In this guide
The primary obstacle preventing skilled forecasters from succeeding in prediction markets is rarely faulty forecasting — rather, it's inadequate capital preservation strategy. Even an accurate probability assessment becomes worthless if a prolonged losing run depletes your entire stake. This guide outlines the methodology that safeguards against such collapse.
The Kelly Criterion: The Mathematical Foundation
The Kelly Criterion establishes the theoretically ideal proportion of your stake to allocate to each trade: f = (bp - q) / b
- b = net odds received (e.g., if YES costs 0.40, b = 1.5)
- p = your probability estimate
- q = 1 - p
- Result: optimal fraction of bankroll for this position
In practice: employ half-Kelly instead. Whilst Kelly delivers mathematical optimality under perfect probability knowledge, our estimates invariably carry estimation error, making half-Kelly the superior choice for risk-adjusted performance.
Hard Rules: Never Break These
- Maximum 5% of bankroll per single position — without exception, irrespective of confidence level
- Maximum 25% of bankroll in any single correlated cluster — such as all political markets
- Stop-loss: if you lose 25% of your starting bankroll in a month, stop trading for the rest of the month
- Never add to a losing position to "average down" — reassess your underlying investment thesis before committing further capital
Drawdown Recovery
Temporary performance declines occur routinely, even amongst traders possessing genuine edge. Following a 20% drawdown, scale back your position sizes to half their previous level until you reach your prior peak. This approach ensures that unfortunate runs remain manageable rather than terminal.
FAQ
- How much starting capital do I need for serious prediction market trading?
- $500-1,000 furnishes sufficient capital to construct meaningful diversification across 10-20 positions using half-Kelly methodology. Amounts below $100 create such severe position-sizing constraints that systematic approaches become impractical.
- What should I do after a winning streak?
- Increase scepticism rather than confidence. Successful runs breed complacency and overestimation of skill. Maintain adherence to your sizing discipline regardless of how recent outcomes appear.