Your Bankroll is Your Friend
The biggest mistake that you can make
in poker is to not practice solid money management. The most
fundamental part of money management is "playing within your poker bankroll".
This refers to playing at stakes where, if you go on a losing run, you will
NOT lose all of the money that you have to play with.
Before we get into a more in depth
discussion of how to figure out what your bankroll should be, let's look at
a very simple example of why your bankroll is critically important.
Imagine that you have a coin.
One side is heads, while the other is tails. Someone has offered you
the following proposition. They will allow you to flip that coin...as
many times as you would like as long as you still have money...and when the
coin comes up heads...they will allow you to keep your coin and give you an
additional $1.10...when it's tails, you lose $1.
So half the time you will make 110% on
your toss...the other half you lose 100%. The net expected value of
this proposition is 5% in your favor
You have $1...should you accept the
proposition? $100? $1,000?
If you accept this proposition with
just $1 to your name, the chances are very good that you will go broke.
There's actually a 50% that you will lose all of your money on the first
toss! And even if you win, there's a 25% that you will lose all but $.10 on
the next two tosses. If you have $1 only to start, there is a great
chance that you will end up broke within the first 20 tosses.
If you start this proposition with
$100, there is a 0% chance that you will go broke in 20 tosses. And
with a net expected profit of $.05 per toss, you would expect to be
positive $1. (That assumes 10 head tosses and 10 tail tosses, which is
a big assumption).
If you start with $1,000 you are even
more comfortable that the math underlying this proposition will come out in
your favor. This is the value of having bankroll in it's simplest form.
When faced with an opportunity where you have an edge, the bankroll allows
you to act without fear of going broke. Even if you are a winning player, to play outside of your bankroll, is to
take on too much risk.
So how big should your bankroll be?
Most poker players will track their
performance using big bets/hour (BB/H). A Big bet is the larger of the
two bet amounts in a limit game. For example, in a $3/$6 limit game,
the big bet is $6. In No Limit games, an hourly rate is sometimes used
instead of big bets/hour...but you can also track it by big bets by doubling
the value of the big blind.
Bankrolls are thus calculated as a
multiple of big bets. Most experts claim that a winning player should
have a bankroll of approximately 300 times the big bet for the stakes that
they are playing. The mathematical derivative for this estimate is
below for those interested in seeing it.
Given all of that, the following table
gives a general guideline to use for determining bankroll requirements at the various
levels of poker.
|
Little Bet |
Big Bet |
Conservative Play |
Aggressive Play |
|
$.50 |
$1.00 |
$250 |
$300 |
|
$1.00 |
$2.00 |
$500 |
$600 |
|
$2.00 |
$4.00 |
$1,000 |
$1,200 |
|
$3.00 |
$6.00 |
$1,200 |
$1,800 |
|
$4.00 |
$8.00 |
$1,600 |
$2,400 |
|
$5.00 |
$10.00 |
$2,000 |
$3,000 |
|
$10.00 |
$20.00 |
$4,000 |
$5,000 |
|
$15.00 |
$30.00 |
$6,000 |
$7,500 |
|
$20.00 |
$40.00 |
$8,000 |
$10,000 |
|
$30.00 |
$60.00 |
$12,000 |
$15,000 |
|
Aggressive play requires a bit larger
bankroll because it is, by its very nature, a more volatile type of play
resulting in bigger swings of the bankroll. Bankroll requirements
decrease at higher limits because you should have developed better skill at
poker at these levels. If you find yourself losing money at an
uncomfortable rate at a higher level of poker, drop back down and rebuild.
It may be that you just had an unlucky run. Use Poker Tracker, Poker
Office, the Party Poker Hand Replayer, or your own notes to go back and
analyze your play.
Aside from that, your goal is to
steadily increase in stakes as your bankroll steadily increases. Pay
attention to the health of your bankroll and it will last you a lifetime.
Do The Math and
find YOUR optimal poker bankroll
There is a more
precise, mathematical way to calculate how large your bankroll
should be for a given level of stakes. In order to use
this method, you must already know something about your
performance when playing poker. Specifically, you need to
know your hourly win rate. It would also be ideal to know
your standard deviation from this win rate, but since that is
too tedious for most people to calculate, we'll use 10 times the
win rate as an estimate.
Bankroll needed = -(SD^2/(2*HWR))*ln(risk aversion)
SD = standard deviation of win rate (10 times win rate is a good
estimate)
HWR = Hourly Win Rate
ln = natural log function
Risk Aversion = represents your willingness to accept risk.
.1 corresponds to a 10% chance that you will go bust if you use
the bankroll suggested.
As an example:
Hourly win rate of 2 Big Bets (at $10/$20) = 40
SD = 400
Risk Aversion = 10%
- ((400*400)/(80)) * ln(.1) = $4,605
This means that with a bankroll of $4,605, there will be a 10%
chance that a player with these attributes will lose their
entire bankroll.
If you had a 5% willingness to lose your whole bankroll, you
would need a starting bankroll of: $5,991 (It's not
an accident that this is approximately 300 times the BB at
the $10/$20 stakes. This is where the 300x the big bet
figure comes from.)
|