If you’ve searched for “At The Races market movers”, you already know the most useful free signal in racing: when a horse’s price collapses before the off, somebody thinks they know something. The ATR page is where most punters go to see it. It’s a decent page. It’s also a snapshot — and a snapshot is exactly the wrong way to look at a moving market.
What the ATR market movers page shows
At the time of writing, the At The Races market movers page lists today’s steamers and drifters with, for each horse: the first show (opening odds), the last recorded price before the live show, the percentage move between the two, an ATR index figure with a small graphic of the swing, and a link to a bookmaker offering the last price. As a headline — which horses moved today, and by how much — it does the job. What it leaves out are the four things that tell you whether a move actually means anything.
1. No exchange prices
ATR shows bookmaker odds only. But the sharpest money in racing shows up on the Betfair Exchange, and the most interesting moments are when the bookies and the exchange disagree about the same horse. Two prices, one horse, two opinions — a one-column snapshot cannot show it.
2. No price journey
A 33% move can be a steady all-morning walk or a violent lurch ten minutes before the off. Those are different signals. First show vs last price compresses the whole day into two numbers and throws the shape away.
3. No results
The page is live-only. Once the race is off, the move vanishes — there is no record of whether the steamer won, placed or trailed in last. If nobody shows you the results, nobody has to answer for them.
4. No archive
Yesterday’s movers are gone. You cannot look back at last Saturday, check what the market said and check what happened. Without history, every day starts from zero and no pattern is ever checkable.
The full-picture alternative (free)
Our live market movers board tracks significant UK racing market moves in real time — prices update every few seconds — and shows the parts the snapshot leaves out: the bookmaker odds walk and the Betfair Exchange price side by side for every runner, the full price journey drawn against the forecast, results landing on the cards minutes after the off (SP, Betfair BSP and places — including the steamers that lose), and a permanent archive where every day has its own page. It’s free, with no login — here’s how it works.
| At The Races | Stable Whispers | |
|---|---|---|
| Bookmaker odds | First show vs last price | Full odds walk through the day |
| Betfair Exchange prices | No | Yes — side by side |
| Price journey chart | Swing graphic only | Full-day chart per horse |
| Updates | Snapshot | Every few seconds |
| Results after the off | No | SP, BSP and places on the card |
| Archive of past days | No | Every day, own URL |
A market move is information, not a tip — plenty of steamers get beaten. 18+, bet responsibly (BeGambleAware.org).
Frequently asked questions
A horse whose odds have shortened significantly (a steamer) or lengthened (a drifter) since the market opened. Moves reflect where money is going — informed or otherwise.
No — nowhere near. Steamers get beaten every day, and anyone telling you otherwise is selling something. A market move is one input, not a verdict, which is exactly why results and an archive matter.
The At The Races page doesn’t keep history. The Stable Whispers archive keeps every day at its own URL, so you can browse back as far as you like and check any move against its result.
