The Physics of Wall Street: a brief History of Predicting the Unpredictable
part of the money for the casino trip
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part of the money for the casino trip. It took about a month, but at last Kimmel was convinced that thorp’s system worked — and that thorp had what it took to use the system in a real casino. thorp decided that $100,000 was too much and insisted on working with a smaller sum — $10,000 — because he thought gambling with too much money would attract unwanted at- tention. Kimmel, meanwhile, thought that Las vegas was too high profile, and besides, too many people knew him there. So over MIt’s spring break, thorp and Kimmel, who was once again accompanied by a pair of young women, descended on reno to test thorp’s system. 90 • t h e p h y s i c s o f wa l l s t r e e t Beating the Dealer • 91 It was a resounding success. they played, moving from casino to ca- sino, until they developed a reputation that moved faster than they could. In just over thirty man-hours of playing, thorp, Kimmel, and Hand collectively turned their $10,000 into $21,000 — and it would have been $32,000 if Kimmel hadn’t insisted on continuing to play one evening after thorp announced he was too tired to keep counting. thorp would later tell the story — with Kimmel’s name changed to Mr. X and Hand’s to Mr. Y — in a book, Beat the Dealer, that taught readers how to use his system to take vegas to the cleaners themselves. thorp developed several methods for keeping track of how the odds in blackjack change as cards are played and removed from the deck. Using these systems, thorp was able to reliably determine when the deck was in his favor, and when it was in the house’s favor. But suppose you are playing a game of blackjack, and suddenly you learn that the odds are slightly in your favor. What should you do? It turns out that blackjack is extremely complicated. to make the problem tractable, it’s better to start with a simpler scenario. real coins come up heads and tails equally often. But it’s possible to at least imag- ine (if not manufacture) a coin that is more likely to come up one way or the other — for now, suppose it’s more likely to come up heads than tails. now imagine you’re making bets on coin flips with this weighted coin, against someone who is willing to pay even money on each flip, for as many flips as you want to play (or until you run out of money). In other words, if you bet a dollar and win the bet, your opponent gives you one dollar, and if your opponent wins, you lose one dollar. Since the coin is more likely to come up heads than tails, you would expect that over the long run money will tend to flow in one direction (yours, if you consistently bet heads) because you’re going to win more than half the time. finally, imagine that your opponent is willing to take arbitrarily large or small bets: you could bet $1, or $100, or $100,000. You have some amount of money in your pocket, and if it runs out, you’re sunk. How much of it should you bet on each coin flip? one strategy would be to try to make bets in a way that maximizes the amount of money you could stand to make. the best way to do this would be to bet everything in your pocket each time. then, if you win, you double your money on each flip. But this strategy has a big prob- lem: the coin being weighted means that you will usually win, not that you’ll always win. And if you bet everything on each flip, you’ll lose everything the first time it comes up tails. So even though you were trying to make as much money as possible, the chances that you’ll end up broke are quite high (in fact, you’re essentially guaranteed to go broke in the long run), with no chance to make your money back. this scenario — where your available funds run out, and you’re forced to accept your losses — is known as “gambler’s ruin.” there’s another possibility — one that minimizes the chances of going broke. this is also a straightforward strategy: don’t bet in the first place. But this option is (almost) as bad as the last one, because now you guarantee that you won’t make any money, even though the coin is weighted in your favor. the answer, then, has to be somewhere in the middle. Whenever you find yourself in a gambling situation where you have an advan- tage, you want to figure out a way to keep the chances of going broke to a minimum, while still capitalizing on the fact that in the long run, you’re going to win most of the bets. You need to manage your money in a way that keeps you in the game long enough for the long-term benefits to kick in. But actually doing this is tricky. or so it seemed to thorp when he was first trying to turn his analy- sis of card-counting odds into a winning strategy for the game. fortu- nately for thorp, Shannon had an answer. When thorp mentioned the money management problem to Shannon, Shannon directed thorp to a paper written by one of Shannon’s colleagues at Bell Labs named John Kelly Jr. Kelly’s work provided the essential connection between information theory and gambling — and ultimately the insights that made thorp’s investment strategies so successful. Kelly was a pistol-loving, chain-smoking, party-going wild man from texas. He had a Phd in physics that he originally intended to use in oil exploration, but he quickly decided that the energy industry had little appreciation of his skills, and so he moved to Bell Labs. once he was in new Jersey, Kelly’s colorful personality attracted plenty of attention in his staid suburban neighborhood. He was fond of firing plastic-filled bullets into the wall of his living room to entertain house- 92 • t h e p h y s i c s o f wa l l s t r e e t |
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