THE TURTLES STORY
By Russell Clarke (rcbetting@gmail.com)
Published courtesy of www.SmarterSig.com
In 1984 a man called Richard Dennis had a wager with his financial trading partner, William Eckhardt, that he could train a selected number of people (later to be termed The Turtles) to trade profitably in the financial marketplace, with no prior financial trading experience. It was a classic Nature v Nurture experiment. Over a thousand people responded to simple classified advertisements placed in The International Herald Tribune, Barrons and The Wall Street Journal. From these, around 40 were interviewed and a dozen or so were initially chosen.The Turtles were given just two weeks training and were then allowed to trade with real money, strictly following the relatively simple systems and rules taught them by Dennis and Eckhardt. This story is almost folklore in financial circles, albeit a little cultish. The systems they were taught were simple and took up very little of each day. They traded at simple desks in a non-descript office where the most used piece of equipment was a ping-pong table!The Turtles were “trend-following” traders. Trend followers wait for a market to move and then follow it. The aim is to capture the majority of a trend, either up or down. The doyen of trend followers was Richard Donchian, as far back as 1960, he encapsulated the philosophy into a brief rule, “When the price moves above the high of the previous two weeks, cover your short positions and buy. When the price breaks below the low of the two previous weeks, liquidate your long position and sell short.”
The Turtles themselves entered markets on breakouts. For example, if a contract made a 55 day breakout (ie higher than at any time in the past 55 days), it was a buy. Similarly, if it broke to the downside they would sell. They were buying rising markets and selling falling markets….the age old wisdom of “buy low and sell high” turned on it’s head! The Turtles also used a shorter term breakout system that operated over 20 days. Each turtle was allowed to use either system or both or any mixture of the two.
In terms of staking, the Turtles were taught about risk management and how much to risk on each trade. This was done by calculating the daily volatility in each market. Again it was a relatively simple calculation. Given this, it is perhaps surprising to note the differences in returns made in that first year by the Turtles. Jim Melnick produced an outstanding +102% in 1984, wheras Liz Cheval managed a loss of -21% over that same, initial 12 month period.
The story itself is a fascinating one and I cannot do it justice in such a short article, but the result was that Dennis was proven correct as a number of the Turtles went on to take their place among the most successful traders on Wall Street over the following three decades.
How does this relate to betting? My interest has always been in the utilisation of systematic, objective, non-discretionary applications (exactly as The Turtles were taught) to betting, whether it be horse-racing, sports or financials. As a boy, I was both fascinated and perplexed, in equal proportions, by The Sporting Life Naps Table. Each year less than 20% of the full-time racing journalists in the competition, ever managed a level stake profit, and, every year it was a different 20%! Their results looked completely random. The conclusion that screamed at me was that fundamental/subjective analysis of form (as practiced by virtually every racing journalist) was very difficult to profit from, and, individuals, over a lengthy period of time are just not suited to profiting from their own opinion.
Given this, why is fundamental/subjective analysis of form, going, distance, trainers, so popular? Because most people know no other way? Because we need to feed our ego (ie my opinion is superior to your opinion)? Because it seems the most logical thing to do? Probably it is a mixture of these reasons and maybe others that I have not considered.
Returning to the financial world where information is available 24/7 and is far more public than in sports betting, I researched the published results of the most successful funds. To eradicate luck and optimisation, I looked for exceptional performance over a lengthy period of time. I chose 20 years to cover bull and bear markets and a myriad of economic conditions. I settled on 20%+ pa average returns over the 20 years. Unsurprisingly, with the bar set so high, only 7 funds qualified.
Name of Fund Inception Average Return
Eckhardt Trading Co 1990 22.34%
Hawksbill 1988 22.11%
ECM Capital Man. 1987 21.75%
MJ Walsh & Co 1985 21.14%
Blenheim GL 1986 22.06%
Tudor BVI Global 1986 20.67%
Berkshire Hathaway 1965 20.30%
Of these 7 funds, 4 are systematic investing funds. The definition of systematic would be “rule based trading”. One of the others (Paul Jones Tudor) certainly uses a systematic approach, even if it is not strictly rule based. And, of course, Berkshire Hathaway is the investment vehicle of Warren Buffet! That more than half of this most exclusive league table is made up of systematic investing funds is even more remarkable when you know that less than 1% of all funds available worldwide operate on a systematic basis.
