Betting Bank Management: How to Grow Your Money Safely

A football on top of coin stacks, with a profit graph in the background

We're all aiming to do the same thing... achieve financial security for ourselves and our loved ones.

Most people go out and get a job, pay into a pension for many years and hope to have enough money to retire at a reasonable age.

That has worked out well in the past, but as average life expectancy rises and pension funds run out of money, a growing number are starting to look at other options.

The growth in online betting - and particularly exchanges such as Betfair - has opened up new opportunities. Nowadays, it's perfectly possible to trade football for a living (or a second income) which can be literally life-changing when managed correctly.

While profitable football betting is not easy, it's not as impossible as it once was and it starts with betting bank management.

In this article, I am going to show you how to set up your betting bank and keep it safe. I will also explain how to stake properly and how you can grow your bank passively in order to provide financial security for you and your family.


What is a Betting Bank?

A betting bank is an amount of capital that has been set aside exclusively for the purposes of betting and/or trading.

It should never be more than you can afford to lose.

A disciplined trader who employs good bank management is unlikely to ever lose his or her bank, but many who are new to football trading blow a bank or two before the 'light bulb' moment when it all starts to come together.

This is perfectly normal. Trading is damn tough and inexperienced sports traders are often easily tempted into chasing losses, which does nothing but make a bad situation worse.

Think about it... if you hit a large loss, how many profitable trades do you then need just to get back to where you started?

Small losses are acceptable and they are unavoidable. There are various betting websites which will try to convince you that they have some sort of magical betting system which never loses, but that's mathematically impossible. Live in the real world.

Learn to accept small losses and recover steadily with disciplined trading.

Outside of a bank building

Your aim is to increase your bank over time as safely as possible. Set reasonable, long-term targets and break them down into smaller, manageable amounts. Every time you trade, you are working towards your target.

As your bank grows, the 'snowball' effect takes over and things get very exciting! We'll get into that shortly.


How to Build a Betting Bank for Free!

If you don't have a betting bank to get started with, here's a great way to build one.

Many years ago, I blew my bank - as most new traders do! - and I couldn't afford to simply deposit more money into Betfair.

My cousin mentioned that she had been making money from matched betting. I searched online for matched betting sites, signed up to Bonus Bagging and had covered the £30 or so cost within a couple of days.

All my profit from that point on was free!

Within a few months, I had made more than £1,000 profit with very little risk and that was enough to start thinking about Betfair trading again.

These days, there are a number of websites which explain how to take advantage of the best matched betting offers.

You can find plenty of advice online for free, but for the sake of a cheap subscription (which you'll make back very quickly) it's worth joining one of the services. Outplayed is currently the biggest and the best.


Managing Your Betting Bank

Whether you're aiming to trade full-time in the future or simply enjoy a second income, you have to keep your bank safe.

Remember... without a betting bank you cannot bet or trade at all!

Piggy bank with a padlock and chain wrapped around it.

Firstly, separate your betting bank completely from all other funds. As I said right at the beginning, it is an amount of money set aside for the purposes of betting and/or trading and it's much easier to keep track when held in a different bank account.

Most new traders simply deposit their entire betting bank into Betfair, but don't do that! While it's rare to get your account hacked, cyber crime is becoming more of a threat.

You're only ever going to be trading with a small proportion of your bank, so you don't need it all sitting there. With a smaller balance, you'll be less tempted to chase losses too and that's very helpful for inexperienced traders.

No online bookmaker or betting exchange should be holding your entire bank at any time.

It's also a good idea to hold some funds in another exchange, such as Smarkets, in case Betfair suffers an outage and you need to trade out quickly.


How to Calculate Your Betting Stakes

Ok... now we've looked at setting up your bank, let's turn our attention to another aspect of bank management.

One of the most common questions asked by new traders is, "how much should I stake on each trade?".

Man in a superhero costume with a questioning look.

There is no simple answer because everyone has their own risk/reward levels.

However, if you're new to sports betting then it's difficult to stake too little.

Just £2.74 profit every day for a year adds up to £1,000 so you certainly don't need to go crazy. On the other hand, if you stake too much you could hit a bad run and blow your bank, so you definitely need to avoid that!

I suggest dividing your bank into 100pts and that will set the value of 1 point.

For example, a bank of £1,000 is 1,000/100 = £10 per point. For a £500 bank, 1 point works out to be £5 and for a £5,000 bank it's £50 per point.

Of course, if the value of 1 point feels too high then you can divide your bank into 150 points, 200 points or even more until you're more comfortable with larger amounts.

This is a very simple and straightforward way to stake the correct amount and you can reset it at the beginning of each month so that your stake size rises and falls in line with your bank.

When your bank is rising, think very carefully about increasing stakes and do it in small increments. Be cautious.

In order to protect your bank as much as possible, don't risk more than 1 point on a single bet or trade:

  • Back stakes - For back bets you can either use a 1pt stake or adjust the amount so that the potential profit is 1pt. The second option is quite handy as it means you stake less on higher risk bets, which makes sense.
  • Lay stakes - Lay bets work differently in that you must make sure the liability is no more than your maximum loss limit. If the price is under 2.00 you will be able to stake more than 1pt if you wish and still have the maximum loss under control. However, it is similar to a back price being above 2.00 in that it is higher risk.
  • Trading stakes - Trades are different again, in that your maximum risk may be more than 1pt. This is because for many strategies, such as correct score trades, the potential profit is that much more. In many cases, it makes sense to use smaller stakes. You may divide your bank by 100 when placing a bet, but by 200 when trading.

It makes sense to be flexible so that you are always comfortable with the risk/reward.

