
http://www.youtube.com/user/0nehandclapping
You can see the large amount trying to get matched on the lay side, then getting cancelled as a disguise. It looks pretty obvious to me that that money was real and was desperate to get matched. At the same time there wasn't much resistance to soak it up. That was from two years ago though, I watch it now and think how much more I could have got out of that one, but to be honest that was just a very straightforward trade. I wouldn't be surprised if the horse wasn't sweating or playing up at the time, it's not normal to see £1000s being thrown in on the lay side like that. If you know the money is real then follow it. WOM is still the strongest short term indicator there is to price movement, the only trick is knowing what actually is real money wanting to be matched and what isn't.ndarlington wrote:Some great trades there. Can you tell me what was telling you the market was going to climb and continue to rocket up on the Aug 14 video, for example?
Did it have anything to do with the actual type of race, or the movement of the other horses, or was it purely on WOM and the other graph?
Cheers!
Oh I see, interesting, When I first started trading a few years back I used stakes like £111 £222 and so on but this was because the person who got me into it used stakes like that, The reason he did it is because he used to use the betfair website rather then a platform! so he said it was quicker to type £333 then £300, this guy was Adam heathcote standard so I listened and copied until I got betangel and rounded my stakes off.hgodden wrote:Thanks. My stake size isn't due to any scientific forumla I'm afraid, for me it's just best not to stick out too much as a trader, so IMO 199 is better than 200, though I wouldn't have thought it makes that much of a difference
I meant to say earlier I have some more I haven't upload yet so I'll put up in the next couple of days
hgodden wrote:You can see the large amount trying to get matched on the lay side, then getting cancelled as a disguise. It looks pretty obvious to me that that money was real and was desperate to get matched. At the same time there wasn't much resistance to soak it up. That was from two years ago though, I watch it now and think how much more I could have got out of that one, but to be honest that was just a very straightforward trade. I wouldn't be surprised if the horse wasn't sweating or playing up at the time, it's not normal to see £1000s being thrown in on the lay side like that. If you know the money is real then follow it. WOM is still the strongest short term indicator there is to price movement, the only trick is knowing what actually is real money wanting to be matched and what isn't.ndarlington wrote:Some great trades there. Can you tell me what was telling you the market was going to climb and continue to rocket up on the Aug 14 video, for example?
Did it have anything to do with the actual type of race, or the movement of the other horses, or was it purely on WOM and the other graph?
Cheers!
Personally I don't make much use of the advanced charting, certainly not candlesticks etc. The whole technical analysis thing isn't really my game and I'm not sure how much can be applied to the racing markets. Certainly knowing resistance points is useful and looking for breakouts makes sense. But personally I can't see the point of say looking for 'head and shoulders' patterns in the racing markets, as the way the volume arrives makes them so different from financial markets. I'm not saying these things definately are not useful, just that I'm not using them to any great effect. I think that to get the most out of the advanced charting you probably need to find your own unique custom set ups and your own unique strategies to go with them. Something I will definately be doing in the future is creating my own graphs in excel and viewing them live on another screen, the betfair graphs timing is very inaccurate, so viewing things differently could certainly give an edge and let you see things in a different way.to75ne wrote:very sorry the first two are very recent, how stupid of me. all the same, do you have real use for the advanced charts? cheers.
Personally I don't make much use of the advanced charting, certainly not candlesticks etc.hgodden wrote:to75ne wrote:very sorry the first two are very recent, how stupid of me. all the same, do you have real use for the advanced charts? cheers.
sorry the above is a mistake. i have not got used to QUOTE thing, not very good at this.to75ne wrote:Personally I don't make much use of the advanced charting, certainly not candlesticks etc.hgodden wrote:to75ne wrote:very sorry the first two are very recent, how stupid of me. all the same, do you have real use for the advanced charts? cheers.