How to sell art short

No GravatarFor a while it seemed like a month wouldn&#8217-t pass without hearing of a new record-breaking art auction, along with the inevitable insinuations of a &#8220-bubble&#8221-. Last night the buyers blinked, as a Van Gogh work expected to command $28-35 million did not get any bids.

People talk about art as an asset class and yet there is no way to sell it short or hedge against declines in value. Clearly, prediction markets are an answer. It seems like this would be a good niche market for a real-money exchange. Markets could either be tied to upcoming auctions or, more likely, an art price index. The latter would allow any art owner a hedge with basis risk.

This, by the way, is not to imply that art prices are about to collapse. There is some evidence that they trail housing prices with a lag of a year or two, but this is mainly anecdotal to the late &#8217-80s / early &#8217-90s period. It is more likely that the location of demand is shifting.

Exchanges that are fortunate enough to be operating in modern legal and regulatory regimes show a somewhat limited imagination in their offerings. There are opportunities in the current re-shaping of how art is priced and artists are rewarded.

Previous blog posts by Jason Ruspini:

  • 2009 tax futures yielding 1.5%
  • Intrade, with carry
  • Talking tax futures on BNN, Canada’s business channel
  • Tax Futures, “In Real Life”
  • YooNew, fears and hopes

If Musharraf goes, should we celebrate?

No Gravatar

Benazir Bhutto made a compelling case in the Sunday New York Times that she would be a better partner for the West than Musharraf. As she noted, $10 billion in U.S. aid since 2001 has not resulted in the elimination of Al Qaeda&#8217-s base there. There seems to be substantial reason to believe that Pakistan and its intelligence service are part of the problem, not the solution.

But would Musharraf&#8217-s fall be good news? It&#8217-s not obvious, since we don&#8217-t know who will replace him (i.e., Bhutto or someone more anti-Western). And even if it&#8217-s Bhutto, we don&#8217-t know how much help she&#8217-ll be once in office.

Intrade has just listed a contract that may help provide an answer. In addition to adding Musharraf to their foreign leader departure series (as Chris noted yesterday), they also added a parlay for Musharraf leaving and Osama being captured (at my suggestion). So if these contracts turn out to be liquid, we&#8217-ll be able to get a market-based estimate of the correlation between Musharraf and a reasonable summary statistic for whether outcomes in Pakistan are good for the West.

Of course, the usual caution about correlation and causality applies here. If Osama is caught tomorrow, it probably helps Musharraf keep his job. The longer term conditional probabilities should be less contaminated by this problem and the difference betweens between the prices of the long and short dated contracts might be used to contract a clean(er) estimate of a causal effect.

This seems like the most interesting geopolitical decision market to come along in a little while. But it&#8217-ll only work if it&#8217-s liquid. So those of you with Intrade accounts, put up an order or two. Your country needs you.

Price for Pakistani National General Election Date at intrade.com

Price for Pervez Musharraf (Pakistan) (Rule 1.8 Applies) at intrade.com

Price for Osama Bin Laden at intrade.com

BetFair Australia is a low-margin betting operator that helps horse racing compete against the other gambling products.

No Gravatar

ABC News:

[…] Betfair can take bets from right around the country [Australia], but needs a change in law in states other than Tasmania – where it is already licensed – to enable it to advertise. Mr Twaits says the laws are invalid and are holding racing back.

