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We are inherently risk takers.
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If we don't take risks,
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we don't make money.
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In my seven years reporting for the Wall Street Journal,
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countless traders and investors have brought up the game of poker telling me that
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the game has actually taught them a lot about investing one of the biggest and most
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successful trading firms out there.
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Susquehanna International Group actually uses the game to train its
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traders.
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Yeah,
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I know.
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So this year I decided to learn the game and invited Susquehanna executive
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Todd Simpkin.
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Thanks for having us and Jeremy Ween,
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founder of Moot Point,
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capital management and a long time poker player,
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Jeremy Wein is your champion to the Wall Street Journal studios to play a
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game of no limit.
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Texas hold em.
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The only thing at stake was our pride.
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So let's get started.
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Susquehanna uses poker to train its traders.
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Tell me a little bit about that.
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There are a lot of parallels between poker and trading.
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There's the difference between making the right decision and having the right outcome.
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So even if you made the right decision,
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sometimes you lose and sometimes you make the wrong decision and win both happen at the poker table and in trading,
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you have to get comfortable with the variance in your outcomes.
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Poker has helped you think about risk and how much risk to take in certain
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positions when you're trading.
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Absolutely.
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Absolutely.
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I mean,
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poker came first for me.
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It taught me patience because I was not a patient child and risk management.
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The very first hand of poker that I ever played in no limit in college.
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I had pocket two s which is,
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I was like,
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oh my God,
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I got a pair.
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I thought that was so good.
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When we perceive ourselves as being in the losses,
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we are willing to,
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to do riskier things to get back to even.
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You'll see the same thing in the market where,
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where people will chase losses because they're in the,
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in the mindset of being in the losses and want to get back 100 more
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that 150 I will fold.
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And this is like a 32nd comment on this hand if that is.
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So this would be in my view,
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the equivalent of buying a really inexpensive option.
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I was already in for 50.
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You raise it 100 more in the context of our stacks.
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That's not a lot.
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If I hit my set.
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If I hit another three,
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it's unlikely.
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But if I do more than likely I'm going to win.
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Not just the pot,
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but probably a big pot or at least,
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at least something more than that.
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And if I don't,
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it's just very easy for me to fold.
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And so,
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you know,
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whether it's in an index or in a stock or a currency or whatever,
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you buy a really low,
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a low delta,
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low premium option.
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Um you know,
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again,
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spend a little premium,
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that's your max loss.
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But if things go your way,
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you can really make a lot.
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I like how you put that and an inexpensive option.
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This is what I had.
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Yeah.
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So it was good.
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That was a good buff.
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I thought you were ahead of me.
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Raise a 375.
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I might have an exciting hand here for the first 375
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check in the race six morning.
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So I have hock and kings there.
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And so my,
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that's the kind of hand I thought you had.
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So my thought process was that first of all,
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if you have a hand like pocket tens or jack or queens and we get a low flop,
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I'll get more from you.
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The flop is this which players use to gauge the strength of their hands?
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And also if I re raise there and you have a hand like ace queen and you call and an ace comes on the flop,
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I probably have to fold.
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Maybe I pay one small bet.
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And so again,
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this is kind of a risk reward perspective,
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you know,
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kind of concept is let me keep this quick call,
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pot control.
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Let me keep the pot a little smaller and see what happens.
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Are there parallels between bet sizing and trade sizing?
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To me,
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this is like the two most important things,
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especially between tournament poker and,
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and,
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and,
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uh,
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and trading our patients and bet sizing.
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Right.
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And you know,
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if you've got pocket aces,
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you don't want to have your life savings at risk a 4 to 1 favor because one out of five times you're bankrupt.
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And the same thing goes in trading,
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you can,
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there could be a great trade,
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but I promise you can always go to a warps scene level.
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And so you want to make sure that,
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you know,
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that you're not in a position where if it moves against you more than you think that you
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are,
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you know,
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stopped out,
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you know,
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blowing up whatever you want to call it where,
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you know,
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where you're done.
