Betting Arbitrage
Betting arbitrage, miracle bets, sure bets, sports arbitraging is a particular case of arbitrage arising on betting markets due to bookmakers’ different opinions on either event outcomes or plain errors. By placing one bet per each outcome with different betting companies, the bettor can make a profit. In the bettors' slang an arbitrage is often referred to as an arb; people who use arbitrage are called arbers. A typical arb is around 2 percent, often less; however 4-5 percent are occasionally seen and during some special events they might reach 20 percent. Arbitrage betting involves relatively large sums of money stakes are bigger than in normal betting.
Bookmakers generally disapprove of arbers, and restrict or close the accounts of those who they suspect of engaging in arbitrage betting. Although arbitrage betting has existed since the beginnings of bookmaking, the rise of the Internet, odds-comparison websites and betting exchanges have enabled the practice to be easier to perform. On the other hand, these changes also made it easier for bookmakers to keep their odds in line with the market.
The best way of generating profit, which has been established in Britain via sports arbitrage, consists of 'key men' employing others to place bets on their behalf, so as to avoid detection and increase accessibility to bookmakers. This allows the financiers or key arbers to stay at a computer to keep track of market movement.
While often claimed to be risk-free, this is only true if an arb is successfully completed; in reality, there are several threats to this:
Arbs in online sports markets have a median lifetime of around 15 minutes, after which the difference in odds underpinning them vanishes through betting activity. Without rapid alerting and action, it is possible to fail to make all the legs of the arb before it vanish, thus transforming it from a risk-free arb into a bet. High street bookmakers however, offer their odds days in advance and rarely change them once they have been set. These Arbs can have a lifetime of several hours.
Making errors: In the excitement of the action and due to the high number of bets placed, it is not uncommon to make a mistake like traders on financial markets. For example the appropriate stakes may be incorrectly calculated, or be placed on the wrong legs of the arb, locking in a loss, or there may be inadequate funds in one of the accounts to complete the arb. Those errors might temporarily have an important impact. In the long term, the benefit will depend on the odds. For example one could actually make more money by placing the wrong bet where the outcome happens to be beneficial, though not justified by the arbitrage calculation. However, this stroke of luck being repeated is unlikely, assuming the bookies have calculated the odds so they make a profit.
Bet cancellation: If a bettor places bets so as to make an arbitrage and one bookmaker cancels a bet, the bettor could find himself in a bad position because he is actually betting with all the risks implied. The bettor can repeat the bet that has been cancelled so as minimize the risk, but if he cannot get the same odds he had before he may be forced to take a loss. In some cases the situation arises when there are very high potential payouts by the bookie, perhaps due to an unintentional error made while quoting odds. Many jurisdictions allow bookmakers to cancel bets in the event of such a palpable [obvious] error in the quoted odds This is often loosely defined as an obvious mistake, but whether a palp in fact has been made is often the sole discretion of the bookmaker.
Other problems: Bookmakers who suspect arbing can set very low maximum stake limits, making arbing insufficiently profitable. Capital diffusion is serious; many bookmakers make it very easy to deposit funds and difficult to withdraw them. Making a return involves many bets spread over typically many bookmakers so keeping track is a considerable challenge, and requires excellent record-keeping.
Table Stakes Rules
All casinos and many home games play poker by what are called table stakes rules, which state that each player starts each deal with a certain stake, and plays that deal with that stake. A player may not remove money from the table or add money from his or her pocket during the play of a hand. In essence, table stakes rules creates a maximum and a minimum buy-in amount for cash game poker as well as rules for adding and removing the stake from play. A player also may not take a portion of their money or stake off the table, unless they opt to leave the game and remove their entire stake from play. Players are not allowed to hide or misrepresent the amount of their stake from other players and must truthfully disclose the amount when asked.
Common among inexperienced players is the act of "going south" after winning a big pot, which is to take a portion of your stake out of play, often as an attempt to hedge one's risk after a win. This is also known as "ratholing" or "reducing" and, while totally permissible in most other casino games, is not permitted in poker.
Table stakes are the rule in most cash poker games because it allows players with vastly different bankrolls a reasonable amount of protection when playing with one another. They are usually set in relation to the blinds. For example, in a $1/2 No Limit cash game, the minimum stake is often set at $40 while maximum stake is often set at $200, or 20 and 100 big blinds respectively.
This also requires some special rules to handle the case when a player is faced with a bet that he cannot call with his available stake.
Chips Poker
Poker chips are fabricated with complicated graphics and edge spot patterns intending to make them difficult to counterfeit. The process used to make these poker chips is a trade secret and expensive - typically done on high pressure compression molding machines. The typical material of construction for poker chips is not clay as is sometimes believed, but a ceramic material with clay added for texture and weight. The breakable, clay poker chips of the 1960s and 1970s are no longer manufactured. The clay composition of modern chips varies by manufacturer, and is typically very slight (1-10%).
Casino poker chips are special tokens representing a fixed amount of money. The chips used in American Casinos generally weigh 10 grams each. The chips sold for home use vary much more, depending on manufacturer and construction.
Poker Casino
Acey Deucey
Acting jobs
Acting school
Actor auditions
Actor search
Actors guild
Addiction
Alexis
All Music Guide to the Blues
American Quarter Horse
American Silver Eagle
Amsterdam
Atlanta auditions
Attorney
Audition monologue
Auditions Auditions
Auditions for actors
Auditions tv
Auto Insurance
Bastra
Betting Arbitrage
Betting Pool
Billabong
Blues Brothers
Boston
Bouillotte
Brick and Mortar
Buenos Aires
California Card Rooms
Car Insurance
Card Game
Card Games Rules
Caribbean Stud Poker
Home
Casting calls auditions
Celebrity Branding
Chicago Poker Card Game
Chocolate
Comps
Compulsive Gambling
Contact Casino Players Club
Crime
Dance audition
Dead Mans Hand
Dead Money
Dealing
Detroit
Diamond Investments
Disney Channel Auditions
Drug Information Results
Dui Canada
Duplicate Poker
Financial betting
Gambling
Gambling Disorders
Gambling Disorders Studies
Gambling Problems
Gift Card
Gold Investors
Gold Jewelry
Gold Price
History of Poker
Hong Kong
Indian Poker
Infomercial Format
Internet Casinos
Ivy
Jewelry Case
Jewelry Stores
job of an attorney
Kamma
Kuhn poker
Long Beach Blues Festival
Mahjong
Manning
Metropolitan Manila
motorcycle
Mult-Line Slot Machines
Mumbai
New York State
Newbie Karma
Odds
Online Bingo
Open auditions
Pachinko
Pathological Gambling
Personal Karma
Playing Cards
Point Shaving
Poker Ante
Poker Blinds
Poker Chip
Poker Tournament
Problem Gambling
Progressive Jackpot
Project Manager
Red Dog Poker
Responsible Gambling
Retail Store
Rings
Robbie Williams
Rules for Card Games
Sacramento
Sao Paulo
Sapphires
Shuffling
Slahal
Slot Machine
Slot Machine History
Slot Machine Terminology
Sports Betting
Table Stakes Rules
Teaching
Theatre auditions
Thoroughbred Horse Racing
TV show auditions
Twenty Gambling Questions
Universal Life Insurance
Vacation
Video Slot Machines
Wagering is Gambling
When the Stakes Turn Toxic
Zurich