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General election betting: latest odds and activity oddschecker 11:05 - Dec 11 with 434 viewsTommyparker

Labour are creeping into the betting, but the Tories continue to dominate.
Most seats The Conservatives continue to dominate perhaps the most important market for this general election, remaining massive odds-on favourites to win most seats. At the time of writing (10/12/2019), the Tories are 1/20 to take the most seats following Thursday's vote, with Labour priced at 14/1.
Overall Majority again, the Tories continue to hold odds-on favouritism for a Conservative majority, but in the last 24 hours, a flurry of bets have been placed on ' no overall majority'. The Conservatives are priced at 1/3 to obtain majority sought after by Johnson, with no overall majority priced at 3/1. A Labour majority is looking increasingly unlikely at 28/1, or to equate that into a percentage, just a 3.4 chance

Government after the general election this is where it gets a little bit interesting. Despite the Tories being priced at 1/3 to obtain a majority government, the money this morning is coming for a Labour minority, in the last hour, 48 of all bets have backed a Labour minority. That's caused bookies to cut odds on both that and the Labour party forming an alliance with the SNP, which has been cut from 25/1 into as short as 9/1. Oddschecker projections using data from every bookmaker on the Oddschecker grids, we scraped the favourite in each of the 650 constituencies. Our projections currently have the Conservatives favorite in 352 different constituencies, which would be enough for a overall majority. When looking at Labour, our projections have them winning 212 seats this election, with the SNP set for 43 and the Liberal Democrats on track for 17 seats.
Recommend bet No Overall Majority 3/1.
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General election betting: latest odds and activity oddschecker on 11:10 - Dec 11 with 412 viewsJ2BLUE

These markets are easily moved. It doesn't take much money to move the odds but it has a real effect on how possible people think something is. Remain was 1/5 to win the referendum. I remain convinced that these political markets are manipulated by the campaigns. People dismissed this theory after the referendum but both leave and Trump were outsiders on the day of the vote according to the odds and both won.

Truly impaired.
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