Race Ace Select is a horse racing betting tipster service that says that you don’t need any knowledge of horse racing.
What does the product offer?
Race Ace Select is a subscription based tipping service with daily emails sent out to subscribers advising on Race Ace Selects selections. These emails are sent out before 10.30am which should allow plenty of time for bets to be placed directly with a bookmaker or online.
How does the product work?
At its core Race Ace Select seems to be a form based system as the creator’s state that Race Ace Select is an “exact system purely based upon a concise and mechanical set of rules” and that “every angle of form” is taken into consideration when selecting winners.
What is the initial investment?
Race Ace Select sells for £60 per month. Unfortunately there is no money back guarantee mentioned but as this is a subscription based product you should be able to cancel this at any time.
What is the rate of return?
The creators of Race Ace Select advertise returns of £19,897 in just four months. It is rather difficult to see how they have reached this figure as the sum total for all of their proofing results comes in at just £13,205 and this is over 6 month. This is also choosing to overlook the fact that each month starts with £1000 profit which I suspect is actually the starting bank. If that is indeed the case then the actual profits for the 6 month period are much more believable £7,205.
Conclusion
I cannot (despite no lack of trying) calculate how Race Ace Select was able to make £19,897 over a four month period. The only logical reasoning I can arrive at is that the figures that produced this result have not been released, although this then raises the question of why. This discrepancy cannot be overlooked, particularly when applied to a tipping service that costs double what some of its rivals are available for. That isn’t to say that Race Ace Select isn’t a profitable system. As you can see, even applying the figures I calculated it still makes for a healthy £1,200 per month for the taking. Unfortunately I am of the mind-set that if copywriters are allowed to apparently lie in such a brazen fashion, it is difficult to have any faith in the product, even if this means overlooking legitimate aspects.