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New daytrading rules (thread closed)

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264414.164 in reply to 264414.163
Date: 11/10/2014 10:56:23 AM
Overall Posts Rated:
370370
Edit: the expert from England, who originated in England III and spent four seasons there before promoting ... I'm not a math graduate but...
a) I made the playoffs (13 Human Teams) the first 2 seasons and promoted on the third. That'd be 2+1=3
b) I made the playoffs in my first run in D2. I went to the finals (and lost) in my second run.
c) I suggest you check the payroll expenditure as when I promoted from D3 I was bottom half in the league. Last season I had the 4th lowest payroll in my league.


Good thing you're not a math student.

"In season 26, Stinkilemons were crowned champions of league England III.2
In season 26, Stinkilemons were one of the final 128 teams in the England Tournament
In season 25, Stinkilemons made the playoffs in league England III.2
In season 25, Stinkilemons were one of the final 64 teams in the England Tournament
In season 24, Stinkilemons made the playoffs in league England III.2
In season 24, Stinkilemons were one of the final 512 teams in the England Tournament
In season 23, Stinkilemons won the relegation series to stay in league England III.2"

23 ... 24 ... 25 ... 26 ... in most developed countries, probably even in England, that is four seasons ... or maybe they publish your record incorrectly.

I feel for you about low payroll, though. I have made it so far with an arena that is far, far smaller than any in the league I am in now. Most of the arenas are at least double the size of ours, so we are in effect a small market team making our way among much larger market teams. This season will be arena-season, not championship-season. TTFN.

Last edited by Mike Franks at 11/10/2014 10:57:27 AM

This Post:
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264414.166 in reply to 264414.162
Date: 11/10/2014 12:00:27 PM
Skytturnar
II.2
Overall Posts Rated:
1111
Good point!

Yes, it´s good idea to let them play one match (why should they bought them if not to use them?).

Too in HT. If you buy a player you can´t sell him and get 100% selling fee, it´s takes time. For example player you bought 7 days ago mean that if you sell him after 7 days you get 86.38% of the selling fee. Very good rule and may be better than tax for selling beccause it´s more fair.

Sportssend.com
This Post:
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264414.167 in reply to 264414.164
Date: 11/10/2014 12:04:02 PM
Overall Posts Rated:
14901490
Apparently Perpete anticipated me.

Last edited by Lemonshine at 11/10/2014 12:43:28 PM

This Post:
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264414.168 in reply to 264414.162
Date: 11/10/2014 12:05:34 PM
Overall Posts Rated:
14901490
Something like that concept applied to listing tax and a maximum initial bid price might be a decent solution - if a guy has only played 10 minutes in your club, for example, you might only be able to list him for sale at 1k for free, or up to his initial purchase price with a listing tax. If he's played for you 2000 minutes, conversely, you might be able to list him up to a $2M initial bid price with no listing tax.
This is another good idea.

If you buy an 18 year old trainee, give him seven seasons of training and turn him into a superb player, and then list him at a fair price but don't get bites for a while, the listing tax would be hurting a person for a behavior that one presumes should be encouraged.
I can see how a listing tax could be punitive, but we have to agree on what behaviour we're trying to encourage and what we're trying to prevent.

I believe the original point made while suggesting a tax on listings was to encourage lower asking prices and hit day traders. If you imagine a day trader buying for 1k and reselling for 250k he'd be hit by 50k (as the minimum fee used to be around 20%) whether he sells or not. With such a change he will likely list at a lower amount fearing the player would go unsold at 250k. A tax on listing would reduce the average listing price for players (hitting daytraders the most), but also would lower the number of players on the TL and increase the number of players being cut, which obviously are unwanted bad consequences.

The current minimum fee which is going to be deducted from a sale is 3%. That is only applied if you sell the player. If you're trying to sell a draftee for 800k, you could list at 1k and hope there is enough demand to push the price to that level or list at 800k and hope someone bids on him. Assuming 800k is a fair price, if the market is very liquid listing at 1k would often yield better results. If you had a tax you stand to lose a minimum of $3 plus the difference between the actual purchase price and 800k (which may be as high as $799k) in the first case; or $24k for each time you try to list the player in the second case.

3% is an arbitrary number which was decided upon by the developers. I'm not sure people would be against reducing that 3% number further for players held for 3+ seasons.

I believe Sokker.org has a similar system and doesn't charge you just for listing (I may be mistaken on this though). Sokker.org also differs in that the transfer market is a lot more liquid and you continue to get money from further sales of players you developed.

