Most people think bookmakers try to estimate the true probability of a match and then add a margin.
In practice, their real problem is predicting how people will bet.
A simple coin-flip example shows why:
Even with a 10% overround, if 80% of money lands on one side, the bookmaker becomes exposed to extreme short-term variance.
Three consecutive popular outcomes can wipe out the theoretical edge.
The article breaks down:
– why money distribution matters more than probability
– how emotional teams distort football markets
– why positive expected value does not prevent bankruptcy
Curious how people here see the analogy with market makers in financial markets.
In practice, their real problem is predicting how people will bet.
A simple coin-flip example shows why:
Even with a 10% overround, if 80% of money lands on one side, the bookmaker becomes exposed to extreme short-term variance. Three consecutive popular outcomes can wipe out the theoretical edge.
The article breaks down:
– why money distribution matters more than probability – how emotional teams distort football markets – why positive expected value does not prevent bankruptcy
Curious how people here see the analogy with market makers in financial markets.
Full breakdown here: https://www.playaiodds.com/en/blog/money-made-on-public-bets