Quote:
Originally Posted by Youtioo
Sorry, this seemed like a good place to ask this. Let's say I have a standard deal 50/50 w/mu over a month long period with an initial stake of 2g
Scenario 1: we cash out profits weekly
Week 1:hes +3000 and we each take 1500 $
Week 2:-1500
Week 3:+2100 1800$ for me and 300$ for him
Week 4:-500 and ships me back my 1500 left,
My total profit :1300$, his total profit :1800$
Now scenario 2:we split profits at the end of the month for these same 4 weeks, he's +3100 at the end of the month and we each get 1550$
Ive read lots of reasons for letting the horse cash out earlier or not letting him do so but this isn't touched upon. Am I missing something here like he should be paying back the losses with his winnings because in extreme cases, (say he made 500$,the first week and lost each week after) he's walking away with money even though we lost money overall.
Thanks for your feedback and sorry if this was the wrong place to ask this, I'm just frustrated looking for an answer and the last time I asked the answer I received was 'that's the risk of being the backer' which is absolutely ******ed as any backer would know that the profit and losses depend at all on the payout structure.
After posting a question in this thread last year about structuring any deal that includes no make up, I've had time to think about it and think they're usually a pretty bad idea and there's probably a better way to handle it.
I agree with Orange in that, in your deal, he's basically playing makeup free and free rolling week 4.
Before considering how to handle it, it is somewhat important as to what the player was thinking.
It's probably likely that week 4 being a free roll was an unforeseen consequence from which he happened to benefit. In that case, he should be OK with restructuring future deals to avoid this situation.
If he viewed week 4 as just an extra incentive you were aware of, which seems unlikely, then you may need to renegotiate the next time to give up a little higher percentage to get back the 100% MU. If you don't think he's worth anything extra, then perhaps there was no deal to be made in the first place and the mistake is on you but at least you still came out ahead.
If he knowingly viewed this as a hidden incentive that you didn't realize and took advantage of it, it's a bit of an angle shoot on his part and you may need to be more careful when structuring future deals with him in the future.
For those that argue that you made the deal and shouldn't hold it against that player, I'd agree as to holding up your end of the bargain but that doesn't mean that that player didn't just spend some of his own integrity in the process. I'm not saying it was a huge violation of trust or that he's a bad guy for doing it but I wouldn't treat him as a trusted friend either.
Clearly he'll put his interest ahead of your's so to allow them to gamble in spots that benefit them while hurting you is a bad idea.
Trust can be a valuable commodity that many people seem to throw away too easily these days because they feel they are being clever at no cost to themselves but I'd disagree. Especially when they're in the position of needing to be staked in the first place. When they need backing, their integrity should be guarded as much as their own bank roll because clearly one is directly related to the other.
In any case, I don't think structuring in a free roll situation is a very good practice in general for the reasons I gave in my last post. It's basically investing money that creates incentives that can work against your interest and regardless of if that player takes advantage of it or not you want your money creating incentives that align his interest with yours.
On the other hand, allowing the player to hold the stakes plus winnings for an extended period may also test the limits of your trust if you haven't dealt with the player with that kind of money before. A hot streak may mean you're now trusting the player with $10K instead of $2K or you may have better use for that money in the near term to stake another player.
I think a better method would be to settle up each week but hold his share up to $2K as a deposit against the last weeks make up to be returned after any makeup which is the same as you just keeping the deposit and he keeps the stake.
If he doesn't like the idea of you holding $2K of his money for a month, ask him how that's different from him holding your original $2K stake for a month. You're still at risk if he's a net loser but at least he's never benefiting from your losses even in an EV sense.