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by OscarCunningham
3031 days ago
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>(Not only that, but there's no other strategy that will make you money faster.) That's not true. If you bet 99% of your money each time then there's still no probability that you go bankrupt (it's literally impossible to go bankrupt unless you bet all your money), and you make money much faster. Perhaps we could add in a lower bound, like you have to stop betting if you have less than $1. But then it's possible to go bankrupt even if you use the Kelly criterion. Furthermore we've introduced a fixed quantity into the problem, which means there's no longer any justification for saying that your bet should be the same proportion of your wealth every turn. I've never yet seen a convincing argument for Kelly betting aside from the when utility is logarithmic. |
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Go back and read through the Math for the Kelly Criterion - when you know your edge and odds, it's the optimal solution. It's basically the balance point between taking advantage of current betting opportunities and preserving capital to take advantage of future betting opportunities.
If you bet 99% of your money on a coin flip, you'll eventually lose a flip and have too little money to take advantage of future coin flips.
Let me try another explanation: your return from a series of coinflips comes from two sources. The first is the return from the next coin flip, which when you have an edge, makes you want to bet as much as possible on this flip. The second is the return from all future flips, which makes you want to bet less so that a poor result doesn't permanently diminish your ability to make bets. Mathematically, the Kelley Criterion is the point where adding or removing bet sizing moves these two values the same amount, resulting in a change in expected value per bet size of zero, which means it's a maximum.