Walkers Flavour Cup

May 20, 2010

Walkers are running a competition to find the biggest fan of their new flavours. We loved the idea so we’re running a market on it, we also had a little taste test at Smarkets towers to see what the residents think.

We put the Northern Europe and Southern Europe flavours head-to-head. These were the results:

Flavour Like Dislike Difference
German Bratwurst 12 5 +7
English Roast 4 11 -7
French Garlic Baguette 6 8 -2
Spanish Paella 2 12 -10
Italian Spag Bol 10 6 +4
Dutch Edam 10 6 +4

So the winner from this round, with a love/hate difference of +7 is German Bratwurst. The English didn’t even get a look in.

Our market still has the yet untasted American Cheeseburger in the lead, but we’ll see how German Bratwurst progresses in our taste tests!

We don’t often blow our own trumpet, but when Lindsey, an eagle eyed Smarkets member, spotted this tweet from Alastair Campbell:

It’s only took us 37 minutes to get the market live (we were a little slow because we were eating lunch!).

We’ve rolled out a little extra functionality on our political markets for any hackers out there. You can now get live prices for any of our political markets in either JSON or XML. For example:

The “overall majority” market as JSON is: http://api.smarkets.com/v1/markets/2gvp44k

Or the “Will the BNP win a seat” market in XML is: http://api.smarkets.com/v1/markets/2gvqip0.xml

Simply browse to any political market and view the source to see the link for that market. It’ll look something like this:

<link rel="alternate quotes"
    href="http://api.smarkets.com/v1/markets/2nktxr8" 
    title="Clegg TV wins" type="application/json">
<link rel="alternate quotes"
    href="http://api.smarkets.com/v1/markets/2nktxr8.xml" 
    title="Clegg TV wins" type="text/xml">

We have a much richer API in development so this is just a peek at the functionality to come. Have fun with our data, we’d love to see what you come up with. Let us know any feedback.

This is the first UK General Election where the three main party leaders are going head to head in a televised debate. Although criticised by some as reducing the campaign to a popularity contest, this style of debate has proved hugely popular in the US presidential elections.

On Thursday (televised on ITV) Gordon Brown, Nick Clegg and David Cameron will share the stage for the first of three debates and we’re offering markets on them.

Bet on the size of the TV viewing audience and on which leader will ‘win’ the most debates (according to ICM).

We’ve also introduced some new markets to our General Election betting such as the contested incumbents and the result of Morley & Outwood, the first of the constituency markets.

How betting exchanges work

February 5, 2010


In this video we go into a bit more detail about how betting exchanges work. There are some slightly complicated concepts in here, but they’ll help you understand how to profit on Smarkets.

There’s more information on greening up in the Smarkets help section.

Ever wondered what the difference was between a high-street bookmaker and a betting exchange? This video explains what we see as the main advantages of market betting.

A lesson in Tennis trading

February 2, 2010

I stumbled across this post on the Bet Angel Blog. It’s a great illustration of how market trading works, and the risk of relying purely on data to predict an outcome.

In the quarter-finals of the recent Australian Open, Roger Federer lost 13 games on the trot to Nikolay Davydenko resulting in his odds to win at Betfair lengthening from 1.3 to around 3.7. He took a break and returned to court a changed man, beating Davydenko with relative ease.

[In a post match interview] Federer commented on how the sun was bothering him and how he couldn’t wait till it had cleared the court. He also, accidentally, revealed how he timed his ‘comfort break’ to allow him a chance to regain his thoughts and break the stride of his opponent.

If you had just been following the score, it’s unlikely you’d have taken such an outside bet on Federer, but if you could tell that the sun was bothering him, you would have made a tidy £27 profit on a £10 bet.

Election betting odds in the week before election have indicated correctly in advance the results of Presidential fights in every campaign in the last thirty-six years, since Wall Street election wagers became common.

New York Times – October 30, 1916

Prediction markets were popular one hundred years ago on Wall Street. Former WSJ publisher L. Gordon Crovitz writes that “$165 million in today’s dollars was wagered in Wall Street on the 1916 election – twice the amount spent on the election campaign itself.”

Today, they’re regaining popularity. However, some are pointing to the failings of prediction markets, claiming that they get it wrong all too often, as Barry Ritholtz did in his post Why Prediction Markets Fail.

Markets always act on incomplete information, so it is effectively impossible for prediction markets to correctly indicate an outcome every time. If markets fail to predict a winner, that does not invalidate the idea. Furthermore, what many naysayers fail to point out is that the technical infrastructure is in its infancy. Even prediction market giants Intrade and Betfair, as Barry calls it, do not “parallel the population at large” because of poorly designed interfaces.  This encourages low widespread adoption leaving only highly motivated yet homogeneous traders in the marketplace.

So my prediction is this: prediction markets have been around for a long time and have shown to have empirical value. A March 2008 article in Scientific American reports that the Iowa Electronic Market “was closer to the outcome of an election 74 percent of the time.” There is no question that prediction markets are useful, fun and will play a bigger role as the technology improves.

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