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The Betfair Prof: How the Democrats won the Keys to the White House!

By Leighton Vaughan-Williams
December 2nd, 2008

There have been a number of fascinating articles on election forecasting published in ‘Foresight’, the magazine of the International Institute of Forecasters. Of these, perhaps one of the most accessible is that associated with the name of Professor Allan J. Lichtman.

Lichtman’s unique approach to political forecasting revolves around what he terms the ‘The Thirteen Keys to the White House’, a historically based model that is both simple and seemingly successful. The theory underpinning the “Keys” is that the result of a US Presidential election turns almost entirely on the performance of the party controlling the White House. There are 13 keys, each of which Lichtman assesses as either true or false. When five or fewer keys are false, the candidate of the incumbent party will win. When six or more are false, the candidate of the challenging party will win.

Key 1 is ‘Party mandate’ (”After the midterm elections, the incumbent party holds more seats in the US House of Representatives than it did after the previous midterm elections”). In fact, the party of the incumbent President (the Republicans) lost seats in 2006, so this is FALSE.

Key 2 is ‘Contest’ (”There is no serious contest for the incumbent party nomination”). I don’t think Mitt Romney would agree with this. I would mark this as FALSE.

Key 3 is ‘Incumbency’ (”The incumbent party candidate is the sitting President”). FALSE.

Key 4 is ‘Third Party’ (”There is no significant third-party or independent campaign”). With all due respect to Ralph Nader and Bob Barr, I think we can say TRUE to this.

Key 5 is ‘Short-term economy’ (”The economy is not in recession during the election campaign”). I think we can reasonably assign this to the FALSE column.

Key 6 is ‘Long-term economy’ (Real per capita economic growth during the term equals or exceeds mean growth during the previous two terms.) FALSE.

Key 7 is ‘Policy Change’ (”The incumbent administration effects major changes in national policy”). Economic crisis measures apart, I think it’s reasonable to mark this as FALSE.

Key 8 is ‘Social Unrest’ (”There is no sustained social unrest during the term”). TRUE.

Key 9 is ‘Scandal’ (”The incumbent administration is untainted by major scandal”). Some scandalous things have happened under Bush’s watch, to be sure, but we can mark this in the sense meant as broadly TRUE.

Key 10 is ‘Foreign/military failure’ (”The incumbent administration suffers no major failure in foreign or military affairs”). FALSE, in spades.

Key 11 is ‘Foreign/military success’ (”The incumbent administration achieves a major success in foreign or military affairs”). Well, the ’surge’ had some success, to the benefit of McCain. Let’s be generous to the Republicans and tick it in the TRUE column.

Key 12 is ‘Incumbent charisma’ (”The incumbent-party candidate is charismatic or a national hero”). McCain was shot down during the Vietnam war, captured and hailed as a war hero. Let’s be generous again and mark him down as a TRUE national hero.

Key 13 is ‘Challenger charisma’ (”The incumbent-party candidate is not charismatic or a national hero”). Obama not charismatic? FALSE.

Of course, it’s possible to disagree with a couple of the way I’ve marked these keys but whichever way you cut it, this adds up to six or more FALSE statements, which in turn adds up to a win for the Democrats. And so another success is chalked up for Professor Lichtman and his famous keys!

And for the Betfair markets which never once wavered in pointing to a Democratic victory.

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How Barack Obama Won The Presidency

By Michael Robb
November 5th, 2008

The highs and lows of Betfair’s “Next President” market

Barack Obama will be the next President of the United States of America – a result correctly predicted by Betfair customers back in February following the Super Tuesday primaries.

Betfair’s betting markets have so far traded a total of $57 million over the course of the election campaign. They also foresaw Obama’s victories in most of the key swing states on polling day – only Missouri appears to have failed to fall to the Democrats – as Republican candidate John McCain endured a torrid night.

Obama is already being given a 60% chance on Betfair of being elected for a second term in 2012.

