Kelly Criterion

A formula determining the mathematically optimal bet size to maximize long-term growth.

Risk Management

Definition

The Kelly criterion calculates the fraction of capital that maximizes the logarithmic growth rate of wealth. Full Kelly sizing is theoretically optimal but produces extreme volatility—most practitioners use half-Kelly or quarter-Kelly for smoother returns. The formula requires accurate estimates of win probability and payoff ratio, which are often uncertain.

functions Formula

f* = (bp − q) / b

lightbulb Example

Win probability 55%, payoff ratio 1.5:1 (win $1.50 for every $1 risked). Kelly fraction = (1.5×0.55 − 0.45)/1.5 = 0.25 or 25% of capital. Most traders would use half-Kelly (12.5%) for reduced volatility.

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Warning

Full Kelly sizing can lead to extreme drawdowns. Most successful practitioners use fractional Kelly (25-50%).

verified_user Key Points

  • Maximizes long-term geometric growth rate
  • Full Kelly produces high volatility
  • Half or quarter Kelly preferred in practice
  • Requires accurate probability and payoff estimates

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