Freakonomics did not quiz Bo Cowgills boss, Hal Varian, on prediction markets -triple alas.

No GravatarHal Varian, Google’s Chief Economist

Freakonomics interview. (I did ask, but they didn&#8217-t listen.)

Hal Varian&#8217-s post.

Read the previous blog posts by Chris F. Masse:

  • OutReach
  • If Warren Buffett can’t figure out derivatives, can anybody?
  • Many people twitter on prediction markets.
  • Folks, when you have something important to say, write up a full post, not a comment.
  • Prediction Market Journalism
  • TechCrunch is 221 times bigger than Midas Oracle.
  • Earthquake measuring 9.0 or more on Richter scale to occur anywhere on or before December 31, 2008

2009 tax futures yielding 1.5%

No Gravatar

The &#8220-&gt-34&#8243- contracts are being offered at 96. If you discount the possibility of the marginal tax rate for that year being below 34%, this is an annual yield of about 1.5%, after transaction fees. The 2010 &#8220-&gt-34&#8243-s are paying around 1.35% and the 2011s, 1.2%. Buying any of those allows you to sell higher contracts on the ladder at reduced margin, as described before.

A possible trade that stands out on the board is to sell the 2010 &#8220-&gt-36&#8243-s in the high 70s and buy the 2010 &#8220-&gt-38&#8243-s for 50. I don&#8217-t see how a spread of 30 is warranted there, as any legislation that accelerates the Bush tax cuts sunset will likely put the highest marginal rate at 39.6%, higher than 38% at least. That is, I think the market&#8217-s implied probability of the rate ending-up in the 36-38 bin is too high. This trade would make roughly a 39% return on frozen margin, which could be improved to 50% by additionally buying the &#8220-&gt-34&#8243-s at 95. (unannualized)

Comments are now completely open on Midas Oracle.

No GravatarI have been fighting comment spammers for weeks, and I think I&#8217-ve finally found the right combo:

  1. I don&#8217-t use &#8220-Askimet&#8221- anymore (it constantly sent my own comments in the spam area!!!)-
  2. I use &#8220-Bad Behavior&#8221- (it protects this blog from naughty spambots)-
  3. I use &#8220-Peter&#8217-s Math Anti-Spam Image&#8221- (it makes sure the commenter is a human being and not a spambot)-
  4. I use &#8220-WP AJAX Edit Comments&#8221- (it allows commenters to edit their comments, post publication)-
  5. I use &#8220-Subscribe To Comments&#8221- (it allows commenters to receive e-mail notifications of new comments to a post)-
  6. I use &#8220-NoFollow Free&#8221- (it allows the commenters&#8217- links to be computed by the Google PageRank system)-
  7. I use &#8220-TinyMCEComments&#8221- (it puts a visual editor in the comment area)-
  8. I use &#8220-WordPress Gravatars&#8221- (it shows off the face pictures of our blog users).

TWO CASES:

CASE #1: You are logged in.


Comment Registered

CASE #2: You are not logged in. &#8212- a) You are not a registered user. b) You&#8217-re a registered user but haven&#8217-t logged in.

Comment Unregistered

The comment will appear immediately if the commenter has one previously approved comment.

Read the previous blog posts by Chris F. Masse:

  • GLOBAL COOLING
  • Sikorsky X2 = coaxial main rotors + rear-facing tail rotor
  • Linear Programming – Combined Value Trading – Parimutuel Call Market – Combinatorial Call Markets
  • Cash Rewards for Innovations
  • Let’s blog and dig about the Future.
  • OSCARS 2008: The Hollywood Stock Exchange has been more accurate than InTrade.
  • Right-click on the image below, open the link in another browser tab, and click on “OK”… to subscribe to InTrade’s iGoogle widget.

Midas Oracle is incontestably [*] the best vertical portal to prediction markets.

No Gravatar

Jeremy:

This site has more than you need to know about futures markets and the subtle point that they don’t predict but rather capture what people think will happen. Clear?

My dual strategy is paying off.

  1. Presenting a prediction market chart associated with an explainer about prediction markets on the blog frontpage &#8212-on top of the daily posts, making the reading of this introductory material compulsory for our visitors.
  2. Publishing, again, the explainer on prediction markets on top of the page grouping the current prediction market charts. This &#8220-predictions&#8221- page has been the more popular material on Midas Oracle, these last 30 days.

