Woman Lost Nearly Half A Million Pounds Betting On Hillary Clinton To Win The Election
The
US Presidential Election was the biggest political betting event in
William Hill's history, with the British bookmakers taking in around £4
million in bets.
A
female client lost nearly half a million pounds on a single bet on
Hillary Clinton to win the election, the bookmaker told Business
Insider.
The
unnamed woman bet £481,000 (around $597,000) on Clinton to defeat
Donald Trump four weeks before the election, only to lose all of it
after the surprise outcome. William Hill's Graham Sharpe told Business
Insider over the phone that the woman, who was not British, placed the
bet online.
Clinton
was the favourite to become the 45th President of the United States but
Donald Trump surprised political commentators, financial markets,
pollsters, and bookmakers to win the race to the White House.
There
were some other huge losses too, according to Sharpe. A customer at one
of William Hill's shops in Northumberland, northeast England, threw
away £181,200 betting on the Democrat candidate and a London-based
customer put £150,000 on her a day before the election.
The
bookmaking industry took a total of around £20 million on US Election
bets, with 71% of individual bets placed on Trump to upset the odds and
the polls to inflict a shock defeat on Clinton.
John
Mappin, a hotel-owner in Cornwall, southeast England, made a profit of
£100,000 after placing 30 bets on Trump to win, the first placed when
the businessman announced his candidacy for the Republican nomination.
The betting shop also paid out £101,750 to a customer in Nottingham who
put £37,000 on Trump to make history and win the election.
"Donald
Trump started as a 150/1 no-hoper but was very well backed, albeit in
smaller amounts than we accepted for long-time favourite Hillary
Clinton," Sharpe said.
He
added that the election was a "disaster" for the betting industry, with
more customers than ever placing large bets on political markets and
winning them. "We've paid out lots of money," he added.
He
also pointed out a striking similarity between how British customers
bet on Brexit and how they bet on the US Election. "The US Election
statistics reflect almost identically the division of stakes and bets
for Brexit.
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