morning
I was reading a thread on here about commission percentages and wondered what goals people set themselves (I'd never thought about tracking this metric before)
Personally I want to set some goals around pre race trading and I'm thinking about:
* How many races can I trade without a losing race (what's your record?!)
* how many days without a losing day ( anyone done a month or even a year yet!!)
* Highest green fig on a single race
Partially to see how my trading is going and partially for fun.
Can anyone add to the list above?
Thanks
Peter
PS Last year I set some targets on my auto trading which included a 1.01 lay and a 1000 to 1 back and got both which was immensely pleasing when I got them!
Goals
Hi Peter
I'm not sure aiming to go x number of races without a loss is a good idea, as loss aversion and profitable trading don't always go hand in hand!
Why not aim to double your bank over a particular timeframe?
Jeff
I'm not sure aiming to go x number of races without a loss is a good idea, as loss aversion and profitable trading don't always go hand in hand!

Why not aim to double your bank over a particular timeframe?
Jeff
PeterLe wrote:morning
I was reading a thread on here about commission percentages and wondered what goals people set themselves (I'd never thought about tracking this metric before)
Personally I want to set some goals around pre race trading and I'm thinking about:
* How many races can I trade without a losing race (what's your record?!)
* how many days without a losing day ( anyone done a month or even a year yet!!)
* Highest green fig on a single race
Partially to see how my trading is going and partially for fun.
Can anyone add to the list above?
Thanks
Peter
PS Last year I set some targets on my auto trading which included a 1.01 lay and a 1000 to 1 back and got both which was immensely pleasing when I got them!
Thanks Jeff,
I'm not sure that would be a good metric for me? (I'll have a bigish bank to start with as I will need that behind me if and when I need to lay at highish odds). Plus it also depends on how much you 'consider' to be in your bank..you may have £10K sitting in there but only ever use a say £2K of it? For eg see an extract from a post below by BA.
I think Return on Turnover would be a good metric (Think an average is circa 0.15 % from memory ie what Adam achieved (Will check it out later- got to get the bloody leafs off the lawn before the racing starts!!)...and average per race( I know there are circa 800 races in the summer months,realistically I could trade say 400 - 500, so that would given me an idea how much I could make pre race trading)..
This is the extract I mentioned above;-
I went to Betfair visited the 'my account' area and downloaded my 'bet history' for yesterday. I totalled up all the stakes in the J column on the spreadsheet. This totalled £236,000. I made £652 net yesterday so my return on turnover before commission was just short of 0.30%.
However, you could also look at it a different way. My net exposure in the market never breached £2000 yesterday so I could have traded with only £2k in my account and still returned £652 which would have been a 32% return on my bank. I prefer the former measure though.
I'm not sure that would be a good metric for me? (I'll have a bigish bank to start with as I will need that behind me if and when I need to lay at highish odds). Plus it also depends on how much you 'consider' to be in your bank..you may have £10K sitting in there but only ever use a say £2K of it? For eg see an extract from a post below by BA.
I think Return on Turnover would be a good metric (Think an average is circa 0.15 % from memory ie what Adam achieved (Will check it out later- got to get the bloody leafs off the lawn before the racing starts!!)...and average per race( I know there are circa 800 races in the summer months,realistically I could trade say 400 - 500, so that would given me an idea how much I could make pre race trading)..
This is the extract I mentioned above;-
I went to Betfair visited the 'my account' area and downloaded my 'bet history' for yesterday. I totalled up all the stakes in the J column on the spreadsheet. This totalled £236,000. I made £652 net yesterday so my return on turnover before commission was just short of 0.30%.
However, you could also look at it a different way. My net exposure in the market never breached £2000 yesterday so I could have traded with only £2k in my account and still returned £652 which would have been a 32% return on my bank. I prefer the former measure though.
Last edited by PeterLe on Sun Nov 21, 2010 3:00 pm, edited 1 time in total.
Hi Peter
I'm not sure return on turnover is a good metric, as it doesn't necessarily have anything to do with how successful you are.
I once spoke to an extremely successful trader who has a higher return on investment than Adam. The trader theorized that, whereas he often waits for the market to come back to him when it goes against him, Adam was scratching a lot of his trades. Therefore, the difference in ROI didn't necessarily mean that Adam was doing anything wrong. It was just that Adam had a different style to the other trader.
Do you have Bet Angel set up so that you make x pounds per point? If so, why not aim to increase the number of points you get per day?
Jeff
I'm not sure return on turnover is a good metric, as it doesn't necessarily have anything to do with how successful you are.
I once spoke to an extremely successful trader who has a higher return on investment than Adam. The trader theorized that, whereas he often waits for the market to come back to him when it goes against him, Adam was scratching a lot of his trades. Therefore, the difference in ROI didn't necessarily mean that Adam was doing anything wrong. It was just that Adam had a different style to the other trader.
Do you have Bet Angel set up so that you make x pounds per point? If so, why not aim to increase the number of points you get per day?
Jeff
PeterLe wrote:
I think Return on Turnover would be a good metric (Think an average is circa 0.017 % from memory ie waht Adam achieved (Will check it out later- got to get the bloody leafs off the lawn before the racing starts!!).
I think return on turnover is a good metric because it will tell you how effective you are trading. I keep an eye on this figure as it gives me a good idea of what is going on at a core level. It varies a fair bit depending on what markets are around but over all it will give you a steer on whether things are getting better or worse at a core level. A few years ago it slipped yoy so I tweaked a few things and have been climbing since.
PeterEuler wrote:I think return on turnover is a good metric because it will tell you how effective you are trading. I keep an eye on this figure as it gives me a good idea of what is going on at a core level. It varies a fair bit depending on what markets are around but over all it will give you a steer on whether things are getting better or worse at a core level. A few years ago it slipped yoy so I tweaked a few things and have been climbing since.
Ive just been searching on the forum for return on turnover figures..this is an old post...
can you remind me what a good trader should aim for?
I seem to recall that 0.13% to 0.17% is a good target (?)
..and do you use the greened up figure or the profit made on the individual selection to use in your calculation?
Thanks
regards
Peter
hi
I've found the blog entry now thanks:-
http://www.betangel.com/blog_wp/2009/09 ... -turnover/
..it might a better question now to ask whether you have maintained or grown the percentage?
thanks
Peter
I've found the blog entry now thanks:-
http://www.betangel.com/blog_wp/2009/09 ... -turnover/
..it might a better question now to ask whether you have maintained or grown the percentage?
thanks
Peter