Tuesday 1 June 2010

2010 election: post-race analysis

Those who do not learn from the past are condemned to repeat it, so they say. There is certainly a lot to learn from the 2010 election. I don't pretend to have a monopoly of wisdom (more like a flake in a very fragmented market), but here are some of the things that I learned about political betting from the 2010 election :

1. Don't be afraid to do the obvious

For a long time, it looked as though the Tories were going to achieve an overall majority. Perhaps they should have. But by the time that the election campaign began, it was already going to be a tough call for them. They were not getting the leads in the polls that would guarantee an overall majority. Yet the betting markets stubbornly refused to acknowledge this. Even after the first debate, when the Lib Dems' support shot up and the polls pointed to a hopelessly hung Parliament with only three weeks to go, the markets remained odds-against a hung Parliament for another couple of days. I piled in - this was by far my biggest bet and was also by far my most lucrative. I greened out after the third debate, which David Cameron appeared to win, but made sure I remained as exposed as possible to the upside of a hung Parliament.

I do not claim any brilliance on this - quite the reverse, it seemed totally obvious to me. I was probably too hesitant in greening out. But I still made a substantial sum of money by opposing the preconceptions of the rest of the market which was too slow to recognise when it was out of date. This leads me onto my next point.

2. There is no special wisdom in the market

Money talks and money should be respected, but money can still be hopelessly wrong. Most political gamblers don't do as much research and testing as professional financial analysts. So there is probably more scope for uncovering errors to profit by than in the financial markets. It's always good to start with the belief that others are on the right track - assuming that your opponents are stupid is always a recipe for losing. But look for where assumptions may have been made. Those assumptions might be incorrect or out of date.

3. A lot of knowledge can be a dangerous thing

The constituency markets held especial dangers. Yokel has pointed out in the past how sometimes it is easier to bet with less information. I agree. It was surprising just how often the best of betters got caught out by their own pet constituencies. There has been much soul-searching among Scottish posters as to why the predicted seat changes didn't happen. Jack W was wrongly confident that Watford would fall to the yellow peril. Mr Smithson misread Buckingham and even in Bedford, he thought the Lib Dems might sneak up on the rails, where in fact they finished a distant third. I point this out just to show that the shrewdest commentators can be led astray even on home turf.


My most successful constituency bets were made by applying general principles rather than applying too much local knowledge. It's one thing working out that Labour would be about as popular as herpes in much of the country south of the Severn and the Trent, and it's another thing entirely trying to second-guess how this might interact with local constituency effects. Far better to look at generalities - is there an incumbent MP? has the constituency any tradition of voting for the challenging party? what is your expected regional swing?


The local constituency effect that is most important to look at is whether one of the parties has a seat-specific problem; for example, the Conservative party in Southport was publicly and utterly split. Occasionally, we get tells from inside: when the first Conservative candidate abandoned Brighton Pavilion, it seemed likely that they would struggle to take the seat. Similarly, when the incumbent unexpectedly retired in Walsall South, a seat that was on no one's radar looked very interesting (Labour retained it, but by a margin of under 2000 votes in a constituency that had returned a Labour MP with 58% of the votes in 1997). Hard news is worth following, but generic reports of excellent canvassing returns should be heavily discounted.

4. Think about what's driving prices: it might not be the underlying odds

It is easy to assume that betting prices are driven by underlying probabilities. Not so. What drives betting prices is the money that is placed. Betfair automatically works in this way and conventional bookies are going to want to keep their books balanced. The price ends up as the balance between two competing flows of money.

This is particularly important in something as emotional as politics. A lot of gamblers want to back their own horse. This means that prices can be quite seriously askew, particularly in constituency markets.

The particular danger arises where a party has considerable support but relatively few exciting betting opportunities. The odds on the Lib Dems and the SNP taking new seats were way too short in most cases. This was observable in advance (at least, I observed it). For every Redcar there was a St Albans, a Sheffield Central, a Newport East and a Bedford. The SNP didn't even have those meagre satisfactions.

The same effect could be seen in a localised way for the Tories. In Scotland, the Conservatives came nowhere close to justifying the odds in some seats. The challenges in Morley & Outwood and Exeter failed, though Antony Calvert did very impressively in Morley & Outwood. The emotional satisfaction of backing an upset against a particularly unpopular (with Tories) Labour minister drove prices out of kilter.

It is no surprise that many of the longer priced bets that came home were on Labour candidates. There's something very unheroic about backing a candidate to retain a seat. It's much more fun backing a candidate to win a seat. But fun doesn't equate to money.

antifrank

5 comments:

Marcia said...

The situation is Scotland at the last election was always going to be difficult for all non-Labour parties. The problem I found was that the nation can be very clannish at times and having a Scottish Prime-Minister was a hurdle to over-come. The personal attacks by the media did him a favour and courted a sympathy vote. I even found die-hard Tories annoyed at the press treatment of him. A week out from polling day I thought the SNP had a good chance in Dundee West of just sneeking in. Some voters do vote differently for Westminster and Holyrood. The bulk of the postal votes verified a week out before polling day had Labour behind (in 2005 it was 2 to 1 for Labour) that gave some encouragement. However the anti-Tory feeling started to be felt as we got nearer and nearer to polling day and the postal votes verified in the last three days slowly started to go in Labour's favour. Canvassing on the doorstep in the final couple of days did show a very late swing to Labour in the sense of 'don't want the Tories in this time but will vote for you at Holyrood'. If I had a £1 for every time I heard that in the the final few days I could have a Round the World holiday. On polling day some votes were scared to look you in the eye as they gave you impression they didn't want to really vote Labour but fear of the Tories guided their vote.

Anonymous said...

(AnneJGP)

Thanks, antifrank, an interesting review.

I was (and still am) amazed by all those commenters on PB who seem to have their fingers on the local pulse politically. Hardly anyone ever mentions politics in my hearing, and that was so even during the period of the campaign.

Rob Barnes said...

Thanks AntiFrank. Very thought-provoking.

I would like to add another point to your "Don't be afraid to do the obvious" heading. It was obvious that the LDs would go up in the seat markets after the first debate, so it was obviously a good idea to buy LD seats, and even more obvious to sell them before polling day.

Why didn't everyone do this?!

Humbly,

Rob

bunnco said...

I enjoyed this article. The trouble about the next election is that it's going to be fought on different boundaries and is going to be almost wholly unpredictable so it's the 'gut-feel' that's going to be the most effective tactic.

Andrea said...

"A lot of knowledge can be a dangerous thing "


Yes. There were a couple of candidates who admitted they didn't write their winning speech because they didn't think they would win. It may be an exageration but it gives the picture of even those involved getting lost in the picture.



"Similarly, when the incumbent unexpectedly retired in Walsall South"

which one of his many retirments during 5 years?! :-)
Between him and Strang in Edinburgh it was a rollercoaster! They changed their mind 100 times.



"The local constituency effect that is most important to look at is whether one of the parties has a seat-specific proble...Hard news is worth following, but generic reports of excellent canvassing returns should be heavily discounted."

I was misled by one of these local "happenings"
Re Rochdale where the CLP almost collapsed last year with members expelled and disciplinary hearings (the saga also involved the PPC, his divorcing wife and his "mistress").
I had written it off for Labour and I was very surprised on election night.
I overestimated the impact of it. However I agree on the general point.