We started talking about Kelly criterion a couple weeks ago. As you play with the ideas yourself, I’ll point out 2 subtleties. One here and another below in the Masochism section.
Edge/Odds
I posted a couple ways to express the Kelly formula. Because it’s easy to remember, I prefer the simple expression edge/odds.
If you use this version too, let me offer some user notes.
The expected arithmetic return is therefore 20% (.90 x 100 + .10 x $300 minus your $100 investment)
The odds or percent return when you win is 200%
f* = Edge/odds = 20/200 = 10%
With this version of the formula…
…you get a divide by zero error. Which is nature’s way of saying “Bruh, you can’t lose with this proposition you should bet 100% why you asking a calculator.”
We’ll address this in the next section.
Bias towards negatively skewed bets
Consider 2 bets:
The prescribed Kelly fraction is to bet 1% of your capital on this proposition.
This is a positively skewed bet. You lose most of the time, but win a large amount occasionally.
Let’s look at a negatively skewed bet with the same 10% expectancy.
The expectancy is the same but now Kelly wants you to bet nearly 1/2 your bankroll.
My intuition is that Kelly conclusions are loaded on volatility as opposed to higher order moments of a distribution. I’ve discussed this many times but to find the links I asked MoontowerGPT:
The first link of the responses is the most relevant (it’s embedded in the second link as well):
Kelly’s bias towards negatively skewed bets is already understood:
And here you have Euan’s adjustment:
🔗The Kelly Criterion and Option Trading
[Euan needs no boost from me but I’ll add that his book Positional Option Trading was terrific. My notes here]
In real-life, almost nobody is aggressive enough to bet full Kelly (at least amongst those who would consider using Kelly in the first place). Half or quarter Kelly is more common and Euan’s adjustment will lower the prescribed full Kelly amount even further in the presence of strong negative skew.
This bit from Fortune’s Formula is instructive:
A Kelly’s bettor’s wealth is more volatile than the Dow or S&P 500 have historically been. In an infinite series of serial Kelly bets, the chance of your bankroll ever dipping down to half its original size is 50%.
A similar rule holds for any fraction 1/n. The chance of ever dipping to 1/3 of your original bankroll is 1/3. The chance of being reduced to 1% of your bankroll is 1%.
Any way you slice it the Kelly bettor spends a lot of time being less wealthy than he was.
A Kelly bettor has a 1/3 chance of halving the bankroll before doubling it. – The half Kelly bettor has only a 1/9 chance of halving before doubling.
The half Kelly bettor halves risk but cuts expected return by one 1/4.
This was a widely read post:
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