This is how Barack Obama’s fortunes changed on Betfair…

A) January 3: Obama wins in Iowa, propelling him into the lead for the Democratic nomination

Barack Obama: 47%
John McCain: 15%

B) January 8: The lead is short-lived as Hillary Clinton pulls off a shock win in New Hampshire

Barack Obama: 25%
John McCain: 15%

C) February 5: John McCain secures the Republican nomination after Super Tuesday

Barack Obama: 30%
John McCain: 33%

D) May 2: Barack Obama finally looks to have secured his party’s nomination following a primary win in North Carolina

Barack Obama: 56%
John McCain: 35%

E) September 4: The “Palin Bounce” starts a period of recovery for the McCain campaign

Barack Obama: 62%
John McCain: 38%

F) September 15: The bounce did not last. From the day investment bank Lehman Brothers went bankrupt, the gap grew increasingly wider

Barack Obama: 55%
John McCain: 45%

Betting Highs & Lows:

  • Obama traded at a high of 13-2 for small money
  • McCain traded at a low of 6-5 (over $180,000 was matched at 5-4 or less)
  • Total amount traded on all Betfair markets during this election campaign (as at 12:00am EST, 11/5/08) - $57 million

 

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Polls still open but Obama is 100% on Betfair

By Michael Robb
November 4th, 2008

0300 GMT Wednesday 5th Nov (2200 EST - Tuesday 4rd Nov.)

DESPITE polls still being open in the west coast states, Barack Obama is now unbackable on Betfair, meaning customers are refusing to offer any odds or risk any money that the Democrat candidate will not become the next US President. According to reports, at McCain’s campaign headquarters the TV has been turned off and a band has struck up.  

Obama is now 1-3 (a 77% chance) to win more than 351 of the total 538 electoral votes.       

Total amount traded on Betfair (as at 0300 GMT) - £35m ($56m)

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Missouri and Florida heading for the blue column

By Michael Robb
November 4th, 2008

2100 EST 

McCain will be crushed according to Betfair punters as he hits 100-1 for first time

BARACK Obama will be the next US President according to Betfair customers after they predicted that all the swing states will go the way of the Democrat.

 

AS the US media continues to give Republican candidate John McCain some hope, Obama is now trading at Betfair’s lowest price of 1-100 which means £1 is being bet to win 1p.

 

It’s such an electoral bloodbath for the Republicans that it’s not a case of how but how many for the Democrats – it’s now 2-5 (71% chance) that Obama will win more than 351 of the total 538 electoral votes up for grabs.       

Professor Leighton Vaughan-Williams, Director of the Political Forecasting Unit at Nottingham Trent University commented: “Obama is now favourite in the Betfair markets to win all of the pre-poll ‘battleground’ states. Since these were almost all states won by Bush in 2004, he can afford to lose one or two of these and still have scored a ‘landslide’ win of epic proportions.”

Total amount traded on Betfair (as at 0200 GMT) - £34m ($54m)

 

To win Indiana – Betfair:                   69% Obama, 31% McCain

To win Virginia – Betfair:                   79% Obama, 21% McCain

To win Ohio – Betfair:                        93% Obama, 7% McCain

To win North Carolina – Betfair:        73% Obama, 27% McCain

To win West Virginia – Betfair:          92% Obama, 8% McCain

To win Missouri – Betfair:                  77% Obama, 23% McCain

To win Florida – Betfair:                    88% Obama, 12% McCain

To win Pennsylvania – Betfair:          No bet being offered for Obama

 To be Next US President – Betfair:    98% Obama, 2% McCain

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Obama Makes Massive Jump In Indiana

By Michael Robb
November 4th, 2008

Betfair market calling it for Obama even though exit polls say too close to call

 

Barack Obama will win in Indiana according to the Betfair market after moving to odds-on in that state for the first time – despite only 2% of exit poll data being made public.

 

Just two hours ago John McCain was the 4-5 favourite (a 54% chance of victory) to take the state, just as the Republicans have done in every election since 1964.

