Derek27 wrote: ↑Wed Oct 11, 2017 2:57 pm
Kafkaesque wrote: ↑Wed Oct 11, 2017 2:19 pm
As far as I know, there's been several studies showing that the Pinnacle closing prices are extremely close to a fair price, so I'd say, you're off on that one. Call it wisdom of the crowd (with sharpies being a more significant part of said crowd) or whatever, but there does seem to be a fair price. Otherwise Pinnacle's business model wouldn't work imo.
Kafkaesque, I think you may be confusing fair price as in close to 100% overround and fair price as in true chance of winning. In any case, I never said there wasn't a fair price, I said it's not relevant to where a gambler enters the market: if he wants to bet at 2.5 he will bet at 2.5 regardless of what a fair price is.
It's mathematically not possible to calculate the true chance of a horse. You can prove that on average for a collection of runners that they are fair prices, but if the overround is close to 100%, you know this anyway.
I'm not confusing those two, no. The reason Pinnacle are confident in offering so close to 100% overround is precisely that - nearly - all the information is in, and the sharps have collectively moved the prices to very close to mathematically correct chance of each outcome.
Key is that I say matches. It may be that it doesn't apply to horses, and the studies were done in terms of football, tennis, American sports etc. I've never been into horse racing, so I'll openly admit to possibly being wrong on that count, as I cannot recall if the studies covered horses.
Your point on a gambler entering at 2.5 nomatter what is interesting. I assumed, and have read the rest of the thread as, a gambler being someone betting seriously, looking for edges. If you're talking recreational gamblers taking any old price vs. traders it's a different kettle of fish altogether, and the differences are so vast, it's not even worth discussing imho.