[*] Overcoming Bias and Freakonomics are not prediction market blogs. And they didn&#8217-t take my challenge to comment on the BetFair Starting Prices.

Quake Markets

No Gravatar

Markets offer us a potentially useful tool for predicting earthquakes. Imagine the San Andreas fault divided into segments, each of which carries a price based on the present discounted disvalue of a future quake. That price would reflect both a quake&#8217-s place in time and its place on the Richter scale. Such a market in quake claims would probably generate some useful&#8211-even lifesaving&#8211-data. If sufficiently thick, it might offer hedging, too.

I&#8217-ve not yet found that sort of quake market. Has any of you? If none exists, at least one should! Plenty of people and institutions would love to know more about earthquakes. Some of them would gladly support an earthquake market, I&#8217-d bet. There remain some legal risks, granted, but I think I&#8217-ve got a good hack for those. (Long story short: independent contractor researchers paid a base salary for making trades and winning bonuses for correct predictions.)

One nice thing about a quake market: Done right, it would generate powerfully positive externalities, benefiting even those who do not trade on the market. Imagine a map of the San Andreas fault, the price of each tradable segment illustrated by color coding or line thickness. One glance at that picture, and you would know whether it was time to relax, double-check your emergency kit, or head for the hills.

[Crossposted to Agoraphilia.]

Lords Of Odds

No Gravatar

Lords Of Odds

Lords Of Odds

How Game Works

How To Trade

Siddhartha Saha (from India) is the co-founder of www.LordsOfOdds.com. They are currently offering sports and entertainment predictions and will add current affair predictions soon. Siddhartha Saha founded this company with a couple of close pals. They will get into corporate forecasting, later.

The right way to implement a multi-outcome prediction market: Linear programming

No Gravatar

Over on Oddhead Blog, I give a lengthy pitch for linear programming as the &#8220-right&#8221- way to implement a multi-outcome prediction market.

I argue that the simplest and most common approach &#8212- to treat a multi-outcome market as a bunch of independent single-outcome markets &#8212- is wrong, even though it&#8217-s the approach taken by most prediction markets, bookmakers, and financial exchanges.

I also argue that

  • IEM&#8217-s implementation is one of the worst
  • Intrade&#8217-s is slightly better but not much
  • Newsfutures&#8217-s and Chris Hibbert&#8217-s phantom bids approach is even better
  • A host of people* hit on the best approach, many well before I did, advocating linear programming as a natural matching engine for multi-outcome markets
&nbsp-*Including Baron, Bossaerts, Chen, Economides, Fine, Fortnow, Kilian, Lange, Ledyard, Nikolova, Pennock, Peters, So, Wellman, and Ye.

Intrade, with carry

No Gravatar

For years now, a criticism of Intrade has been its lack of a positive carry in long-term markets. In contrast to regulated futures exchanges, Intrade does not pay out interest on deposits to most traders. While understandable, this discourages liquidity and can skew prices near extremes as future winnings are discounted, exaggerating any favorite/longshot bias.

If carry can be seen as a type of liquidity subsidy, it need not be provided by the exchange. It could be paid by other traders, or passed-on by traders that happen to have interest-bearing accounts. Consider a contract that is set to expire at 100 with certainty at a future date. Offers below 100 then represent a carry payment, and prices in such a market imply something like a discount rate. This is not a true interest payment or discount rate because no funds are being loaned, but in some situations the buyer will gain the benefit of reduced margins on subsequent trades in addition to &#8220-interest&#8221-.

Take the new &#8220-tax futures&#8221-, which are structured as a &#8220-ladder&#8221- of binary options. Currently the lowest rung expires at 100 if the highest marginal tax rate is equal to or greater than 34% and zero if it is less than 34%. The next highest rung pays when the highest marginal rate &gt-= 36%, and so on. Say we add a new rung that pays-off if the rate is greater than 0% and has no transaction fees. This would seem to be a relative certainty, and an offer below 100 represents carry. Furthermore, the buyer of this contract can then sell short higher rungs at reduced margin.

