??? charity-driven prediction markets OR social issue prediction markets ???

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BOTH.

But, contrary to what Lucy Berholtz thinks, the former will go further than the latter &#8212-in my view.

My thoughts about the Financial Times article on Bet2Give:

  1. I have said from day one that it&#8217-s a great idea.
  2. This is a &#8220-unique&#8221- concept&#8230- until InTrade-TradeSports, Betdaq and BetFair-TradeSports decide to create a charity wallet for their traders. Complex, sure, but that might come, one day.
  3. I have the highest esteem for Lucy Berholtz, generally, but I&#8217-m with Emile Servan-Schreiber on the idea that Bet2Give is not a simple marketing trick. All the money but a small percentage goes to the traders&#8217- selected foundations. If all US betting were organized that way, that would mean a huge windfall for US foundations.
  4. Tyler Cowen makes sense.
  5. As for LongBets, it&#8217-s a failed experiment in my judgment. Too many one-sided &#8220-predictions&#8221- for only a fistful of agreed &#8220-bets&#8221-.

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Managed Futures is the one category that consistently benefits from volatility AND has positive expectancy, unlike short-sellers.

No GravatarInsteresting comment from Jason Ruspini.

Jason, the high-end event derivative traders at BetFair (and probably at TradeSports and Betdaq) do benefit from volatility &#8212-they would trade thousands of times on one prediction market, back and forth, taking advantage of small price moves. Any related thought about that, with respect to your comment at Potfolio?

Previous blog posts by Chris F. Masse:

  • “Is Clinton’s Pennsylvania Lead Really 20 Points?”
  • The Most Surprising Piece Of News I’ve Heard Today
  • My first prediction market plugin for WordPress
  • Self-Serving Prediction Market Of The Day — Unlawful Internet Gambling Enforcement Act of 2006
  • Prediction markets tend to be so illiquid, though, that mere activity looks like volatility.

BetFair Digital Odds = BetFair Probabilities

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Odds that Hillary Clinton gets the 2008 Democratic nomination = 1.56 (digital odds taken at 9:15 AM EST)

To get the implied probability expressed in percentage:

  • Take the number &#8220-1&#8243–
  • Divided it by the digital odds (here &#8220-1.56&#8243-)-
  • Then multiply the result by 100-
  • 64.1% = ( 1 / 1.56 ) x 100

BetFair-generated implied probability is not far away from InTrade&#8217-s 62.1%.

Monty Python and the Holy Grail

Psstt&#8230- This present post was prompted by Niall O&#8217-Connor, who puts all his faith in the BetFair instant &#8220-over-round&#8221- &#8212-which indeed doesn&#8217-t add up to the virgin and perfect &#8220-100%&#8221- that Niall is seeking (like the Monthy Python were seeking the Holy Grail). Good luck for your quest, Niall.

Joke

The French Taunter:

Your mother was a hamster and your father smelt of elderberries!

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External Resource: Interpreting Prediction Market Prices as Probabilities – (PDF file) – by Justin Wolfers and Eric Zitzewitz

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NEXT: Implied Probability of an Outcome &#8211-BetFair Edition

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We, the undersigned, petition J.K. Rowling to write more new adventures for Harry Potter and his friends no matter what happens at the end of Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows.

No GravatarSave Harry Potter

There is a precedent for resurrecting a literary hero &#8212-Sir Arthur Conan Doyle&#8217-s Sherlock Holmes. In The Adventure of the Final Problem (1893), Sherlock Holmes falls to his death during a violent struggle with his nemesis, Professor Moriarty. A public clamor then persuaded Conan Doyle to resurrect him.

Holmes archenemy and popularly-supposed nemesis was Professor James Moriarty (&#8221-the Napoleon of Crime&#8221-), who fell, struggling with Holmes, over the Reichenbach Falls. Conan Doyle intended The Final Problem, the story in which this occurred, to be the last that he wrote about Holmes. However, the outpouring of protests and letters demanding that he bring back his creation convinced him to continue. He did so with The Hound of The Baskervilles, although this was a case Holmes was involved in before his supposed death. His return in The Adventure of the Empty House had Conan Doyle explaining that only Moriarty fell over the cliff, but Holmes had allowed the world to believe that he too had perished while he dodged the retribution of Moriarty&#8217-s underlings.