 

Professor Leighton Vaughan-Williams, Director of the Political Forecasting Unit at Nottingham Trent University observed: “Only a few districts of Indiana are reporting so far, and it’s very close in the vote tally. However, comparing the exact same precincts with how they voted in 2004 shows a surge in support for the Democrat. This is showing in the markets, with Obama now favourite to win Indiana and an even shorter favourite to win the Presidency.”

 

If Obama wins in Indiana it indicates a landslide election victory for the Democrat – he’s now moved to a 96% chance of winning overall.

 

Total amount traded on Betfair (as at 2400 GMT) - £32m ($51m)

 

To win Indiana – Betfair:                   64% Obama, 36% McCain

To win Virginia – Betfair:                   90% Obama, 10% McCain

To win Ohio – Betfair:                        88% Obama, 12% McCain

To win North Carolina – Betfair:        73% Obama, 27% McCain

To win West Virginia – Betfair:          92% Obama, 8% McCain

To win Missouri – Betfair:                  67% Obama, 33% McCain

To win Florida – Betfair:                    81% Obama, 19% McCain

To win Pennsylvania – Betfair:          95% Obama, 5% McCain

To be Next US President – Betfair:    96% Obama, 4% McCain

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Markets React to “Historic Turnout” Reports in Missouri

By Steven Germacher
November 4th, 2008

Betfair customers reacted instantly to media reports from Missouri of “unprecedented” and “historic” levels of voter turnout.

As of 6:20pm EST, Betfair’s Missouri market had jumped to +28 points for Obama, up from an opening of +3 points on the day.


>> Get a live-updating version of this chart here

Even with 0% of precincts reporting in MO, bettors seem to be translating high turnout numbers into more expected votes for Obama.

Traditionally, high voter turnout means more votes for Democrats.

Missouri holds special importance for election buffs, as it has failed to choose the President only once in the last century.

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US Presidential Election Odds: Can McCain Pull Off an Inside Straight?

By Leighton Vaughan-Williams
November 4th, 2008

How can John McCain beat Barack Obama in today’s Presidential Election? Completing the ’straight’ is his only option, says Professor Leighton Vaughan Williams…

You’re sitting at the poker table, holding the 2, 3, 5 and 6. There’s one card left to draw from the pack. You need a 4 to complete an ‘inside straight’. Spades, clubs, hearts or diamonds, you don’t mind, as long as it’s a 4. What are your chances?

About the same as John McCain winning this election, according to the latest Betfair odds. In fact, his current likelihood of winning, according to the market, is about 8%, or a shade less than the chance of getting that elusive ‘inside straight’.

So where does McCain get the 8% from?

After all, he’s down, according to the latest polling averages, in Florida, Ohio, Virginia, Colorado, Nevada, Iowa and New Mexico, all of which Bush won in 2004. North Carolina, another Bush state, is also in peril, as to a lesser extent would seem to be Indiana, Montana, Georgia and even McCain’s home state of Arizona.

Meanwhile, Obama is leading in the polls by comfortable digits in every state that John Kerry won in 2004.

So what is the McCain strategy?

It comes down to holding all the states where he is down by a bit (Florida, Virginia, Ohio), taking Pennsylvania out of the ‘blue’ (Democrat) column and winning one of the smaller states where he currently lags by a wider margin (perhaps Nevada, Colorado or even New Hampshire).

So the bottom line, it seems to me, is Pennsylvania. This is the ‘inside straight’ strategy. The current polling average puts him down 7.6 percent down in this fount of electoral votes, and the very latest poll, a Quinnipiac survey with a large sample puts him down 10 points. Still, this is the sort of state where he can hope to appeal to conservative Democrat blue-collar male white voters, and in swinging this wedge of the electorate lies his last best hope.

This ‘Pennsylvania strategy’s makes up part of the 8%.