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If I were to join as a new trader tomorrow,
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fresh out of college,
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what would I go?
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One?
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We'd love to have you.
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We spend a lot of time talking about the basics of poker,
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but importantly,
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in a situation like this,
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we would get to a point where you might have a difficult decision and we'll stop and talk about all the
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things that would factor into that decision.
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But frequently what we have to do in trading and what we have to do in poker is put somebody on a
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hand or put them on a distribution of hands,
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try to figure out what they might be thinking what given the actions that they've taken.
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So,
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if you were to check here,
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um,
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and then I bet.
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What,
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what have you learned about what I have if you bet and I raise,
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you learn something very different about what I have.
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Um,
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and we talk about kind of the value of the information and the quality of the information that you get in a poker
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hand and,
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and in trading.
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And there's certainly some things that are very different in trading and in poker,
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it's not a perfect model,
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but it's a very good model for making decisions wither information.
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If someone's not a good poker player,
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are they fired?
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No.
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Um,
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being a good poker player is a constellation of skills and what we wanna talk about are
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how to improve the skills where they're deficient and how to take advantage of the skills,
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uh where they're strong to make sure that they,
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uh they continue to hone those check.
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Uh I'll bet 100 and 25 on call
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225.
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What are the biggest mistakes?
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You see,
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rookie investors making one of the dangerous things?
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And Jeremy alluded to this earlier is assuming that whatever the current state of the world is,
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is going to be the future state of the world that we're going to continue seeing.
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Well,
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what we've seen with every basis trade that has that has blown up in the history of the markets.
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Right.
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You know,
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you don't have to go back terribly far to get to the
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financial meltdown in the late in the late aughts to see,
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you know,
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the trades between credit default swaps and,
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uh,
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and underlying bond prices,
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which would normally move within maybe two basis points and you would fade the move if it got to five
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basis points and then it blew out to 304 105 100 basis points.
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It was like this is not a normal situation and it is entirely because too many people
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thought that that the tie between these two assets could not be broken
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about 50.
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And what about in poker?
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Because there is so much noise in poker,
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it's really easy to walk away and say that I don't have enough skills to be able to evaluate
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how well I played when I won.
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I must be really good.
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I should keep doing what I was doing.
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And when I lose,
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it's because I got unlucky.
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Like,
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you know,
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I can't believe,
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you know,
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if that club hadn't come,
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I wouldn't have lost all my chips.
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Like,
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well,
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you didn't have to lose all your chips.
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You only lost it because you put in the call after that club game,
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right?
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So the combination of the self serving bias and dunning Kruger effect,
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I think leads people to,
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to not do a good job of critically evaluating their their skills.
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150 they're the best players in the world spend
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the most time,
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you know,
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analyzing their hands and not just because that's how they're improving,
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but they're predisposed to know that they might be doing things wrong and,
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and,
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and,
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and want to improve that and,
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and think about that where it's like the person who just like,
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plays casually and they're sitting at the end of the bar telling about their bad beat,
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they're just less likely to,
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as I said,
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you know,
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less likely to think that that was the reason I love being at a table with people who are talking about their bad beats.
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That's,
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it's such a great indication that,
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that they are not going to take the feedback appropriately from the table.
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What do you mean by that?
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So if they're talking about their bed beats,
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they're saying here's how unlucky I got as opposed to,
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you know,
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maybe I made a mistake.
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They don't have the humility and for the introspection to say,
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you know,
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uh I'll bet 500 to say here,
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here's the feedback from the marketplace that,
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that I was not playing as well as I could have been playing.
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It's not a good use of time because even if they,
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they probably did get a bad beat,
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they probably did get unlucky.
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It happens,
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it happens every single time you sit on a table.
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Uh it's just not gonna,
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it's not gonna benefit you in any way 2000.
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Do you want to hear about my bad beep?
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How do you think about ego at the poker table?
