S_M;35836 wrote:That aside, if you have the ability to study the game a basic grasp of maths (probability) and a solid temperament there is money to be made. It is no coincidence that one of the best female poker players in the world has a degree in astrophysics. People who have an above average IQ generally do well at the game.
http://www.livboeree.com/about-liv/ Funnily enough I'm a vague acquaintance of Liv ... Really nice girl ... I remember years back when she was plucked for a Channel 4 show in which they taught a small group of people off the street how to play poker
Alan Selwood;35842 wrote:Rather than betting, I recommend that you spend a couple of hours watching the now fairly old film of James Garner as 'Maverick' on a Mississippi river-boat in a poker competition. Much more entertaining (IMHO) and very much cheaper as an activity unless you are the bank/bookmaker.
As my Dad used to say:
Those that bet and know are crooks.
Those that bet and don't are fools!
I will look up that film ... Loved Daniel Craig's Bond playing against Mads Mikkelson (sp?) in 2006's Casino Royale
I must admit I find more parallels between poker and investing than I used to ... When I invest in an infrastructure fund, I am betting on it going up
If it goes down 15%, I might double down on the bet (AKA rebalance), or I might fold (AKA use a stop) ... Statistically, either tends to work out better than doing nothing, because of course some markets just keep going down
Worst case, I keep rebalancing into a losing asset (the kind of poker hands you don't want to get drawn into – "raise, raise, dammit raise" – e.g. Japan post-1990)
Income investing feels much less like betting/gambling, but then we know that *really* a dividend is just earnings that other companies are using to expand their businesses ... So I think dividends only give the illusion of a guaranteed return – they're not creating anything from thin air
I probably haven't made the case very well, but when it comes down to it, it doesn't make much difference whether I invest on my fund platform, or my spread betting account ... It's just the latter somehow feels much more like gambling (it can actually be a lot safer)