The second glimmer of hope is that some external event (perhaps a terrorist outrage) will occur in the dying hours of the campaign to drive security-concerned voters into the arms of the Vietnam veteran.

Then there is the so-called ‘Bradley’ effect, named after the black mayor of Los Angeles who lost the Governorship of California despite the polls showing him well up. In other words, it is the hope that a block of voters who have been telling pollsters they will vote for the African American candidate will, in the privacy of the voting booth, pull the lever for the white man.

The problem with the first line of hope is that Pennsylvania doesn’t seem to be tightening up in the closing hours (for example, a Rasmussen poll published yesterday showed McCain down 6, compared to a 4-point deficit in the same poll a few days earlier).

Time is ticking down fast for the second line of hope. Finally, there has been scant evidence of a Bradley effect (if it ever really existed) for some years now.

Do these strands of hope add up to an 8 percent probability of winning? Perhaps, perhaps not. Either way, John McCain will want to turn over that last card.

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Top 10 Ways Obama Could Lose the Election

By Jeff Sawyer
November 3rd, 2008

Jeff Sawyer is a former writer for David Letterman and a special guest columnist to Betfair Predicts.

Ask a Chicago Cubs fan, a meteorologist, Al Gore, or anyone who’s checked his 401(K) balance lately, and they’ll tell you: there is no such thing as a sure thing.

19th-century English novelist Edward George Earle Lytton Bulwer-Lytton put it this way: “Fate laughs at probabilities.” And that’s all he wrote, because his name took up the rest of the page.

The point being that even with the prediction markets suggesting an imminent Obama victory, it seemed reasonable to ask, what if? What if Obama messed up? What blunders might he or his cadre of supporters commit that would throw the election the other way?

To that end, we bring you the …

Top 10 Ways Barack Obama Could Lose the Election

===========================

10. Proclaims that if he becomes President, all Web addresses will end in .comobama

9. America wakes up the morning of November 4 realizing that the Iraq war, the housing crisis, the Wall Street collapse, global warming and the 10 trillion dollar national debt were all just a bad dream and everything is hunky-dorey

8. Replaces circle of stars in Presidential Seal with a big “O”

7. As a gesture of bipartisan goodwill, hires Joe the Plumber to run his plumber’s snake through Dick Cheney’s carotid artery

6. Changes campaign theme from “Vote for Change!” to “Stay the Course!”

5. Reveals that he and Joe Biden will play the Chris Tucker and Jackie Chan roles in the new blockbuster film, “Rush Hour 4″

4. Nation accidentally sets clock back one century when Daylight Savings Time ends

3. Announces $700 billion bailout plan for Ed McMahon

2. Purchases one hour of time on Home Shopping Network and raises campaign funds selling Joan Rivers moisturizing foot cream

1. His new Secretary of Health and Human Services? Amy Winehouse

Election Odds as of Novemeber 3, 2008

>> Get a live-updating version of this chart here

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Who Should Voters Trust? Gamblers.

By Steven Germacher
November 3rd, 2008

Who knows what votes lurk in the hearts of men?

Gamblers know.

Time and time again, Betfair customers have proven they can predict election outcomes better than the pollsters.

In both 2000 and 2004, Betfair patrons correctly predicted the identity of each President-Elect, as well as the outcome for each lynchpin battleground state: Florida in 2000 and Ohio in 2004.

In fact, Betfair customers accurately predicted the outcome of all 50 states in 2000 and 2004.

Election Odds as of Novemeber 3, 2008

>> Get a live-updating version of this chart here

How did the polls fare during the same elections? Well, let’s just say mistakes were made.

And in mid-October 2004, with John Kerry leading several polls, Betfair customers tilted wagers toward George Bush. The funds were followed weeks later by a Bush victory.

So why do gamblers get it right more often than pollsters? Keith Thompson from the Huffington Post quotes Koleman Strumpf, a leading authority on polls and prediction markets:

“Polls can be inaccurate. People may say what is politically correct, the questions may be leading, the pollsters may be biased. A pollster can still bill for an inaccurate poll. Bookmakers must make an accurate line or they lose — period.”

