US hurricane outlook draws betting surge
By Michael Christie
- Reuters
MIAMI (Reuters) - If he believed the smart money, online gambling
commentator Christopher Costigan would move out of his oceanfront pad
on Miami Beach right now.
According to the odds given by the multibillion-dollar Internet
betting industry, it's almost a dead certainty that Florida will be
struck by a big hurricane during the 2006 Atlantic hurricane season,
which officially opened on Thursday.
But Costigan says he is staying put. "I will be betting on the reverse ... I'm looking right at the ocean," he said.
The intensity of the last two Atlantic hurricane seasons has
triggered a mini-frenzy this year of storm-related bets online, where
gamblers can make so-called "proposition wagers" on anything ranging
from "will life be found on Mars?" to "who will win the next
presidential election?"
(…)
If you want to win big money, Costigan said, you should bet on
the United States escaping a major hurricane strike over the next six
months after two ferocious seasons that saw eight hurricanes lash
Florida and Hurricane Katrina devastate New Orleans and kill 1,300
people.
"In terms of will a Category 3 (hurricane) not hit the U.S.,
actually there's some great value in those odds," Costigan said,
referring to the five-step Saffir-Simpson scale of hurricane intensity.
"Six hundred was the last I saw, 6 to 1 odds or $6 paid for
every dollar bet. Those are actually great odds considering the fact
that in the last 16 years, there's only been six years in which a
Category 3 or higher has hit the United States," said Costigan, of the
Gambling911.com Web site, which reports on the online betting business.
Some U.S. media commentators have slammed the industry for
insensitivity -- about 1,300 Americans died and tens of thousands of
lost their homes when Katrina swamped New Orleans and shattered the
Mississippi coastline last August.
Thousands more in Florida, Texas, Alabama, Mexico and Central
America suffered as 2006 spawned a record 28 tropical storms, of which
15 became hurricanes.
The online gambling industry says betting on the weather is as
legitimate as betting on a baseball game. None, however, are offering
odds on death tolls or home destruction.
"I'm not looking to profit off destruction, believe me," said
Mickey Richardson, chief executive of Costa Rica-based BetCris.com. "I
guess there's a thin line between what's appropriate and what's not and
I'm trying to stay in that gray area without offending people."
The Web sites base their odds on predictions by expert
forecasters, statistics of past seasons and to a lesser extent on how
their customers bet.
The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, the U.S.
government's climate agency, forecasts up to 16 tropical storms, of
which up to 10 will become hurricanes.
NOAA expects four to six of the hurricanes to be Category 3
storms or above, so-called "major" hurricanes. The long-term average is
for just under 10 storms per season, of which six become hurricanes.(…)
According to BetCris.com, the greatest likelihood is for three
major hurricanes to strike the United States. The odds on that are at
plus 165. By contrast, the odds on just one major hurricane striking
the United States are plus 400 -- a long shot.
Whether the popularity of hurricane bets continues depends on,
well, the weather. "If this year comes out and it's a very inactive
season and people lose interest in it ... I don't think there's going
to be as much talk about it next year," Johnson said.