A pro-independence blog by James Kelly - one of Scotland's three most-read political blogs.
Thursday, November 12, 2020
Wednesday, November 11, 2020
Who is still betting on Trump to win an election he's already lost?
Just a quick update on my earlier post about the inexplicable fact that the betting markets were still implying that Donald Trump had a 5% chance of winning an election he's already lost. I would have expected common sense to kick in at some point, but incredibly it's gone the other way - at the time of writing, Trump is now implied to have around a 9% chance of winning. Which begs the question, who on earth is placing these obviously doomed bets on Trump, and why are they doing it?
Someone suggested on Twitter that it might simply be that people who successfully bet on Biden are closing out their position, which effectively counts as bets on Trump. That's technically a possibility, but it doesn't really make sense, because any such phenomenon will have been balanced out (perhaps more than balanced out) by people who placed pre-election bets on Trump and now think it's Christmas because they were somehow able to retrieve some of their stake by cashing out long after the election result was known.
It must be that there are an awful lot of true believers out there who actually accept the fairy-tales about industrial-scale fraud and who think the Supreme Court will overturn the election results in three, four or five states and that Trump will be inaugurated for a second term in January. When people are behaving as irrationally as that on betting markets, there's a golden opportunity to cash in. To pretty much remove any risk, the thing to do would be to place a lay bet against Trump (as opposed to a positive bet for Biden), and that will cover any unlikely scenario in which something happens to Biden. All you'd need is for Trump not to be declared winner of the election, which he won't be, and you'll have locked in a 9% profit. I'm still not tempted to do it, simply because a huge stake would be required to get a half-decent return. But this is just about the closest thing you'll ever see to free money.
Tuesday, November 10, 2020
Return of the Poll of Polls shows an average Yes vote of almost 55%
Since 2014, it's rarely been feasible to apply the same method, because there usually haven't been enough independence polls from a broad enough range of pollsters. But for obvious reasons, the last few weeks have seen a flurry of polls, and they've come from no fewer than six different firms - two of which (Savanta ComRes and JL Partners) had never polled on independence before. Here's what the average of the most recent poll of each of the six shows...
SCOT GOES POP POLL OF POLLS
Should Scotland be an independent country?
Yes 54.8%
Monday, November 9, 2020
Why don't the media hold the Tories accountable for *their* past statements on when and how a second independence referendum can be held?
If anyone even vaguely mentioned the *possibility* of ending free movement between Scotland and England, let alone waved flags about it and had a party, the Tories would call it "ugly, twisted, bitter, grudge and grievance fuelled small-minded separatism".https://t.co/7CQmrCRBX5
— James Kelly (@JamesKelly) November 9, 2020
."Dark cloud over BBC journalism, says Michael Grade."
— James Kelly (@JamesKelly) November 9, 2020
These people look at the BBC's antics in the indyref and say "no problem there, we're proud of that", but some incomprehensible rubbish about royal bank statements in 1995 is apparently the end of civilisation as we know it.
Sunday, November 8, 2020
I'm not tempted, but just for your consideration...
Incredibly, the current odds on the Betfair exchange imply Trump has an approximately 5% chance of winning an election he's already lost. Punters have consistently overestimated his chances for months, but this is getting ridiculous.
— James Kelly (@JamesKelly) November 8, 2020
What's the odds on a Biden win? Worth a punt
— Tam Jardine (@Tam__Jardine) November 8, 2020
Roughly 1/20. It's practically free money at this stage, but I'm not tempted. It would take a huge stake to get a decent return, and the money would potentially be tied up for weeks, depending on how long the legal challenges drag on.
— James Kelly (@JamesKelly) November 8, 2020
Still- even if it took 6 months 5% return is really good. As you say- free money.
— Tam Jardine (@Tam__Jardine) November 8, 2020
Significantly better than most savings accounts :)
— Col Total Manscaping (@colken16) November 8, 2020
Friday, November 6, 2020
Day of despair for Douglas Ross as the Tories go backwards in Aberdeen by-election, and are on course to lose TWELVE SEATS in next year's Holyrood vote
Thursday, November 5, 2020
Sparkling Survation survey sustains the sequence: eleventh poll in a row to show pro-independence majority
Wednesday, November 4, 2020
Biden: never in doubt (much)
So my winning track record on political betting remains intact - an hour or two ago, I cashed out my bet on Biden for a decent profit, although I must admit it was a rollercoaster ride to get to that point, and I almost lost my nerve at one stage. Even though Biden was very much a value bet before the results started to come in, probably the optimum time to bet on him would have been at around 2am, when incredibly the odds implied that Trump had more than a 75% chance of winning. I couldn't make head nor tail of that, because at the time Biden had built up decent leads in Ohio and North Carolina - states he didn't even need to win. My best guess was that punters had massively overreacted to Trump holding Florida against expectations.
But of course, a couple of hours later, the tables had turned. Trump had not only secured a comeback win in Ohio and taken what looked like a decisive lead in North Carolina, he had also rapidly built up what looked like telling leads in states that were actually much more vital to Biden's chances, namely Wisconsin, Michigan and Pennsylvania. The experts repeatedly cautioned that those numbers might well be misleading due to the order in which different types of votes were being counted, but I remembered waiting for a Clinton comeback in those states in 2016 that never materialised, so I started to wonder if the sensible thing to do would be to cash out at a loss. I decided to risk seeing if anything had changed after a few hours sleep, and by the time I woke up, as if by magic, Biden had the upper hand in Michigan and Wisconsin. Although the margin in each case is narrow, those in the know are convinced it won't be overturned, meaning that Biden is assured of a majority in the electoral college unless Trump can overturn his narrow deficit in Nevada, which by all accounts is also unlikely. And even if an improbable comeback does occur somewhere, it still might not be enough if Biden squeezes out a win in Georgia, which is considered perfectly possible.
I would guess at this stage that Trump's main hope will be that Biden ends up owing his electoral college majority to a narrow win in a single state - that would at least give the appearance of reasonableness to any legal challenge. But if Trump needs the courts to alter the results in two or three states, his efforts to stay in office are going to look a bit desperate.
I don't actually think it'll take the army to remove him from the White House in January, but ideally he'll want to spin this out for as long as possible to build up a victim/conspiracy narrative, possibly with a view to another tilt at the presidency in 2024.
Sunday, November 1, 2020
Pool and share, Yookay-style
Just a quick note to let you know that I've written today's online-only 'National Extra' piece, about how wonderfully convenient it is that the extension of furlough suddenly became possible when the south of England faced lockdown. You can read it HERE.