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Old 12-01-2007, 11:15 AM
warrantofice warrantofice is offline
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Join Date: Jul 2007
Posts: 463
Default Re: The Ceiling Concept

Interesting argument
'However, your argument to then do something else is short sighted. Garbage Men don't get paid as much as Doctors but they don't go 'I want more money, i'll be a doctor'. Poker Players can't suddenely be good on the stock market. Even if they could they may prefer to dedicate their time to poker as they enjoy it more.'

I am advocating taking there money out of poker and putting it into the stock market. But I don't mean that they should do it themselves. I look at poker as an intellegent way to invest time and money in the hope of making more money. So i think the ultimate goal of a poker player is to take his 10k dollars or whatever and increase that by a percent, with a limit risk of going broke.

If we can assume that is true, then the concept of reaching the top of the market, so that investing your money either becomes to much of a risk or involves to much time without the same reward then you have to look for different avenues to make money. I would suggest that investing in the stock market would be one of them.

I would not suggest that David Benyamine when he had 4 million dollars start to look at stocks all day, however when you have that much capital, good investors and money managers will happily accept your money into their investment pool, and treat it well.

When you have 50k and try to get a money manager/investor you have a much smaller selection because all the best ones are handling large accounts.

This is all obvs. stuff but what i'm trying to say is that...earning a sold profit in poker at 600nl tables with a low chance of going bust-o should be farely easy for an exeptional poker player, however when playing the highest limits there is very very little selection in your games and your either risking to much of your bankroll or to little to see a noticable profit. So when that becomes true, your money is better spent in the hands of a top notch investor, rather then you.

You've basically out-grown poker as a forum of investment.
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