Hedge funds try to promote sports betting as an asset class
Is it really recession-proof?
WHEN he was 12, Warwick Bartlett bought “100 Famous Greyhound Systems”, a guide for betting on dog races. After spending a year tracking every stratagem and picking the best two, he went to the races to take his first punts. He lost. Mr Bartlett, now the boss of GBGC, a betting consultancy, says it taught him a good lesson: “A system can win for a period of time. And then it’s had its day.”
This article appeared in the Finance & economics section of the print edition under the headline “Against the odds”
Finance & economics August 19th 2017
- The North American Free-Trade Agreement renegotiation begins
- The Trump administration is investigating Chinese trade practices
- China modernises its monetary policy
- The Catholic church becomes an impact investor
- Hedge funds try to promote sports betting as an asset class
- A firm that shares a name with its founder earns higher profits
- Why Africa’s development model puzzles economists
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