I didn't say you were betting £20, £20 is your maximum risk, not your stake.nivi7 wrote: ↑Mon Sep 02, 2019 9:05 amthanks for the reply m8,much appreciated
thing is you cant find 40 trades a day
i cant at least,maybe on Saturday and Sunday,but still they re too many
on football at least which i trade,most people do 1 til 6-7 trades per day and aiming for 1 unit profit or more
how can you reach the numbers you said by trading on football with odds around 2.0 with betting 20 gbp?
I does depend on which sport you trade. 6 or 7 football trades a day is still about 200 trades per month.
So,
If you Back £250 @ 2.0 and then and Lay £255.10 @ 1.96. That would be a hedged (green) figure of +£5.10.
If the price had gone to 2.04, the lay bet would be for £245.10 and the hedged figure would be -£4.90.
But of course if the price had gone to 1.7 the lay bet would be for £294.12, and the hedged figure would be +£44.12
All of that might happen in the first 20mins...and then you might want to make a 2nd trade on the same match.
Have you done much trading, or have you been straight betting?
Trading is about looking for market moves, not the results.
Eg. You might have a game where the teams are very even, maybe H 2.8, D 2.8, A 2.8
But you know the Home team always starts games on the attack, so after 10mins the score might be 0-0 but the odds are now H 2.5, D 2.9, A 2.9
You can trade that price movement by backing a Home win at 2.8 and Laying it at 10mins @ 2.5
I don't really trade football so other people might have different ideas, but it's the same general idea in all markets.