So, why does an objective approach achieve superior results to a subjective one? The major reason is Psychology. The brain isn’t the rational, calculating machine that we like to believe. Over it’s evolution it has developed many shortcuts, biases and downright bad habits. Some of these would have helped early humans (fight or flight etc), but they create problems for us today. In addition, some of the brain’s flaws may result from socialization rather than instinct, As a result of both nature and nurture, the brain can be a deceptive guide for rational decision making.
The brain’s inadequacies have been rigorously studied by social scientists. In my world of economics and investment, Behavioural Economists question the basic assumption of human beings as rational decision makers. They are correct to do so because the evidence is overwhelming. The insights presented here, primarily from the world of finance, are equally relevant to sports betting. Investments are no more than bets on the financial markets and sports bettors can learn plenty from the, more sophisticated, financial world.
OVERCONFIDENCE
Our brains are programmed to make us feel overconfident. This has been tested in numerous studies. For example, people were asked to guess the weight of a London Double Decker Bus, but rather than a precise figure, give a range within which they were 90% confident they had the correct answer. Time and again, they fell into the trap of quoting too narrow a range and thus missing the correct answer. Most of us are unwilling to reveal our ignorance by specifying a very wide range. We prefer to be precisely wrong than vaguely correct.
Overconfidence in our own abilities spills over into over-optimism. This can have dangerous consequences when developing strategies, as these are based on what may happen and, too often, an unrealistically precise and over-optimistic estimates of uncertainties.
MENTAL ACCOUNTING
This term was first coined by a pioneer of Behavioural Economics called Richard Thaler. He defined Mental Accounting as “the inclination to categorise and treat money differently, depending on where it comes from, where it is kept, and how it is spent.” For example, a gambler who loses his winnings, typically feels he hasn’t really lost anything, despite the fact he would have been richer had he stopped when he was ahead.
STATUS QUO BIAS
Nothing to do with Francis or Rick! In a classic experiment conducted by Samuelson and Zeckhouser, students were given a hypothetical inheritance. Some were given the inheritance in the form of a low risk profile portfolio, others were given it in the form of a high risk profile protfolio. Both sets showed a reluctance to change the allocation. The rational choice would have been to re-balance the portfolios, but the students largely chose not to change. The fear of changing comes from aversion to loss.
A similar bias is the Endowment Effect, which is an irrational desire to hang on to what you own. To demonstrate this, Thaler gave students a mug emblazoned with their University Logo. On average, the students demanded $5.25 before they would sell. However, students without the mug were only willing to pay $2.75 to acquire one.
Both the Status Quo Bias and the Endowment Effect make for poor decision making.
ANCHORING
A well known bias. Present the brain with a number and ask it to make an estimate of something completely unrelated, the estimate will be anchored by the original number.
The classic example of this is, write down the last 3 digits of your phone number. Now estimate the date that Genghis Khan died. Done that? Any correlation? Is your estimate of the date he died a 3 figure number? He died in 1227, but most will have estimated a year with just 3 digits!
Anchoring can be seen in price negotiations (buyer starts low, seller starts high), or advertising a retail price. Fund managers advertise past performance, and, despite the fact that there is very little correlation between past performance and future performance, it is anchored in the consumers mind.
Related to Anchoring is the need for really statistically robust numbers for predicting the future. A great example is Equities. Anyone looking at the 1980′s and 1990′s would have a double digit per annum return firmly anchored. But the noughties have brought a negative return! And the 60′s and 70′s returned a miserable 2%pa. Double digit returns have been achieved in only 4 of the past 13 decades. So beware of a mere 20 year track record!!
SUNK COST
Otherwise known as “throwing good money after bad”. Why do we do it? Loss aversion is the broad answer and the current trend for “kicking the can down the road” by the governments of the world is a classic example. Bailing out countries such as Greece (that can never repay their debts) is deemed preferable to accepting the inevitable loss today.
On a more personal level, you buy shares in ABC for £1, but the price falls to 70p….do you accept the loss? For most people, the answer is “no”, indeed Anchoring kicks in (ie you may sell if the price recovered to £1…despite the fact at £1 you originally felt the share was a buy).
HERDING INSTINCT
The desire to conform to the opinions and behaviour of others is a fundamental human trait and an accepted principle of psychology. We don’t mind being wrong, if everyone else is also wrong! To quote Warren Buffet, “as a group, lemmings may have a rotten image, but no individual lemming has ever received bad press”
For punters, the herding instinct is difficult to resist. Give yourself half a chance, and, stop reading the Racing Post!
