takes time to
achieve.

Back testing using commercially available
data sets are available, but I’ve found them deeply lacking in insight. Like
looking at something in 2D rather than 3D. It helps to use real money and get
real data of your participation in the market. So that’s what I’ve done for the
near on 20 years I’ve been in the market.

But another reason I collect data and I
suggest you should to, is so you can work out what would happen if you had no
skill at all and you just did things at random. That way you can understand
what influence you are having. If you can understand how your decisions are
influencing outcomes, you will know if you profit in the long term, whatever temporary
issues you have.

It’s very easy to go on a good run and
increase the stakes. Only to see your strategy collapse just after you did
that. You need to find something to define that what you are doing is not
simply a positive moment within the market.

It’s a very easy trap to fall into. I’ve done it. You will have done it. Everybody does it at some point. But I’ve learned now, so I’ll always need a base measure within a market to understand if I am truly skilful.

Trading isn’t a 50/50 process

If you are an active trader, then you don’t
need me to tell you that trading isn’t a 50/50 process. It’s not random in the
sense of it being a coin flip as to whether you get it right or not. But if you
are new to trading then you may not be aware of what I’m talking about. Let’s
have an example.

Let’s say you are Betfair trading and have
chosen scalping within a horse racing market in the last five minutes before
the off. If you choose just to do a single one tick scalp, this will exhibit a
high win rate by default. This is because the market will quite likely fill an
order offset by just one tick in this high liquidity period near the off.

Even if the market deviates from the
current price, it’s quite likely to return to or past that price in the other
direction before the start of the race.

Of course, trading is a balance of profits
and losses, so if you have +1 strategy on upside and -20 on the downside then
your win rate needs to be extraordinarily high to be profitable overall.

I did a nice video that explained strikes
rates and probably which you can view below.

The three really important things you need to know

One of the very first things I did when I
started trading way back in the year 2000, was to trade at random. I already
knew that random wasn’t 50/50, the number changed depending on a number of
variables. So I wanted to isolate that as quickly as possible.

This sounds counter-intuitive at first. If you trade at random surely it must be 50/50, but the answer is not in the input, but the output.

If you trade at random you will break even,
but it’s a combination of strike rate, another name for how often you get a
winning trade. This is then combined with your wins and losses combined. Put
these together and you get your trading expectancy.

Random trading will produce varying strike rates depending on exactly what you are doing. You can pretty much make up your own strike rate. If you wanted me to show a string of 10 or 20 positive trades I could just pick a high strike rate strategy. It wouldn’t be profitable in the long term, but it would look impressive.

It’s trap!

This is a trap that most newbie Betfair
traders fall into frequently. People, quite naturally, focus on a strategy that
wins. Whoop, whoop, I’m winning!

But failure is ensured long term if all you
are doing is trading at random, but with a high strike rate. If that rare loss
is substantial, it will wipe out all your gains. This has nothing to do with
being unlucky.

Ultimately though, that is not the key to successful trading, as the video pointed out. Being profitable in the long term is about getting those three key variables correct and in the right proportion.

Why in-play is different from pre-off

If you are trading pre-off, you will find
that, in the long term, winning and losing trades tend to be equally
distributed. But in-play it’s a whole different ball game.

If we just lay a horse at a specific price,
let’s say 5.00, then in an efficient market we will win roughly 80% of the
time. Boom! Well not really, because that is just what you would expect given
the odds. To profit you need to exceed that 80% win rate, plus commission, to
make any money longer term. But this isn’t a trade it’s an outright bet, let’s
turn it into a trade.

Let do some scalping in-play instead. We
are going to lay the favourtie at odds of 5.00 and offset the trade by five
ticks. Lay at 5.00, out at 5.50.

At odds of 5.00 there are plenty of ticks
above the current price. By laying first we are effectively playing a game
whereby our strike rate has to be at least 80%. That is because this horse is
going to lose 80% of the time and our closing trade will be matched. Boom!

Therefore, we can say the win rate of this trade
is at least 80%. But what about the 20% of the time that the horse goes on to
win?

Because we are trading, rather than just
outright value betting. There will be times that the horse wins but doesn’t
make all the running. This means at some point during the race, it’s price will
drift. We are not asking will it win 20% of the time. We are asking how far the
price will move before it eventually wins.

As I’ve modelled the in-play market
extensively, I can tell you this would happen 70% of the time at starting odds
of 5.00. So, there is a 70% chance, 20% of the time that you will still get
your trade matched.

I’m not going to get into complicated maths at this point, but basically this trade would work 95% of the time. It’s almost certain that you would get this trade matched and be able to show an impressive string of results.

To put this in context, you can take that percentage, invert it to decimal odds and you are effectively backing at 1.05 shot. That’s the beauty of a betting exchange, that you can flip and play with your options and represent them in a clearly defined manner.

At 1.05 shot is like backing a football team winning in the last few minutes of a football match. It will work most of the time, but that’s actually not what you are worried about.

Your focus shouldn’t really be on winning

But, of course, there is a catch in everything we have talked about so far. Ok, you win 94% of the time, but you should be more worried about that elusive 6% that won’t get matched comes in.

If you lay with £100 to open your trade,
your liability will be £400 or 4 times your stake. But of course, you have
limited your upside to just £9 by trading in and out. Your liability, if it all
goes wrong, is nearly 45 times your maximum win.

So, inverting that into a strike rate, means you need to win roughly 98% of the time, excluding commission, to break even with that mix of upside and downside. Basically, you need to win pretty much every time to have a chance of profiting in the long term. That’s unrealistic.

How you should approach any trading strategy

Knowing that there is a natural win rate in
a market if you trade it at random, should tell you a lot about what your core
objective is. You need to exceed that rate or else you are just being fooled by
randomness.

Framing your trade around an entry and exit
price and the profit that comes out of that, will tell you what strike rate you
are looking for. Tweaking these numbers in effect creates your target win rate.
All these things are interchangeable.

This makes high probability events much
harder to identify whether you’re using actual skill. You will win for long
periods and now and again be “unlucky”. Low probability events
display the opposing characteristic and events near a central value sort the
wheat from the chaff quite quickly.

The only way that you can definitely
confirm if you are profitable, is to repeat your action over a very long period
of time. That’s logical because over that time period will ensure that if you
exhibited no skill you would eventually run out of money due to frictional
costs.

As I have pointed out many times before
this is why a lot of trading advice is merchandised around high probability
systems. It will frequently win and when you lose it can be just discounted as
bad luck. Something that maybe won’t happen next time around. But the reality
is, the true strength of the system or a process is its longevity.

Therefore, as well as strategies that run
every day, I also have automation that sits alongside my standard trading activities.
The objective is really simple, let’s see what happened if I used no skill.

The simple fact is, that you need to know
roughly what the underlying metric is within the market. Otherwise you have no
chance of exceeding it. Or if you’re really going to get serious and quantify
it, that will tell you exactly what your edge is within the market. 

Therefore, the first thing you should do if
you are presented with any trading strategy, is to understand what the
underlying base rate is. Doing that will tell you if you are just lucky or
whether they actually had some element of skill.

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