In most cases I refer to any investment where the probable outcome is unknown, or not knowable, as gambling.
Huh, I would have thought the opposite.
If I gamble(bet) on an event, I know the exact payout(ROI). i.e. Roulette 22 Black pays 35 to 1 give or take.
When investing, the payout might be expected but by no means predictable. The ROI is not determined until you are no longer invested.
Hmm. Good point. My previous statement is obviously incorrect for the reason you state. Perhaps it is the opposite.
Gambling = unsure bet
Investing = (probably) sure bet
Roulette strikes me as pure gambling. Each round has the exact probability of each previous round, so there is no additional insight gained by the "skill" of the player. I would be more likely to place a bet on how much the gentleman in the cowboy hat w/ a scotch is going to lose tonight
Blackjack, unless the deck is shuffled each hand, presents additional potential insight which may increase the player's odds beyond the expected house advantage, as well as rules of play that may increase or decrease the player's odds and are used according to the player's skill. I don't feel like I'm gambling at all while I play blackjack. I have the potential to mitigate risk by means of knowing previous hands and choosing betting strategies, and using tools like dealer blackjack insurance. I rarely do worse than breakeven playing blackjack.
I played blackjack at an online casino once. That felt like gambling. The odds appeared to be stacked against me in an exceptionally unknowable way - there was no apparent way to calculate the odds, and therefore there was no way at all to mitigate risk in the game. No blackjack skills seemed to play any part whatsoever, and the game seemed more like the roulette wheel. The only sure bet in this case was that the casino would remove all my money if I did not leave.
Slot machines? Gambling. Slot machines played at the correct rate to get free drinks? Investment
The slot has the exact same probability on each pull. This (IMO) make this a gamble.
- because the probability is the same on each pull, the ROI is
not knowable.
- to argue that if one plays longer, the odds are averaged and the ROI becomes knowable is a Gambler's Fallacy
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gambler's_fallacy However,
The rate at which you'll be served drinks while playing is (basically) constant - it is predictable based on knowledge (of the casino, waitress, business practices, or any such things)
-I can now apply my skill by limiting my pull rate on the slot in order to receive free drinks, and approximate the
knowable ROI. This makes this an investment.
In the blackjack example, if I take a beginning player, with only rudimentary knowledge of the game, who has not memorized the odds of each type of hand, and essentially remove the possibility of skill from the game, this now seems like gambling again.
EDIT:
Would you sell CDS built on "First Pirate Saving" and "TyGrr-whatever" bond ?
+1