Casual Articles
#1 in Business Subscribe Email Print

You are here: Home > Business > Business > Business Angles and Sportsbetting

Tags

  • legal
  • person
  • store
  • simple divide
  • stock player

  • Links

  • History of the Computer; Analog or Digital?
  • Top 10 Back to School Furniture Buying Tips
  • Back Pain - Osteoporosis
  • Casual Articles - Business Angles and Sportsbetting

    What Are Some Key Legal Aspects Of Starting A Business?
    When starting up a business, there are some important legal matters that you’ll have to deal with, no matter how much you’d love to just dive in and get started. However, if you neglect these legal steps, you’re going to find that maintaining the business down the road becomes much more diff
    estment is simple. Divide any profit by the amount risked to get it. If you bet $100 on the Colts to cover -3 at -110 versus the Patriots and they do, you have a ROI of 91% for that particular bet:

    $91/$1

    Concrete Restoration Using Water Blasting
    Over time, concrete sidewalks, driveways, parking lots, and other structures will begin to show their age. Cracks, uneven pavement, crumbling, and loose joints are just a few of the visible problems that will occur. This is due to water damage, stress and strain, and the movement of the eart
    Sports betting, like any investment, carries risks and rewards. The parallels between betting on sports and playing the stock market are many. In fact, I would argue that they are exactly the same for all intents and purposes.

    Placing a bet on a team and hoping for a win is no different than buying a particular stock and hoping for a rise in price. There are few differences between sportsbooks and brokerage firms. Both are middlemen who charge you a fee for their services. Both the sports bettor and the stock player are after a return on their investment (profit).

    If a person buys a stock and it falls instead of rises in price, he loses money, or has a negative return on investment. If a sports bettor bets a team to win and that team loses, he also has a negative return on investment.

    Calculating a return on investment is simple. Divide any profit by the amount risked to get it. If you bet $100 on the Colts to cover -3 at -110 versus the Patriots and they do, you have a ROI of 91% for that particular bet:

    $91/$10

    Businesses Become More Socially Concious
    It's a brave new world. Effective management now means more than how you handle your staff. Management also includes how you manage your social reproducibility to others in your community. "There is no way to avoid paying serious attention to corporate citizenship: the costs of failing are s
    nts and purposes.

    Placing a bet on a team and hoping for a win is no different than buying a particular stock and hoping for a rise in price. There are few differences between sportsbooks and brokerage firms. Both are middlemen who charge you a fee for their services. Both the sports bettor and the stock player are after a return on their investment (profit).

    If a person buys a stock and it falls instead of rises in price, he loses money, or has a negative return on investment. If a sports bettor bets a team to win and that team loses, he also has a negative return on investment.

    Calculating a return on investment is simple. Divide any profit by the amount risked to get it. If you bet $100 on the Colts to cover -3 at -110 versus the Patriots and they do, you have a ROI of 91% for that particular bet:

    $91/$1

    Covert Surveillance - Shoplifiting Prevention
    Call them what you will: Loss Prevention, Assets Protection, Security, or Store Detectives. The larger your store, the more you need to protect your assets from shoplifting. Shoplifting costs businesses millions of dollars every year. Protection is important, but if your customers feel li
    ms. Both are middlemen who charge you a fee for their services. Both the sports bettor and the stock player are after a return on their investment (profit).

    If a person buys a stock and it falls instead of rises in price, he loses money, or has a negative return on investment. If a sports bettor bets a team to win and that team loses, he also has a negative return on investment.

    Calculating a return on investment is simple. Divide any profit by the amount risked to get it. If you bet $100 on the Colts to cover -3 at -110 versus the Patriots and they do, you have a ROI of 91% for that particular bet:

    $91/$1

    How to Negotiate Exactly What You Want in a New Office
    If you are looking for a flexible office space plan that won’t keep you locked into a contract for a year or more, the first thing to forget is conventional lease space.You want to focus your search on ‘rental’ office space. Why rental? Because rentals generally offer the most flexibl
    f rises in price, he loses money, or has a negative return on investment. If a sports bettor bets a team to win and that team loses, he also has a negative return on investment.

    Calculating a return on investment is simple. Divide any profit by the amount risked to get it. If you bet $100 on the Colts to cover -3 at -110 versus the Patriots and they do, you have a ROI of 91% for that particular bet:

    $91/$1

    Five Tips for Successful Online Job Hunting
    The Internet has made job hunting online much, much easier for everyone involved. Employers can post their job listings online and search resume databases while job hunters can search the listings and place their resume in online databases. As easy as things have become, it can still be diff
    estment is simple. Divide any profit by the amount risked to get it. If you bet $100 on the Colts to cover -3 at -110 versus the Patriots and they do, you have a ROI of 91% for that particular bet:

    $91/$100 = 91%

    But where ROI really can help you is over the course of many bets. Let’s say you made 50 bets at -110, risking $100 each time, over the course of the NFL season. You won 30 bets and lost 20. Your total investment for the season would be $5000:

    $100*50 = $5000

    Your total profit would be $730:

    ($91*30) - $2000 = $730

    Where $2000 are your 20 losses. This would give you a return on investment of 14.6%:

    $730/$5000 = 14.6%

    Applying ROI to different aspects of your sports betting can reveal many things. It can reveal how good of a handicapper you are and where your strengths and weaknesses lie. It’s most useful, I think, as it relates to money management and how favorites and underdogs affect your bottom line.

    Risking $100 each time, if you make 10 bets on -150 favorites and win sev

    HTTP = HTML link (for blogs, profiles,phorums):
    <a href="http://www.casualarticles.com/article/594/casualarticles-Business-Angles-and-Sportsbetting.html">Business Angles and Sportsbetting</a>

    BB link (for phorums):
    [url=http://www.casualarticles.com/article/594/casualarticles-Business-Angles-and-Sportsbetting.html]Business Angles and Sportsbetting[/url]

    Related Articles:

    New Grads - Welcome!

    A Cleaner Way To Make Money

    No Accidental Business

    Bookmark it: del.icio.us digg.com reddit.com netvouz.com google.com yahoo.com technorati.com furl.net bloglines.com socialdust.com ma.gnolia.com newsvine.com slashdot.org simpy.com shadows.com blinklist.com