SharpEddie47
Market Sharp
- Joined
- Mar 4, 2024
- Messages
- 637
- Reaction score
- 16
- Points
- 18
The serious betting community has largely converged on CLV as the gold standard for measuring skill.
The logic: the closing line represents the most efficient price the market produces. All available information has been incorporated. Sharp money has moved it. The public has adjusted it. What remains is as close to true probability as markets get.
If you consistently get better odds than the closing line you're beating the efficient market. Therefore you have genuine edge.
I've used CLV as my primary validation metric for ten years. My records show consistent positive CLV across meaningful sample sizes. This is the evidence I use when I tell myself the methodology is real.
But I've started questioning the assumptions.
The closing line isn't perfectly efficient. It's shaped by public money and book shading and steam moves that may or may not reflect true probability. The efficient market it represents is an approximation.
And there's a specific problem nobody talks about honestly.
You can beat the closing line consistently by following sharp steam moves rather than independent analysis. The CLV is the same whether you moved with the smart money or found it yourself.
Does that distinction matter. Is CLV measuring skill or measuring proximity to smart money.
The logic: the closing line represents the most efficient price the market produces. All available information has been incorporated. Sharp money has moved it. The public has adjusted it. What remains is as close to true probability as markets get.
If you consistently get better odds than the closing line you're beating the efficient market. Therefore you have genuine edge.
I've used CLV as my primary validation metric for ten years. My records show consistent positive CLV across meaningful sample sizes. This is the evidence I use when I tell myself the methodology is real.
But I've started questioning the assumptions.
The closing line isn't perfectly efficient. It's shaped by public money and book shading and steam moves that may or may not reflect true probability. The efficient market it represents is an approximation.
And there's a specific problem nobody talks about honestly.
You can beat the closing line consistently by following sharp steam moves rather than independent analysis. The CLV is the same whether you moved with the smart money or found it yourself.
Does that distinction matter. Is CLV measuring skill or measuring proximity to smart money.