&#8220-Thoroughbred racing&#8217-s share of the total gambling pie in Australia has dropped from 26 per cent in 1991-92 down to 8 per cent last year, and it&#8217-s continuing to slide,&#8221- he said. &#8220-And the reason for that is that punters, or gamblers generally, are moving to low-margin products that have nothing to do with racing and racing doesn&#8217-t earn a return from those forms of gambling. As a low-margin operator, what we offer racing is the chance to compete better with those non-racing low-margin operators and return a fair amount to the industry.&#8221-

The NSW racing industry says Betfair does not return a fair amount to the industry, paying 24 cents per $100, compared to $1 from bookmakers and $4.50 from the TAB. But Mr Twaits says that is &#8220-just plain wrong&#8221-. &#8220-We&#8217-ve never put an offer to any racing industry official in the country that has been in those terms,&#8221- he said. &#8220-What we have offered to do is to pay a share of our gross revenue to the racing industry and a share of the gross revenue that we&#8217-ve offered to pay is in line with what the TABs pay here in Australia. What matters is how much punters spend with wagering operators. So what they spend with us and what they spend with the TAB might be markedly different but if we agree to pay the same percentage of that spend to the racing industry then they should be happy with that.&#8221-

Thanks to Niall O&#8217-Connor for this interesting link.

Meet David Jack, the managing director of TradeFair.

No Gravatar

David Jack is on the right&#8230- (here with Andrew &#8220-Bert&#8221- Black, the BetFair co-founder).

David Jack, the managing director of TradeFair

David Jack (Managing Director of TradeFair, a BetFair spin-off)

Previously: Binaries and Spreads: BetFair spins off TradeFair.

NEXT: Why does Tradefair care about Prediction Markets – by TradeFair&#8217-s David Jack – 2007-12-06

A virtual tour of InTrade, the leading prediction exchange for North America

No Gravatar

John Delaney guides you inside the InTrade prediction markets. (YouTube videos)

#1. Welcome to InTrade

#2. Welcome to Trading 101 – InTrade

#3. Trading 101 on InTrade

Interesting. Well done. I hope we will have much more videos like these from all of the prediction market industry players, in the coming months.

Summary of Conference on Corporate Applications of Prediction/Information Markets (1 November), Kansas City

No Gravatar

A summary of the talks at last week&#8217-s conferences is available here,

http://people.ku.edu/~cigar/PMConf_2007/PMConference_Notes.html.

Additional information will be posted in the near future.

Previous blog posts by Koleman Strumpf:

  • Prediction Markets in the Classroom: Inkling Markets
  • Slides of presentations from Conference on Corporate Applications of Prediction/Information Markets (1 November), Kansas City
  • Reminder: Corporate Applications of Prediction Markets Conference (1 November)
  • Conference: Corporate Applications of Prediction/Information Markets (Thursday, 1 November 2007)
  • Copernican Principle: How To Predict the End of the World
  • Win Justin’s Money? (re: Is there manipulation in the Hillary Clinton Intrade market? Redux.)
  • Is there manipulation in the Hillary Clinton Intrade market?

Binaries and Spreads: BetFair spins off TradeFair.

No Gravatar

Via &#8220-jwolstenholme&#8221- and via Niall O&#8217-Connor, who got the scoop, here&#8217-s UK-based TradeFair (Binaries and Spreads):

TradeFair

&#8211-&gt- David Jack (Managing Director of TradeFair) &#8212- (Thanks to Niall for the LinkedIn link.)

Meet John Nafeh, the HedgeStreet brain.

No Gravatar

HedgeStreet:

Dr. John Nafeh – Director

John Nafeh is the Founder of HedgeStreet. He combined his expertise in decision analysis and risk management, his experience guiding Internet-related start-ups, and his vision of an Internet-based mass market for risk-hedging financial instruments [*] to create HedgeStreet. As Managing Director of Pareto Partners, a venture capital fund, Dr. Nafeh has demonstrated extensive expertise in start-up financing, strategic planning, marketing, and mergers and acquisitions. He was involved with Atari and Apple Computer during their start-up phases, founded PC and database software companies in the mid-1980s, and earlier held management positions with Ford Aerospace and General Electric. Along with a BS in electrical engineering, Dr. Nafeh holds an MS in management science and engineering and a PhD in decision and risk analysis from Stanford University.

John Nafeh

[*] a flawed vision?

