decomez6, after the race is run the winner has a probability of 1 and the probability of all other runners is 0! Now that would be a fallacy!

I agree with the other items in your long list and would add "weather" and "is the horse up for it"!

decomez6, after the race is run the winner has a probability of 1 and the probability of all other runners is 0! Now that would be a fallacy!
firlandsfarm wrote: ↑Thu Dec 30, 2021 3:48 pmdecomez6, after the race is run the winner has a probability of 1 and the probability of all other runners is 0! Now that would be a fallacy!
I agree with the other items in your long list and would add "weather" and "is the horse up for it"!![]()
now add the new kid on the block and all the new data ! TPD ratings ...thats the real fox magicwearthefoxhat wrote: ↑Thu Dec 30, 2021 3:04 pmYeah, I'd say that sums it up.napshnap wrote: ↑Thu Dec 30, 2021 1:46 pmReally? What's so hard to gather data, then "streamline what you feel has a greater preponderance and weight it accordingly." (like wearthefoxhat suggests) then sum weights for each runner and finally calc odds from it?firlandsfarm wrote: ↑Thu Dec 30, 2021 12:00 pmOne aspect of seeking the holy grail of true odds (probability) hasn't been discussed and I don't have the solution, I'm just laying it on the table. Having gathered all the information together either as exclusive facts or bundled into 'ratings' you then have to convert that information into probabilities (odds). I have been searching for years to find the formula for that final step. I don't think there is one! So it all comes down to the interpretation of the data, not the data itself. You can piece together the best, most informative, most relevant set of data and screw it up at the last step!
Obviously the trickiest and most time consuming part of that "not so hard process" is the 2nd part, but the last one is a simple math.
I'm not saying that this will be "true odds" but at least it will be your odds, your starting point for experimentation!
Not saying the following is the answer, but there are some interesting aspects to it that can be converted to excel.
https://www.informracing.com/betting-tissue-tool-1/
I struggle with understanding Supply and Demand in a Sports market, take this graph: I can see "Demand" basically equates to "Backers" and "Supply" to "Layers", as at a high Demand(would like to Back) price there is very little Supply(would like to Lay), and similarly at a high Supply(would like to lay) price there is very little Demand(would like to Back). So naturally the price sits where the "would like to Back" == "would like to Lay". This gives you no idea on where the price might "move" to, but if you can measure for example when Demand(would like to Back) is greater than Supply(would like to Lay), then you know at least briefly the market will balance by moving lower in price.ShaunWhite wrote: ↑Thu Dec 30, 2021 1:43 pmNot much difference granted but a difference. Option alone only works as a constraint where the hive all have the same stake/effect. It would only take 1 rogue option with deep pockets to affect supply and demand which is what actually moves prices.firlandsfarm wrote: ↑Thu Dec 30, 2021 11:52 amThere's not much difference between opinion and supply and demand ... supply and demand is the application of opinion.![]()
Besides, supply and demand is easier to use in an equation than 'opinion'![]()
My understanding of it is that the price always moves to the point that nobody is interested. Layers mean it's (perceived to be) priced too low, backers mean it's (perceived to be) priced too high. When there's no interest then it will often drift just because of the book %, the same as it does when there's a lot of interest in the fav. The demand and supply is the appetite for risk, based on the perceived value. If the activity indicates opinion then less activity is more likely to find value, so if you're involved when everybody else is, it's probably too late to find any value (but a good time to be scalping).goat68 wrote: ↑Thu Dec 30, 2021 4:02 pmI struggle with understanding Supply and Demand in a Sports market, take this graph:ShaunWhite wrote: ↑Thu Dec 30, 2021 1:43 pmNot much difference granted but a difference. Option alone only works as a constraint where the hive all have the same stake/effect. It would only take 1 rogue option with deep pockets to affect supply and demand which is what actually moves prices.firlandsfarm wrote: ↑Thu Dec 30, 2021 11:52 am
There's not much difference between opinion and supply and demand ... supply and demand is the application of opinion.![]()
Besides, supply and demand is easier to use in an equation than 'opinion'![]()
Screenshot 2021-12-30 at 15.52.46.png
I can see "Demand" basically equates to "Backers" and "Supply" to "Layers", as at a high Demand(would like to Back) price there is very little Supply(would like to Lay), and similarly at a high Supply(would like to lay) price there is very little Demand(would like to Back). So naturally the price sits where the "would like to Back" == "would like to Lay". This gives you no idea on where the price might "move" to, but if you can measure for example when Demand(would like to Back) is greater than Supply(would like to Lay), then you know at least briefly the market will balance by moving lower in price.
I must have spent 6months+ earlier in then year trying to create a bot to make something from pure technicals for this but failed...
Hence, i've now moved to modelling opinion, and market reaction.
although just thinking about that that's not right, as someone "demanding" to Back at 11.5 is reliant on the "supply" of someone wanting to Lay at 11.5
So naturally the price sits where the "would like to Back" == "would like to Lay". This gives you no idea on where the price might "move" to, but if you can measure for example when Demand(would like to Back) is greater than Supply(would like to Lay), then you know at least briefly the market will balance by moving lower in price.
I must have spent 6months+ earlier in then year trying to create a bot to make something from pure technicals for this but failed...
Hence, i've now moved to modelling opinion, and market reaction.
You're over complicating it, or rather the sports market terminology is over complicating it.
right, so I can't see how that alone helps with trading, you've still have to make your own assessment of opinion, be it form, order flow, .....?ShaunWhite wrote: ↑Thu Dec 30, 2021 4:36 pmYou're over complicating it, or rather the sports market terminology is over complicating it.
Back= Sell.
Lay = Buy.
Supply = Offers.
Demand = Takers.
And as an aside the commodity being traded is a futures contract on an asset (horse) that will be priced at 1 or 0 at the time the contract expires (market closes).
That's all there is to it. Could be a horse or it could be pork bellies.