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If someone lacks humility,
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they are going to miss important information.
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I love playing with the big ego player.
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They are going to undervalue you and like,
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and,
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and I want to be undervalued.
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So I really like it when someone thinks that they can push you around because thinking that they can push you around is
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going to expose themselves at times when you want to get more chips in.
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But you also have to be careful because someone,
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you know,
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that person may be less likely to fold,
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even if you,
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you know,
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think that they're bluffing or you have a,
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you know,
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a pretty good hand,
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you may not wanna,
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you know,
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re raise them because they may go all in.
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And so just to be careful with those people and,
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and again,
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if you're taking that information and you're making use of it,
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you're doing,
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you know,
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you're doing the right thing and making use of it doesn't necessarily mean that,
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that you'll be able to take advantage of it right away or,
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or,
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or that you have to,
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that you'll be more aggressive,
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one more path of it.
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It just depends on right.
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It does mean that,
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that you have an opportunity to change the way you play against that person.
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And anytime I have an opportunity to play differently,
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it's because there's an advantage to playing differently.
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And I like that.
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Turn over a bluff,
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please recheck your cards and throw on a bet.
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Let's just say a bluff.
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You're bluffing with the best hand.
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It comes from some sort of cultural underpinnings of the firm,
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which is that we are inherently risk takers at the end of the day.
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If we don't take risk,
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we don't make money.
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It is really easy to play poker and in,
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in a game without a rake,
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in a game without blinds,
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it's really easy to play a poker and never lose,
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which is that you never play a hand,
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right?
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But that is not a really good way to win at playing poker.
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So we are inherently risk takers and importantly,
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in order for us to take risk,
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we have to take risk at the appropriate price,
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whether we're long or short,
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we have to be buying it under its fair value,
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it's expected value or selling it over its expected value.
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And the other thing that really comes out of poker is that in any single session and certainly
00:10:04
in any single hand,
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it is not going to necessarily be the best player that won that hand,
00:10:09
right?
00:10:09
It is entirely,
00:10:11
almost entirely down to the quality of the cards that you have on a single hand.
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There's a little bit that's not in the quality of the cards,
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but for the most part,
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it's the cards.
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So then over the length of a session,
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the cards kind of even out over time.
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But even then you,
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it's the variance that comes from the randomness of the way the cards turn out
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over the course of a lifetime,
00:10:34
a career of playing.
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It is certainly the case that good players come out ahead and bad players have lots of
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excuses about bad beats that they've had lots of stories about why it's not their fault,
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but they ended up not winning.
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Our philosophy is to get our traders to make positive expectancy decisions where they're putting capital at risk
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and getting inappropriate return on it.
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And if we are good at doing the evaluation,
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which is an important part and then good at managing the bank role on
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when,
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when there are big opportunities to,
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to put capital at risk,
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then we're going to come out ahead and are you using that framework in all the different markets
00:11:10
that you guys are at?
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I know you are providing odds to sports books and applying for sports gambling
00:11:15
licenses.
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Um We've talked about how you entered the event contract market.
00:11:19
Is that the same framework for every market or does it vary?
00:11:22
It is absolutely that framework and sometimes there are um
00:11:27
exogenous factors to that we have to consider,
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you know,
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we can lose,
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you know,
00:11:32
X million dollars and that would have an impact on your solvency and your ability to support the markets that you
00:11:36
support.
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So we want to make sure that you limit that Susquehanna has gotten into.
00:11:41
Yes or no bets.
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And you know,
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I think the most popular example is like yes or no.
00:11:46
Will Taylor Swift be the top artist on Spotify this year?
00:11:49
Yeah,
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that's on,
00:11:49
on Calci.
00:11:50
We are providing liquidity on,
00:11:52
on Calci event contract,
00:11:54
binary event contract.
00:11:55
Well,
00:11:55
it's so interesting because we talk about poker and the reason it's some of these skills are
00:12:00
transferable is that it's a game where you have to navigate having incomplete information.