“On Election Night I’ll look at the movement on the betting sites to see what’s going on,” Strumpf says. “I watch CNN too, out of the corner of an eye, but it’s not necessary.”

According to Betfair Predicts, the world’s largest prediction market, speculators will place more than $70 million in bets on the identity of the next President by the close of precincts Tuesday.

Obama’s odds to win are currently 90%.

While polls over the past year have passed the crown back and forth from McCain to Obama, Betfair hasn’t had the Democrat trailing since February.

What’s more, an increasing tide of wagers predicts Obama to win most battleground contests (e.g. Missouri, Ohio, North Carolina) and even open up wide margins in states polls maintain are too close to call, such as Florida.

Here’s how Betfair customers are calling the 5 biggest battleground contests:


Florida (27 electoral votes)
>> Get a live-updating version of this chart here


Indiana (11 electoral votes)
>> Get a live-updating version of this chart here


Missouri (11 electoral votes)
>> Get a live-updating version of this chart here


North Carolina (15 electoral votes)
>> Get a live-updating version of this chart here


North Dakota (2 electoral votes)
>> Get a live-updating version of this chart here

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What will it take for McCain to win this election?

By Ari Last
October 31st, 2008

There is under a week to go until The U.S. Presidential Election and with his odds of victory long on Betfair, John McCain is currently far behind with time fast running out…

The conventional methods of campaigning seem to have left the Republicans some way short of the White House, and it’s therefore time to have a look at what radical occurrences are now needed to swing the vote their way.

A Terrorist Attack:

An attack on US soil would spread fear amongst US citizens and allow the experienced “war hero” John McCain to capitalize on the widespread panic bound to be present amongst voters. Obama is certainly seen as a milder, more diplomatic character and his greater tolerance for dialogue with America’s “enemies” and his lack of experience on the battle field would count against him if national security were to come under threat.

Perhaps we’ve been watching too much 24, but should something, heaven forbid, happen between now and Tuesday, conspiracy theories involving Republican die hards desperate to save the country from Democratic rule would be prevalent in the minds of most.

It emerges that Ahmadinejad and Obama are old friends:

His lead according to the Betfair markets looks unassailable, yet it may well be whittled away if some old photos of a young Barack Obama sipping tea and playing chess with Iran’s President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad suddenly surfaced.

Granted chances of this happening are slim but in all seriousness Obama’s relationship with the controversial Pastor Jeremiah Wright could have been more damaging if it wasn’t so expertly swept under the carpet, and another incident such as this could prove more fatal to his election hopes.

Bush finds Osama Bin Laden:

Timing has never been the current President’s forte yet if he could get his hands on Osama Bin Laden between now and Tuesday, his old Republican pal would be much obliged. The Republicans’ running of the country over the last eight years will be remembered as disastrous on the foreign affairs front and downright catastrophic in terms of the economy.
It would take the capturing of the world’s most wanted man days before the election to restore some pride and belief in a Party deemed by many to have drastically let the county down.

Hollywood changes its mind:

The widespread support for Obama amongst those political analysts otherwise known as Hollywood actors has certainly hindered the Republican cause. Should Angelina Jolie and Brad Pitt start sporting matching jewel encrusted John McCain tracksuits over the next few days, American voters may begin to change their minds.

Extreme weather conditions:

A snowstorm on election day could prevent hundreds of thousands getting out to vote. Obama is certainly relying on multitudes of the usually political ambivalent, who intend to vote for him based on the fact that in the United States, particularly amongst the young, it is undoubtedly a fashionable thing to do. How many of these voters would risk frostbite to cast their ballot?

The economy recovers:

A full recovery in three working days may be a bit much to ask, but a stock and housing market surge could dispel the depression engulfing much of America, and dilute the Democrats’ most deadly campaign weapon which has been Obama’s superior grasp of the economic crisis.

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