Archive for the tag 'strategy'

WORLD-WIDE WEB EXCLUSIVE (PLEASE, DO CREDIT “MIDAS ORACLE” FOR THE SCOOP): Here’s what Nigel Eccles drinks when he works on the HubDub mission statement.

Chris F. Masse July 26th, 2008

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What's on Nigel Eccles' desk at HubDub.

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Nigel Eccles:

Quoting HubDub forecasts in news stories about future events will be as common as quoting stock prices in financial stories is today or (in the UK) quoting betting odds for political elections.

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In my view, the only way our good friend Nigel Eccles would succeed would be to get HubDub on television —like our good friend Max Keiser did with the Hollywood Stock Exchange in the end of the 90s.

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Nigel Eccles’ flawed “vision” about HubDub shows that he hasn’t any.

Chris F. Masse July 24th, 2008

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[IMPORTANT NOTE: This present post is critical of one point expressed by Nigel Eccles, but, overall, I like this Scottish guy, and I enjoy HubDub's prediction markets a lot.]

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Nigel Eccles:

Quoting HubDub forecasts in news stories about future events will be as common as quoting stock prices in financial stories is today or (in the UK) quoting betting odds for political elections.

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Nigel,

my good friend,

Quit drinking the Scotch whisky and listen up 2 minutes.

I appreciate the formidable effort you made to start up HubDub and I am delightful its prediction markets are now well traded. In that perspective, HubDub is already a success. And I agree that many HubDub prediction market prices are meaningful.

However, I strongly disagree with the idea that, at one point in the future, the free world’s journalists and bloggers will rush to quote HubDub’s market-generated probabilities. Here’s why.

See, my good Scottish friend, you’re not the first fellow to tackle this problem. A guy named Emile Servan-Schreiber, with another fellow named Maurice Balick, created NewsFutures (a play-money prediction exchange quite similar to HubDub, except that HubDub uses MSR whereas NewsFutures uses CDA) in the year 2000 —at the time most contemporary prediction market people were still drinking their mother’s milk.

For the Midas Oracle readers who are just surfacing from an Afghan cave, Emile Servan-Schreiber is:

a veteran of the prediction market industry; a well educated (PhD) and smart man; a gifted exchange executive, with a very good understanding of Internet usability; a successful entrepreneur (NewsFutures has been profitable for years); the only international prediction market expert (NewsFutures has clients in North-America, Europe, and Asia); the author of 2 academic papers on prediction markets (one of them established the predictive power of the play-money prediction markets); one of the most often interviewed prediction market people; well connected in the Academia (2 prediction market luminaries are on the NewsFutures scientific advisory board); the winner of a bet he made against Justin Wolfers; etc.

In other words, Emile Servan-Schreiber is far from being a moron.

Still, in 8 years of existence, NewsFutures’s prediction market prices have NEVER been quoted (over than occasionally) in the Mediasphere or the Blogosphere.

What makes you think that a cocky Scottish guy will be able to achieve what a smart Frenchman has miserably failed to achieve?

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The answer to Nigel Eccles’ mission statement resides in a collective effort from all prediction market people and organizations to favor the development of prediction market journalism.

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Running prediction markets as an on-going activity would close the loop and help organizations understand earlier where they need to stay or change course to meet the success factors.

Chris F. Masse March 27th, 2008

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Adam Siegel of Inkling Markets:

And if it turns out those factors were indeed key to the success of the strategy, enabling organizations to forecast their progress in meeting them is quite valuable!


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