Previous blog posts by Chris F. Masse:

  • The CFTC is going to close the comments in 15 days. We have 15 days left to convince the CFTC to accept FOR-PROFIT prediction exchanges, and counter the evil petition organized by the American Enterprise Institute (which has on its payroll Paul Wolfowitz, the bright masterminder of the Iraq war).
  • The CFTC is going to close the comments in 16 days. We have 16 days left to convince the CFTC to accept FOR-PROFIT prediction exchanges, and counter the evil petition organized by the American Enterprise Institute (which has on its payroll Paul Wolfowitz, the bright masterminder of the Iraq war).
  • Brand-new scientific report certifies that starting off the Large Hadron Collider is NOT going to destroy the Earth. Glad to hear that. It means that any bets entertained on the LHC issue will be able to be resolved and winnings to be collected in the end.
  • Small Business = GOOD — Big Business = BAD
  • The letter David Pennock will never send out —well, we hope.
  • Monitor the web traffic of TradeSports.com, InTrade.com, BetFair.com, Betdaq.com, NewsFutures.com, HubDub.com, etc. —thanks to Google Trends.
  • Here’s the way to promote innovation for entry-order and analysis software packages —separate the 2 functions.

Prediction Market History + Prediction Market Journalism

No Gravatar

The New York Times:

[…] Long before political prediction markets sprouted on the Internet, election bets — whether the stakes were money or embarrassing public spectacles — were a ubiquitous part of the American political scene. The practice, which began informally with petty stakes in pool halls in the late 19th century, was by 1900 a multimillion-dollar trade on Wall Street.

In the 1916 contest between Woodrow Wilson and Charles Evans Hughes, about $160 million (in current dollars) was wagered on Wall Street’s outdoor “curb exchange.” By contrast, the 2004 election saw less than $25 million in contracts change hands over the outcome on the Dublin-based InTrade.com market, the largest and most active for-profit market for odds on current American elections. […]

“Until the 1920s, New York would have been the center of gambling in the United States, what Las Vegas is today,” said Paul Rhode, a professor of economic history at the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill. Technically, gambling on the result of an election was — and is — illegal, but the laws were not widely enforced, and newspapers routinely reported the names of prominent bettors and the Wall Street firms that held the stakes. […]

With the rise of polling in the 1930s and a decline in public approval of political gambling, election betting fell out of favor. The expansion of horse-track betting in 1939, giving people another arena in which to place their bets, also weakened interest in the markets.

Reporters, too, could get political forecasts from increasingly reputable polling agencies. While The New York Herald Tribune still reported on the betting as late as 1940, the odds were relegated to an occasional small paragraph on the financial page, and neither bettors nor stakeholders were named.

The online prediction markets that cropped up around 2000 were less a dot-com revolution than a road back to the earlier form of election coverage.

In a few years, we may regard the second half of the 20th century as the aberration in which the press used polls rather than markets to track political races,” Justin Wolfers, a business professor at the University of Pennsylvania’s Wharton School, wrote in an e-mail message. “And in the 21st century, we may return to the habits of the early 20th century, reporting on political races through the lens of prediction markets rather than polls.

Justin Wolfers is right that a new form of journalism may emerge (I call it &#8220-prediction market journalism&#8220-). However, my view is that it will be a minor &#8212-most news media will still be reporting polls rather than prediction market odds.

The Global Betting Exchange

No Gravatar

The company behind BETDAQ will launch a new exchange in the near future. It is backed by significant players in the global sports trading market. It will offer breath of markets and level of liquidity unsurpassed in the betting exchange sphere. It wil target the retail exchange bettor. It will not be purple in colour.

Main investor: Dermot Desmond

Alleged investor: J. P. McManus

Other investors: [One or two surprises to come…]

Signed: Deep Throat

&#8212-

The Global Betting Exchange

&#8212-

Note to the Midas Oracle readers: Actually, there are two brand-new, real-money prediction exchanges (betting exchanges) that will pop up onto the prediction market scene soon. (That is, Global Betting Exchange is only one of them.)