It's vital that losses do not dent your bank. They're always going to happen, but they should always be manageable amounts. Trade with discipline and chip away at your longer-term profit targets.

If you’re sweating on a late goal, then you’re staking too much.


Staking Plans for Football Trading

Here are some of the more popular staking plans you will come across:

  • Fixed stake – this is where you place the same size stake on each bet, also known as 'level staking'. It is the benchmark to use when testing a new betting system to see if it is profitable or not.
  • Fixed profits staking – this is where you vary your stake dependent on the odds of the selection. It is used to standardise profit so that if the bet wins, the profit remains the same.
  • Percentage staking – this is the one that I have already explained to you, whereby you divide your bank into points. The stake size is a fixed percentage of the bank. A step further for this is by combining it with the 'Kelly Criterion' which optimises stake size in relation to the odds and the perceived edge the system has. Kelly itself is a hybrid of fixed profits and percentage staking.
  • Progressive staking plan – this involves increasing or decreasing your stake size after each bet, depending on whether the previous bet won or lost. The idea is to regain losses more quickly or enhance gains when on a winning run. The 'Martingale' and 'Pyramid' systems are in this band of loss chasers. Do not get sucked in! A run of losses will mean stakes of four figures very quickly and is a certain bank buster.

A common mistake for inexperienced traders is to believe that doubling their stake after a loss will get them out of trouble. That may happen sometimes, but it only takes one losing run to blow a bank.

The mathematical principles behind such 'loss recovery' staking plans as Martingale do not add up and they are dangerous.

For example, if you stake £10 per bet and double that stake after each loss, by the time you get to 10 losses in a row you will be staking more than £5,000 just to get your original £10 back. That's insanity!

A pair of scissors cutting the word "RISK" in half.

We all take risks when trading, but they have to be sensible and well-managed. Whenever possible, it makes sense to cut risk and not add to it.

Stick with simple, sensible staking and concentrate on your long-term profit target.

Our 'Goal Profits Academy' football trading course covers bank management in more detail.


The Power of Compounding

If you make 10 points profit each month, you will be a very successful football trader.

How? It's called 'compounding' and this is exactly how it works:

  • Month 1: You start with a bank of £1,000 and divide it into 100pts. The value of 1pt is £10 and when you hit your target of 10pts profit by the end of the month, your bank stands at £1,100.
  • Month 2: You once again divide your bank into 100pts which means that now the value of 1pt is £11. You hit your 10pts profit target again and your bank stands at £1,210.
  • Month 3: 1pt is now worth £12.10 and hitting your 10pts profit target grows your bank to £1,331.
  • Month 4: 1pt is worth £13.31 and your bank grows to £1,464.10 when you hit your profit target of 10pts.

And so it continues, month after month...

  • Year 1: By the time you reach the end of year one, your £1,000 bank has become £3,138.43
  • Year 2: At the end of year two it is up to £9,849.73
  • Year 3: After just three years, your £1,000 bank has now grown into £30,912.68

That's incredible bank growth, yet 10pts profit per month is a very achievable amount working out at roughly 0.33pt per day. If you have a £1,000 trading bank, that's just £3.30!

Of course, nobody wants to trade every day. There will be days on which there are no trades strong enough to risk money on, so let's assume you trade on a Friday, Saturday, Sunday and one midweek evening too. In order to make 10pts profit each month, you need to make an average of 0.63pt each time you trade.

So £6.30 profit, 4 days per week from a £1,000 bank... do you think you can do that?

At Goal Profits, we show you exactly how to do it... click here to start your membership.

Red marker pen changing the word "impatient" to "patient"

Your biggest enemy is impatience. Stick to 10pts per month and don't be tempted to push your luck. If you give in to temptation, you may well spiral out of control and blow your bank. Don't do it.


Financial Freedom

You can achieve financial freedom... everyone can.

You don't need to get lucky and invest in the next Google or Facebook, all you need is some income and time. That's it. Einstein declared that compound interest is the 'Eighth Wonder of the World' and he's absolutely right!

Once you learn how how to trade football and you're making consistent profits, your bank will compound into an amount too large for Betfair. You'll find yourself trading with a small percentage of it while the rest sits around, being eaten away by inflation.

This is when you put your bank to work in other ways so that it is continuing to grow.

Say you have a £10,000 bank and you're trading at £100 per point. How much of your bank do you need in Betfair? £500? Even on a busy day you're not going to need that much, so you'll be quite comfortable. It leaves £9,500 to put to work.

Perhaps you put £1,500 in an instant access savings account, just in case you need it. That still leaves another £8,000.

You can look around at other investments, mainly safe and steady earners, so that your money is doing something.

Just think, if that £9,500 returns an average rate of 5% interest over the year, you've made £475 (4.75pts) just by being smarter than the average football trader and that's what it's all about; taking advantage wherever you possibly can.

Whatever you choose to invest in, do something. Rather than have money laying around doing nothing, put it to work.

Even if it grows at 5% per year, then 5% on top of that, 5% again and so on, you will have the compounding benefit working for you and the growth will accelerate for no extra effort.

Albert Einstein quote: Compound interest is the 8th wonder of the world

Financial freedom is well within reach.

Thanks to football trading and sensible investing, I am well on the way to financial security and early retirement. I don't need to go into details, but I am mortgage-free and I have an investment portfolio which compounds by itself.

The beauty of trading football for a living is that you are in control. You have more time to spend enjoying life and more income to save and invest. You really couldn't ask for any more.

Steve Brown

About the author

I'm the founder of Goal Profits and creator of our Team Stats research and trading tools.

Since 2011, I have been sharing my football trading experience with Goal Profits members.

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