00:12:04
And that's a scenario where it seems like to me,
00:12:06
there's even more incomplete information than there typically is.
00:12:10
So how,
00:12:11
how do you navigate that?
00:12:12
So there is a lot of incomplete information,
00:12:15
but then just like in poker,
00:12:17
there's also a lot of common information.
00:12:18
It is not that hard to see how many concerts she has had
00:12:23
and how many,
00:12:25
yeah,
00:12:25
back out how many unique visitors you think there are to her concerts.
00:12:28
It's not that hard to uh uh to see video clips from the concert and see how many people are singing
00:12:33
along.
00:12:33
In order to sing along.
00:12:34
You have to have heard the song before,
00:12:36
in order to have heard it before,
00:12:37
you must have streamed this couple 100 times,
00:12:40
right?
00:12:40
So it's like,
00:12:40
ok,
00:12:41
we can start figuring out that given when she's released her albums or,
00:12:44
you know,
00:12:44
whatever it might be,
00:12:45
how many people uh have listened to it up to now,
00:12:48
which is again a publicly available figure.
00:12:50
And then we can look at who's expected to release albums over the course of the rest of the year,
00:12:55
how popular they've been historically,
00:12:57
how,
00:12:57
you know,
00:12:57
if they are touring,
00:12:58
you know,
00:12:59
kind of what their tours looks like.
00:13:00
So there's a lot of common information that's available as well.
00:13:04
One thing that,
00:13:04
that doesn't happen in the event space with the Taylor Swift being
00:13:09
number one on the on the charts that does happen in poker is that somebody else
00:13:14
has really relevant nonpublic information
00:13:19
and I'm not saying this in like an insider trading way but Taylor,
00:13:24
no,
00:13:24
no,
00:13:24
I'm saying there's not,
00:13:25
that doesn't happen in that market in that market.
00:13:27
It's not like somebody is sitting there saying I know that Ariana Grande is about to
00:13:32
drop a banger of an album that is guaranteed to be better than Taylor Swift.
00:13:37
That's so interesting.
00:13:38
Hadn't thought of that actually being an advantage rather than a disadvantage.
00:13:42
They are making the best decision that they can with the information that's available and they are doing
00:13:47
it in a way that is going to be efficient with their time.
00:13:50
So it could be that even though this is a fun contract to talk about
00:13:55
that,
00:13:56
the amount of money uh on either side of it on CCI is,
00:13:59
you know,
00:13:59
$8 and we don't want to invest in having somebody,
00:14:04
you know,
00:14:04
read through the lyrics to see if there's something in there that's gonna,
00:14:07
you know,
00:14:07
really give its staying power,
00:14:08
love it,
00:14:13
Jeremy.
00:14:14
When you're in tournaments.
00:14:15
Do you do the sunglasses?
00:14:16
The hat,
00:14:17
I,
00:14:17
I don't think sunglasses do anything.
00:14:18
Uh,
00:14:18
I don't want to be constant,
00:14:19
like reading someone's eyes.
00:14:20
I'm not a big fan of,
00:14:21
I,
00:14:21
I do wear a hoodie that I,
00:14:23
I pull up and at this point it is totally useless.
00:14:25
You probably haven't noticed this because you've been looking down at your cards.
00:14:28
But every time I've been in a hand with you,
00:14:29
I have not looked at the flop,
00:14:31
the flop will still be there after it comes.
00:14:33
I've watched you watch the flop.
00:14:36
I think that I'm going to get less information from Jeremy watching the flop because he's seen more
00:14:41
of them like he's just,
00:14:42
you know,
00:14:42
but I think that I'm going to see and this isn't,
00:14:45
this isn't an assault,
00:14:46
right?
00:14:47
Like this,
00:14:47
like I should be paying attention to the,
00:14:50
the idiosyncratic aspects of the people I'm playing with.
00:14:52
I think that you're more likely to give up information about how you feel about the flop
00:14:57
physically.
