The Daily Tipping Point is a tipster service which is operated by on Jimmy Holden. He claims to utilise bookmaker patterns to generate some very substantial profits.
Introduction to The Daily Tipping Point
If there is one thing that I find frustrating with any product it is being forced to watch a video presentation. Not because I am ignorant, but because I am a busy man and I read a damn sight faster than a video can play, so the fact that The Daily Tipping Point spends 20 minutes on almost the same spiel that I have seen written hundreds of times before.
Other tipsters are just there to rip you off. Of course those other tipsters systems are made up to suck you into their marketing. But Jimmy Holden is different and so is The Daily Tipping Point. This is because he understands “the tipping point” (hence the name), which is a system that really does work. Allegedly. I will get into this in more detail below, but for now let’s just look at what exactly you get with The Daily Tipping Point.
What Does The Daily Tipping Point Offer?
First things first, I want to look at how The Daily Tipping Point operates, because the nature of the system behind the service should dictate that there will be down periods, massively fluctuating volumes etc. None of this is present.
The facts are that this is a daily horse racing tipster service. As is typical for this kind of thing, selections are issued on a daily basis, each morning, and are sent directly to subscribers via email. Not at all surprisingly (at least to me), there is not a huge amount of data contained within the bets themselves.
On the subject of patterns, there is a very clear one when it comes to what Jimmy Holden bets on. There are a massive variety of bets which will supposedly be utilised. This includes backing to win, each way bets, place bets and lay betting, all with a focus on longer odds.
The sales video for The Daily Tipping Point talks about odds of 5/1 and higher and whilst this has not always been the case (or the odds necessarily available), the majority have been somewhere around this.
In terms of the numbers side of things, there isn’t really any staking plan in place for The Daily Tipping Point. This is a big problem for me for a number of reasons however as is all too common, the main one boils down to the fact that the claimed profits are in pounds and pence.
There is an ROI and from this one can try to extrapolate some information but honestly, the details are all over the place and Jimmy Holden says nothing specific except that you can start with £2 bets. This would simply mean guessing and I am not in that line of business.
The same thing applies to the strike rate as well really. There is no proofing provided for The Daily Tipping Point, but there are a lot of insinuations that your bets will generally do well. The fact of the matter though is that there are no specific claims made.
How Does The Daily Tipping Point Work?
The system behind The Daily Tipping Point is one that fundamentally seems sound. Jimmy Holden says that when looking at horses that win with longer odds, there is usually a factor which ties them together. This could be something that is apparently very negligible at a glance. Bookies will however jump on these little idiosyncrasies and use them to shorten odds on horses who also match these patterns.
This is the eponymous tipping point. The Daily Tipping Point supposedly capitalises on the “knowledge” of these trends by identifying future trends.
All of this sounds well and good and may well be true. I’ve not worked for a bookmakers so I don’t really know. What is important to note however is that whilst Jimmy Holden talks about how this is such a key part of The Daily Tipping Point, he doesn’t actually ever really talk about how he is able to identify upcoming winners. This doesn’t really surprise me if I am honest.
What is the Initial Investment?
There is only one option if you want to subscribe to The Daily Tipping Point and that is a one time payment for £17 which is extremely cheap. This buys you 3 months of access to Jimmy Holden’s bets and supposedly represents a rather substantial saving on the usual cost of £19.95 per month (a figure that I don’t believe ever has been charged, or will be charged for The Daily Tipping Point).
The service is sold through Clickbank which means that if you have any issues there is a full 60 day money back guarantee in place. To credit The Daily Tipping Point this is well advertised.
What is the Rate of Return?
The headline for The Daily Tipping Point has this t o say on the subject of earnings. “These selections bank £1,375 ever month”. This is a long way from the sales video in which Jimmy Holden says that his bets made £3,689.43 per week which is a huge number, especially with no information on what is being staked. On top of this, we are also told that the ROI is 187% per week! I could possibly buy this over a year but that kind of claim is patently ridiculous.
Conclusion on The Daily Tipping Point
I can think of several things that put me off about The Daily Tipping Point but there is something to be said that the main selling point (i.e. the income potential) is what really nails it for me. I will get to some of the things that support this, but fundamentally, if whoever is actually operating The Daily Tipping Point cannot decide on how much you can supposedly earn, then there is a big problem and this suggests made up results. It isn’t even like there is any overlap here that suggests rounding of numbers etc.
For my money, this suggests to me that there is a marketer behind The Daily Tipping Point rather than a genuine tipster. A genuine tipster would of course have results that display some consistency.
On top of this, there would be a tangible staking plan to actually get said results. From this I would also expect a strike rate and proofing, because if you’ve logged your results and want to sell somebody a service, the best way is to actively demonstrate that it works.
Combine this with some suspiciously circumstantial things like the way the subscription happens to outlast Clickbank’s money back guarantee and The Daily Tipping Point is just a complete no go as far as I am concerned.
Here is the thing, I know that it is cheap. I also know that the methods behind the service have a certain rationale that I would possibly go as far as to say sounds logical. But as I have pointed out already, all Jimmy Holden really talks about is an idea and then says that because of this, he can predict future trends. None of it seems realistic and I can only see you losing money here.
Yes, The Daily Tipping Point doesn’t cost much and yes, there is also the money back guarantee. But for anybody who values their time, you can probably find much better ways of spending it than following The Daily Tipping Point.
I joined The Daily Tipping Point 14th May. Over past week 26 selections – one win at 7/4 and a place at 14/1. Level staking plans recommended.After four days I stopped placing bets, thinking there is no justification for the selections given. When Curtis talks about marketing I’m suspicious the real reason for some of these services is collecting data.