Opinion
Derivatives and Betting the Ponies
Stock quotes in this article:GS
NEW YORK (TheStreet) -- Growing up in the shadow of Belmont Park, I learned success in finance is much like running a book.
After all, pari-mutuel wagers are derivatives -- contracts to pay contingent on the future value of an asset, namely horse's ability to finish in the money -- win, place or show. Track owners profit from the public's appetite for risk and reward, much as Goldman Sachs (GS) does writing derivatives, called SWAPs, on mortgage backed securities for investors choosing long or short positions on foreclosure rates. Margins are thin for track owners -- ponies are costly to feed and train, and grandstands too expensive, not to mention the acquisitive State of New York, which taxes the betting pool. Then, I quickly learned about synthetic securities. One of my eleventh grade classmates received $50 from her father, when he hit the numbers at Belmont. It seems an enterprising financier with a virtual betting window, off track, took two-dollar wagers on the daily haul at the track. He paid $250 to those correctly picking the last three digits of the total gross, published each day in the Daily News. Wow, I explained to my father, "The bookie pays out 125 to 1 on a bet with 999 to 1 odds, and he has no ponies, track or taxes to pay -- he's getting rich!" Wisely my father replied, "Careful son, bookmaking is illegal and the man does have expenses. He pays for protection to stay out of jail and not get his thumbs broken." Having affection for my hands, I took up something equally questionable -- economics. Long after I distanced myself from the smell of stables -- with a Ph.D. and house in a tonier suburb -- I recognized the connection between the track and derivatives when I viewed the Eddie Murphy 1983 classic "Trading Places." In that gem, Don Ameche and Ralph Bellamy, playing elites on Wall Street, bet they can teach an ordinary ghetto kid commodities trading. Showing him a glass of orange juice, some gold and a few other items, they explain some of their clients think prices will go up and others down, and their firm sells positions in both directions.TheStreet Premium Services
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| Dow Jones | S&P 500 | NASDAQ | 10-Year Note |
|
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 12,393.45 | 1,310.33 | 2,827.34 | 15.81 |
Oil *
101.78
|
|
DOWN
26.41 |
DOWN
2.99 |
DOWN
10.02 |
DOWN
0.44 |
10 Yr
1.58%
SPDR Gold
151.62
|
|
-0.21%
|
-0.23%
|
-0.35%
|
-2.71%
|
Data delayed 20 minutes |


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