00:14:58
When you see it,
00:14:58
then Jeremy will.
00:15:00
So if the two of you were in a hand with me,
00:15:01
I'm gonna watch you and when I'm watching you,
00:15:04
I'm watching you watch the flop,
00:15:06
I get to see your reaction.
00:15:07
So like there are things that you end up being good at without knowing why you're good at them.
00:15:12
Um,
00:15:12
so like it could be that I pick up on something in the eyes and I don't even realize that it's in the
00:15:17
eyes.
00:15:17
But if I don't have that pathway,
00:15:19
then I can't,
00:15:20
I can't have made that decision.
00:15:21
To me.
00:15:22
It's,
00:15:22
it's not as much about,
00:15:23
kind of like quote unquote reading people when you think of that as physical tells as it is about psychology
00:15:27
and,
00:15:28
you know,
00:15:28
some things and for yourself,
00:15:30
I mean,
00:15:30
for me,
00:15:30
the biggest tournament strategy I have is building up a certain image for myself.
00:15:35
And then trying to capitalize on that.
00:15:36
Playing 10 to 20 big blind poker is so important.
00:15:41
You're almost never going to be able to win a tournament without at some point,
00:15:47
I,
00:15:51
you're almost never going to be able to,
00:15:52
to,
00:15:52
to it without being down to 15 or 20 blinds at some point.
00:15:54
And if you panic,
00:15:55
uh that's not good,
00:15:56
but you still have to be taking risks.
00:15:57
You're going to have to pick some spots to,
00:15:59
to,
00:16:00
to go all in and knowing that if you get called,
00:16:01
you will be behind.
00:16:02
Um,
00:16:03
you just have no choice when you,
00:16:03
when you're short of ST and,
00:16:04
and knowing how to do that and when to do that is its own skill.
00:16:08
And I can say personally,
00:16:09
that was a big step function up for me in,
00:16:11
in results.
00:16:12
When I really learned that right around 2017,
00:16:14
I was,
00:16:14
I think a decent poker player before that.
00:16:15
But my live tournament results just got a lot better after I really got better at that aspect of tournament
00:16:20
poker.
00:16:21
Um,
00:16:22
ok.
00:16:25
It's called,
00:16:27
ok,
00:16:34
ch,
00:16:36
and you can use that to your advantage too.
00:16:38
You think that the person with the bigger stack always has the advantage?
00:16:40
But they don't want to be there.
00:16:44
No,
00:16:47
we would have chopped,
00:16:48
we would have chopped.
00:16:49
We're both of a king.
00:16:51
Uh,
00:16:51
10,
00:16:52
9.
00:16:52
Uh,
00:16:52
but,
00:16:53
uh,
00:16:53
but I folded the all in on your,
00:16:55
uh,
00:16:55
on the last one was,
00:16:56
uh,
00:16:56
I was,
00:16:57
I want to know what you had a,
00:16:58
I had a queen jack suited around a big,
00:17:02
yeah,
00:17:02
I know.
00:17:03
But it really good.
00:17:04
Now,
00:17:04
if you wake up with a big hand and do it,
00:17:06
you're more to get called and,
00:17:07
yeah,
00:17:07
exactly.
00:17:07
Right.
00:17:08
Like,
00:17:08
like here,
00:17:08
here's where you're really hoping for pocket kings toward the end of the game.
00:17:13
I started picking up chips and feeling bold.
00:17:15
There are a lot of amateur players against whom I won't bluff because the bluff isn't going to do what I
00:17:20
wanted to do the sooner you realize that the better.
00:17:23
You are.
00:17:27
Cool.
00:17:29
Oh,
00:17:31
there's the kings though.
00:17:32
Yeah.
00:17:35
But my bold bet didn't pay off.
00:17:37
Ok.
00:17:39
I bet all of my chips and ended up losing to Todd who had a full house
00:17:43
that left me with nothing.
00:17:45
But what I learned,
00:17:46
of course,