Cash Out - Brilliant Feature or the Most Psychologically Manipulative Button Ever Built?

FadeThePublic

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I want to make a specific claim and see who disagrees.

Cash Out is mathematically almost never the correct decision and is psychologically almost always tempting.

That gap between mathematical correctness and psychological pull is not an accident. It is the product.

The Cash Out price is always less than the fair market value of your position. Always. The operator takes a margin on the settlement the same way they take a margin on the original bet. In practice the effective house edge on a Cash Out can be significantly higher than on the original bet.

So every time you Cash Out you are accepting a price worse than fair value to escape uncertainty.

The escape from uncertainty is what you're buying. The operator is selling certainty. Certainty is expensive.

The question is whether the certainty is ever worth the price.

My position: almost never mathematically. The fact that I've still used it anyway is the relevant data point.
 
I use Cash Out constantly and I'm going to defend it.

Not the math. I know the math is bad.

The feeling of watching a four-leg parlay sitting three legs in with the fourth leg in progress is almost unbearable.

I've got $180 available to Cash Out. The final leg needs to land to pay $400. The game is 70 minutes in and my team is up but not safe.

The $180 is certain. The $400 is not certain.

I usually Cash Out.

And every single time I do it I feel relief before I feel anything else.

Not disappointment that I took less. Relief that it's over.

That relief is real. The value I get from that relief is real.

The math says I made a mistake. My nervous system says I did the right thing.
 
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