All in all, a lot of proposals on how to change the buying/selling mechanisms in the game have merit. I think what Marin decided to implement was quick and easy, it has a few unwanted consequences, but it does serve its purpose and people can easily live with it. The main criticism has been that it came into the game unannounced and that it (mildly) affects non day traders.

Last edited by Lemonshine at 11/10/2014 12:23:10 PM

This Post:
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264414.169 in reply to 264414.166
Date: 11/10/2014 1:06:20 PM
Overall Posts Rated:
14901490
Too in HT. If you buy a player you can´t sell him and get 100% selling fee, it´s takes time. For example player you bought 7 days ago mean that if you sell him after 7 days you get 86.38% of the selling fee. Very good rule and may be better than tax for selling beccause it´s more fair.
What you're describing sounds exactly the same as last season's regime.
a) you could not sell a player within 4 days from the purchase price, so you had to pay at least one week salary (although I think it might have been theoretically possible for Utopia teams as even the economic update there runs late). In hattrick you pay one week salary upfront when you purchase a player too.
b) after 4 days you could list a player and you'd receive roughly 80% of the sale price. That was a fixed percentage.
c) after about 14 weeks you could list a player and receive 97% of the sale price (that was also a fixed percentage and it is the maximum you can receive even today)

The change introduced in the last offseason modified that 80% and 97% and linked them to how many players you sold in the previous 14 weeks. The result was that there were managers who would obtain less than 20% from an immediate resale.

The requisite that Hrudey is advocating would likely to kill most of the day trading from top managers. Tankers in lower leagues with a plump bank account would be less affected although it would take more time to be able to make the same money they were able to make in the past.

Last edited by Lemonshine at 11/10/2014 1:09:34 PM

This Post:
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264414.171 in reply to 264414.170
Date: 11/10/2014 1:18:39 PM
Overall Posts Rated:
14901490
There has been no change to that this offseason. The only thing who changed are the numbers. It was already working like that in season 28 and before. It was just more permissive.
Yes, indeed.

This Post:
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264414.172 in reply to 264414.169
Date: 11/10/2014 4:57:25 PM
Skytturnar
II.2
Overall Posts Rated:
1111
One important thing are here to have in mind. We are only talking about exactly the player you bought= If you buy John Smith you buy his salary same day as you bought him so you pay always one week salary no matter when in the week you buy him. Too, if you decide to sell him after one week you get 86% and then more and more of the salary fee after how much longer he stay til you keeo 97%.
But, this is only question of John Smith. You can buy or sell as many players in normal way, each of them have this personal rule.

In sokker: "I believe Sokker.org has a similar system and doesn't charge you just for listing (I may be mistaken on this though)."

Sokker charge you always, and actually heavy, each time you sell. If you put on almost 0 you don´t pay but if you want some reasonable minium floor the charge you.

In my opinion the system in HT have worked very well.

Sportssend.com
This Post:
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264414.173 in reply to 264414.168
Date: 11/10/2014 5:16:53 PM
Overall Posts Rated:
32293229
I can see how a listing tax could be punitive, but we have to agree on what behaviour we're trying to encourage and what we're trying to prevent.


That is the trick, isn't it? Just with the label of "daytrading", one could mean those who buy players worth little but with high potential and relist them at high prices, those who buy players for relative cheap prices to use for a short term and then sell for a modest profit afterward, or those who do the time zone trading where they find players selling below market value at a relative dead hour and then sell them at a reasonable price (and often benefit from bid wars) during peak hours. And then of course, for each of the various facets one then has to see how it impacts user experience for various groups of users, and how harmful or beneficial each of those scenarios is for the involved groups and for the game as a whole. Luckily, any community of this type has a very active feedback loop when any changes to the ecosystem are made, though I've seen many a game fail to handle that feedback well. ;)

This Post:
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264414.174 in reply to 264414.172
Date: 11/10/2014 5:20:16 PM
Overall Posts Rated:
32293229
In sokker: "I believe Sokker.org has a similar system and doesn't charge you just for listing (I may be mistaken on this though)."

Sokker charge you always, and actually heavy, each time you sell. If you put on almost 0 you don´t pay but if you want some reasonable minium floor the charge you.

In my opinion the system in HT have worked very well.



Just for clarification because English is, as you no doubt know, a very silly language: when you say:
"Sokker charge you always, and actually heavy, each time you sell"

Do you mean that when you offer a player for sale, you are charged, or does that only happen if the player actually receives a bid? My understanding is that you mean the fee applies simply for offering the player for sale (by putting him on a transfer list) but it could be read either way.

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