Harry Potter will survive The Deathly Hallows.


© NewsFutures

Previous: Sherlock Holmes and Professor Moriarty at Reichenbach Falls

Sherlock Holmes (the good) and Professor Moriarty (the villain) fell together in the Reichenbach Falls. Sherlock Holmes is thought to be dead. Many years later, he re-appears, to the astonishment of his Doctor Watson.

–&gt- Let’s say there were a prediction market on the Sherlock Holmes survival, which was bound to expire just after the Reichenbach Falls episode. It would have expired on the “no” side —although the ultimate truth was going to be that Sherlock Holmes was still alive.

UPDATE: The contract of the Harry Potter event derivative at NewsFutures may be flawed.

NEXT: THE FATE OF HARRY POTTER IN J.K. ROWLING’S 7TH BOOK, THE DEATHLY HALLOWS: prediction market vs. bookmaker + NEWSFUTURES JUDGES THAT HARRY POTTER IS STILL ALIVE AT THE END OF J.K. ROWLING’S 7TH NOVEL, THE DEATHLY HALLOWS.

Read the previous blog posts by Chris F. Masse:

  • Many people twitter on prediction markets.
  • Folks, when you have something important to say, write up a full post, not a comment.
  • Prediction Market Journalism
  • TechCrunch is 221 times bigger than Midas Oracle.
  • Earthquake measuring 9.0 or more on Richter scale to occur anywhere on or before December 31, 2008
  • Why Midas Oracle (and not TV news shows or print newspapers) will dominate the future.
  • The Six Degrees Of Separation

Manipulation can affect prices

For the last two weeks a very interesting manipulation has been going on in Intrade’s “Hillary Clinton for President” contract.

1. The contract had been trading between 23 and 26 all year. It has consistently been about half the price of the “Hillary to get nominated” contract price. This ratio implies that, conditional on nominating Hillary, the Democrats have a 50 percent chance of winning the Presidency.

2. Comparing this with the unconditional probability of a Democratic victory (about 56 percent throughout 2007) suggests that Hillary is a slightly weaker general election candidate than the alternatives (Obama, mainly). [Note I say “suggests” because the comparison of conditional probabilities implies a correlation, but not necessarily that a Clinton nomination would cause a better outcome for the GOP. For more see the fifth question in this paper].

3. Around May 12, someone started buying “Hillary for President” pretty heavily, driving the price up to 40. This price is clearly ridiculous for two reasons:

3a. You could sell the President contracts of Hillary, Obama, Gore, and Edwards for a combined 69 (40+17+8+4) and buy the “Democrat to win” contract for 56.

3b. Since there was no movement in the nomination contract, the conditional probability of Hillary was now a ridiculous 40/52 = 77%, while the conditional probability of “Not Hillary” was 16/48 = 33%.

4. Unlike past manipulation attempts, this manipulator isn’t just dumping a ton of money in to move the price once. He (or she) is moving the price, and then providing support to keep the price high. Note that the price stayed at 40 for about a week (on higher than normal volume).

5. I mentioned the manipulation at the end of my talk at the Palm Desert prediction markets conference, figuring that there was no surer way to get a $100 bill picked up than to tell that crowd about it. Someone emailed Greg Mankiw and he blogged about it the next day. (Justin and I also just tipped off Tyler Cowen). Since then there has been some downward price pressure, but the manipulator isn’t throwing in the towel. He/she keeps replenishing the bid side of the order book, albeit giving ground in the process.

6. By my calculation, the manipulator has spent about $10k to push the Hillary contract up around 12 pts on average for 2 weeks, buying about 8,500 contracts in the process. [I’m assuming 26 is fair value and just summing up volume*(price – 26)].