For example, with the 2011 maturity contracts, the current bid/ask on the &#8220-&gt-38&#8243- rung is 85/87.5. If a &#8220-&gt-0&#8243- rung existed and someone sold it for 95, the buyer can then go out and short &#8220-&gt-38%&#8221- at 85 with 10 margin (corresponding to his worst-case scenario of negative tax rates: 85-95!) instead of the usual 15 margin frozen, plus collect the carry of 5 in the &#8220-&gt-0&#8243- contract by maturity. In absolute terms, the margin is only reduced by the unannualized carry of 5, but if the trader is right, he will capture a return on frozen margin of 900% ((85+5)/10-1) instead of 467% (85/15-1).

Likewise, an &#8220-impossible&#8221- contract would subsidize buyers. The 2009 contracts are currently 35 ask for &#8220-&gt-38&#8243-. If a &#8220-&gt-100&#8243- rung existed and someone bought it for 2, the seller could then buy the &#8220-&gt-38&#8243- with 33 margin frozen – a subsidized 203% vs. a regular 186% profit in this case. (The &#8220-sponsor&#8221- is not interested in profiting directly on that trade and so the fact that the government would be owed all winnings if they are a US citizen doesn&#8217-t matter.)

Now it&#8217-s fair to ask why you couldn&#8217-t accomplish the same subsidy by just consistently selling for slightly less than and buying for slightly more than what you judge to be fair value. Aside from the facts that this could widen the bid/ask spread and make prices less reliable, the more explicit carry of the system described above is psychologically reassuring and should lead to more trade. It is very hard to distinguish between a 65% and a 67% chance of the next president being a Democrat – for good reason. How can a trader practically determine if a 2% difference in price is a subsidy? At the same time, the sponsor&#8217-s risk is more defined if they stick to contracts with near-certain payoffs. In many cases the sponsor will also be a market-maker, but this system allows those functions to be decoupled.

It could be argued that the risk-profile of the average Intrade trader is such that they are insensitive to these kinds of incentives because they are generally trying to grow small sums of money by orders of magnitude, as opposed to preserving larger sums. Even if this is an issue, the multiplier effect described above should mitigate it.

A more likely problem with this system is the danger of free-riders taking carry without providing liquidity to the sponsored market. The sponsor could deal with this by only extending small subsidies at any one time and ceasing to do so if he doesn&#8217-t see reciprocation. The fact that frozen margin on the trade earning carry is unfrozen only when an offsetting trade is made on the same ladder also discourages free-riders. The system could somewhat easily unravel though, with the &#8220-discount rate&#8221- collapsing to relatively useless levels. This would not be surprising, especially in the &#8220-&gt-100&#8243- contract, although subsidizing tax short-sellers with the &#8220-&gt-0&#8243- contract is more important in this market.

Remember, this entire idea is meant to work within the technical and legal structures as they exist.

Ducted Wind Turbines (DFWT)

Ducted Wind Turbines

Ducted Wind Turbines


Author Profile&nbsp-Editor and Publisher of Midas Oracle .ORG .NET .COM &#8212- Chris Masse&#8217-s mugshot &#8212- Contact Chris Masse &#8212- Chris Masse&#8217-s LinkedIn profile &#8212- Chris Masse&#8217-s FaceBook profile &#8212- Chris Masse&#8217-s Google profile &#8212- Sophia-Antipolis, France, E.U. Read more from this author&#8230-


Read the previous blog posts by Chris. F. Masse:

  • A case of advertisement mistaken for content
  • Michael Shermer’s The Mind of The Market
  • A prediction market panel… where only 2 out of 5 are truly prediction market experts. What a nuclear joke. This poor line-up is the reflection of the poor state of the prediction market industry in the US… and the inherent mediocrity of the conference business.
  • VentureBeat makes it like established veterans NewsFutures, Consensus Point and Inkling Markets are contemporary of just-out-of-the-egg Xpree.
  • 13 lines for Justin Wolfers, but only 2 lines and one word for Eric Zitzewitz — Mat Fogarty, what were you thinking of?
  • The Betting King — The ATP Tour was his NASDAQ.
  • The blue screen we all wish David Pennock will never see