FALSE CONSENSUS
The tendency to over-estimate the extent to which others share your views or beliefs. This happens for a number of reasons; Confirmation Bias is the tendency to seek out opinions and facts that support your own beliefs (readership of newspapers with a certain political bias is a good example). Selective Recall is the habit of only remembering facts and experiences that reinforce our assumptions. Biased Evaluation is the quick acceptance of evidence that supports your own hypothesis, whilst reserving rigorous analysis for any contrary opinion. Finally, Groupthink is the pressure to agree with others in team based cultures.
False Consensus is a very dangerous psychological trait, in either financial investments or betting.
An awareness of the brains flaws and psychological traits can be a major factor when attempting to be successful in any form of investment/betting. The human brain itself makes it unsuitable as a primary tool for financial analysis. Therefore attempting to profit from betting using a subjective approach, whilst emotionally satisfying when proven correct, is fraught with dangers and difficulties that can be circumvented if one adopts and maintains a 100% objective, rule based approach.
Russell Clarke is a long serving professional sports gambler and hedge fund manager. He runs the horse racing betting advisory service RCBetting contactable at rcbetting@gmail.com.





{ 7 comments… read them below or add one }
Great read, a lot of stuff that i’ve come across in other formats (check out Steve Wards, Betting to Win).
I’ve long been of the opinion that doing the form is a full time job, my brother and I have a small bet every Saturday where we go after either a quaddie or a few trifecta & first fours. We each pick a few horses as selections, I use my various subscription services such as Champion Picks, he studies the form for a couple of hours on Saturday morning and listens to Sky racing presenters………we haven’t won a decent exotic in over 18 months!!!!
Unfortunatly my brother consistantly loses while I am steadily growing my bank (despite the Saturday exotics) He’s the classic mug, he loves all-up’s as he says ‘if you win the first leg your playing with their money, odd’s on look on is another of his favorites. Iv’e shown him my results and the ratings but to no avail, he definatly falls into the Herding catagory that and taking advice from your little brother which is just not possible.
Bless him though, it’s him and mugs like him which help me to stay in profit.
That’s funny about your brother. It’s very hard to change an opinion someone’s had for 30 years or so.
Wow, loved this article. I see I need to be more objective when it comes to my betting, rather than subjective.
Not being particularly excited about horse racing, I don’t tend to be that interested in betting on the horses.
However, having spent the last few years looking at MLB, and noticing a few trends coming through in that time, I have been keeping a tab on my picks this year (not betting them myself, but what I would bet if I do), and have been hitting over 75% with my picks. I feel I am being more objective with these picks, rather than subjective. Which I find fascinating.
Anyways, thanks again for a great article. Has made me think. And maybe I should get in to horse racing a little more. Given that I don’t like it that much, maybe I am more likely to be objective, rather than subjective.
Andrew if you can make a long term profit on MLB then you’re doing very well because that is a very efficient market. The lines are spot on.
Regarding horse racing, there are a handful of successful punters that take a very objective approach but the really successful ones use a ‘base’ method that is purely objective and then add their own analysis/experience/instincts to determine the best betting opportunities.
Agreed on MLB betting. In my extremely un-professional punting opinion, MLB betting is the most difficult. I am a long time baseball fan and did play a number of years in the US, and with a 162 game MLB schedule, there is just so much variance day-to-day that I have never been able to stay on top of. The very best teams will lose to the very worsts teams fairly regularly (simply because of the number of games being played) and this makes finding good odds difficult. (Which, isn’t suprising as it is just as difficult to set odds given the uncertainty of each game for bookmakers.) Having said that, with the exception of the ponies you won’t find a sport you can bet more frequently on!!
I would be very interested to learn more about some of the various successful objective rating approaches. I’ve always believed you need a systematic way of betting (ie amount spent on each bet), but no such thing exists for what you actually bet on.
I believe all ratings systems are subjective because somewhere someone has to make an assessment. If not, then most ratings system would agree.
Therefore I try to objectively find the best horses in the race under certain criteria, then decide why
one of the best horses cannot win.
The only place systematic judgements apply are in the staking/risk management applied. Unlike the stockmarket where you can apply a stop loss to protect your capital at 98% and about 98% of the time.( Market might take your position past your stop loss.) In betting you either win or lose. You risk your entire bet every time.
Betting exchanges changed that with their ability to bet and lay the same horse.
Either way discipline in betting is the best way. Ever been to an auction and seen someone pay new price for a 2nd hand piece of junk. That is emotion taking over the bank balance.
You’re right David and a fully computerised ratings system is only good up to a certain point. Even the great Dom Beirne over-rides the prices his super computer spits out, but at least they are a very good starting point for this analysis.
And I couldn’t agree more about discipline. It may be boring to talk about and live by, but without it you are dead in the water.