7. So what do we learn from this?

7a. Manipulation doesn’t have to be as ham fisted as the 2004 Bush reelection contract manipulation.

7b. The manipulators are getting smarter. This manipulator was smarter in one sense by providing price support after the fact. But of course, he/she shouldn’t have pushed the price up to such an obviously ridiculous level (and should have bought and sold other contracts to keep the pricing relationships consistent). The same mistake probably won’t be made next time.

7c. By prediction markets standards, manipulation is expensive. But by political spending standards, manipulation could be reasonably cheap. That said, I can find only one media mention of the inflated Hillary price. $10k for one blog mention probably isn’t great value for money, but the Intrade prices get cited a lot these days, so the manipulator may just have been unlucky.

7d. None of this disputes Hanson and Oprea’s point that, if anticipated, manipulation could increase average prediction market accuracy. In their model, traders all have rational expectations about how much manipulation to expect. In the real world, they may need some help (hence this post).

7e. Although the Hillary price is down to 34.5 (bid-ask midpoint at time of writing), there are about 500 contracts bid above 33, so there is still plenty of free money there if you want it.

Hillary Clinton Chart 2007 Manipulations EZ

The pictures of the BetFair Bet-o-Mobile

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BetFair Bet-o-Mobile: a vehicle with 19 TV screens, wireless Internet access and live satellite TV feeds

BetFair Bet-o-Mobile

AV Interactive:

[Betting exchange (real-money prediction exchange, event derivative exchange)] Betfair has commissioned a mobile display unit that will tour UK sporting events. The vehicle, which uses 19 TV screens (including a 50in plasma) has wireless internet access and live Sky feeds. It was built for Betfair by Event Marketing Solutions (EMS) which delivered the vehicle in 12 weeks, ready for a first appearance at the Grand National. The unit is designed to not just let punters watch events, but to help introduce them to Betfair&#8217-s betting exchange concept.

Here are pictures of the BetFair Bet-o-Mobile (with members of the BetFair team at Aintree). Pictures courtesy of the P.R. department at BetFair. (Thanks for sharing. :) )

BetFair Bet-o-Mobile 5

BetFair Bet-o-Mobile 9

BetFair Bet-o-Mobile 1

BetFair Bet-o-Mobile 3

BetFair Bet-o-Mobile 4

BetFair Bet-o-Mobile 6

BetFair Bet-o-Mobile 7

BetFair Bet-o-Mobile 2

BetFair Bet-o-Mobile 8

And we end the series of pictures with la blonde de service. :)

SMOKIN&#8217-&#8230-!!!&#8230- as yelled by &#8220-The Mask&#8221- (played by Jim Carrey), in that movie.

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More On BetFair:

BetFair’s explainer on betting exchanges – at Midas Oracle &amp- BetFair – 2006-12-23

Trading bets at BetFair – Betting exchange explainer – Backing vs. Laying – at Midas Oracle &amp- BetFair – 2007-01-23

BetFair multiples – at Midas Oracle &amp- BetFair – 2007-01-20

Prediction markets timeline – by Chris Masse (at Midas Oracle) –

BetFair vs. TradeSports-InTrade – by Chris Masse (at Midas Oracle) – 2007-04-24

X Groups &amp- X Universes – by Chris Masse (at Midas Oracle) – 2007-02-13

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InTrade-TradeSports – Next Major Sportsbook to Withdraw from US

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Another contract expiry debate.

InTrade-TradeSports – Next Major Sportsbook to Withdraw from US:

These contracts will be expired based on who of the listed Sportsbooks will be next to stop accepting US customers (before 11:59:59pm ET on December 31st 2007. )
A contract will expire at 100 if the named Sportsbook is the first to publicly announce it will stop accepting US customers. If the named Sportsbook is not the first to announce this the contract will expire at 0. If none of the listed Sportsbooks make this announcement the SB.DEC07.NONE will expire at 100 and all others at 0.
Expiry is based only on the Sportsbooks listed . Any other Sportsbooks announcing their withdrawal from the US market will not affect expiry of the listed contracts.
Any change to the result after the contract has expired will not be taken into account – Exchange Rule1.4.
Due to the nature of this contract please also see Contract Rule 1.9 Unforeseen Circumstances.
The Exchange reserves the right to invoke Contract Rule 1.8 (Time Protection) if deemed appropriate.
Please contact the exchange by emailing [email protected] if you have any questions regarding this contract before you place a trade.
Clarification (added March 3rd, 2007): The announcement by BetCRIS that all US customers must now access their accounts through BookMaker.com is not considered as a refusal to accept US-based customers. BookMaker.com is powered by BetCRIS and so this is considered more a rebranding/renaming issue rather than the introduction of a policy of refusing US-based customers.
Important:
Please contact the Exchange if you have any query or uncertainty (including how it may be settled) about this Contract, the Rule above or the Contract Rules before you trade.

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Price for Next Major Sportsbook to Withdraw from US (**from those listed only**) at intrade.com

BetCris:

Effective immediately, all U.S. customers must now access betting accounts through www.BookMaker.com where you can continue to wager using your same account number and password. All player account details, open wagers, account balances and pending withdrawals have been transferred and will be honored. Powered by BetCRIS, BookMaker.com offers the same quality of service and experience you&#8217-ve come to expect at BetCRIS. Should you have any questions, please contact our Customer Service Department at 1-866-BetCRIS. All non-US customer accounts are unaffected by this change and can continue to access their accounts at BetCRIS.com.

BookMaker:

Following a Legacy of quality in service and renowned bookmaking experience of more than two decades, BookMaker.com is born to aim and serve both professional and recreational players. Always first sportsbook to post lines, the phrase “Where the Line Originates” will continue attracting the world’s sharpest and biggest players.

Powered by BetCRIS International, a recognized sports betting industry Leader since 1985, BookMaker.com provides Safe and Secure sports betting on sporting events, as well as horse racing, online casino games, poker, bingo and mobile betting from any location in the world, 24 hours a day 7 days a week. Thus, whether you are betting from your office computer or calling from the comfort of your home you can rest assured our service will be first class and completely confidential.

NetSol&#8217-s Who Is Database:

BetCris.com – Registrant = Investments Manager, S.A. (Location not specified)

BookMaker.com – Registrant = Investments Manager, S.A. (Costa Rica)

MY OPINION ON THIS CONTRACT:

The InTrade-TradeSports contract makes reference to &#8220-sportsbooks&#8221-, which are identified by their brand name (e.g., &#8220-BetCris&#8221-) and domain name (e.g., &#8220-BetCris.com&#8221-), not to the investing group (a.k.a. holding group), refered here by the trade name &#8220-Investments Manager&#8221-. The BetCris sportsbook has indeed notified US customers that it won&#8217-t take their business anymore. The BetCris contract should then expire at 100.

PostScriptum: The term &#8220-powered by&#8221- means that BetCris&#8217- technology is rented to BookMaker. It does not mean, by itself, that BetCris owns BookMaker (although we see, by other means, that yes, it is the case). In any case, that&#8217-s not the issue. The issue is whether the InTrade-TradeSports contract is about sportsbooks brand names (here, &#8220-BetCris&#8221-) or sportsbooks trade names (here, &#8220-Investments Manager&#8221-). The contract mentioned &#8220-BetCris&#8221-, which is a brand name for the sportsbooks service- the contract did not mention &#8220-Investments Manager&#8221-, which is a trade name for the holding group.

Do you guys/gals agree with me or disagree with me??

BRIAN SHIAUS SIM EXCHANGE FEATURED TODAY IN THE FREAKONOMICS BLOG.

Freakonomics.

Previous: BetFair, Sim Exchange = Vertical Prediction Exchanges, First + The Sim Exchange: Basic Trading vs. Advanced Trading + Since November 9, 2006, the Sim Exchange has attracted over 2,400 registered players. + An invitation to join the simExchange beta

Read the last blog posts by Chris. F. Masse: