spreadbetting wrote:
If the markets were truely efficient we'd have straight line graphs between those points
Surely an efficient IP market is one where the prices at any given moment reflect the actual odds of an outcome occuring. (or have I totally misunderstood the word 'efficient', happy to be corrected). It could never be a straight line unless every horse ran at one pace like a machine.
There are far more than 2 points and each are joined by a step, theres' one for each moment observed and assessed by the hive mind, and not just the one at post time and one at the end of the race.
I see it as the reason why, over the entire duration of the average event, if you look for how many contenders get below price n.nn it's almost always exactly n.nn.
I don't think I'm disagreeing with anyone, just seeing the market in the moment(s), rather than as something in transition from a known state (the 'off') to an unknown state (the finish). I get the feeling though that I'm completely missing a vital point somewhere, unless it's to do with deviation from a line.... but it has an unknown end point ??
Euler wrote:if you cut it by a number of metrics you can find a number of oddities
I will say Mr Euler, that you rarely write a sentance that doesn't require a whole coffee pot's worth of pondering. It's like talking to Confucius
I 'get' why your answers are like that (no fixed way to do things/trade secrets/to give us a net instead of a fish etc), that's all fine and I do like a puzzle but; I am left wondering how to measure the market in new ways in order to reveal the bias and how it occurs. I'm missing a clue that will get me off and running, but I'm not expecting one.
That's all far to much to read, but the main question I have for my homework is 'how can I spot an inefficiency if I don't know where the market is going?'...it's time to put the coffee on.