wearthefoxhat wrote: ↑Sun Apr 05, 2026 8:16 am
Can bankroll management and Martingale staking be spoken about in the same sentence?....maybe.
We still have some Martingale-ish workings, on selected markets/mean win rates, with limits on total exposure to cut off after losses exceed X. Initially when I was even greener than I am now, the idea (and similar 'staking plans') seemed to me like some sort of holy grail but I've learnt lessons since then, both from here and hard experience. Lately I'm trying to move us away from that approach where if we can just discover the magic multiplier, the profits will roll in.
Not given up the idea entirely I must confess, but it's no longer the focus of development.
The idea of this thread is to help me justify keeping moving away from using anything that increases stakes as a consequence of previous performance though.
I guess it needs to be similar to bankroll management playing poker, where you play on tables where the big blind (initial stake per hand) is no more than a specific tiny percentage of your bankroll. When you lose enough for your bankroll to not 'qualify for' that table any more, you move to a lower stakes table, where the play is less challenging, to lick your wounds and build back up; and can move up to a more expensive table with tougher opponents if, and only if you increase your bankroll enough to justify it.
In theory, as well as matching the risk to the depth of your pockets and stopping you going broke in a hurry; it auto-corrects the opponents you'll be up against to your current skill level.
That is, unless you have more money than sense and start as a complete beginner with a 10 grand bankroll anyway.