The Bank Vault Report Review: An Excellent Week's Results
The system works by looking for favourites that adhere to a clear set of criteria which, for obvious reasons, I can’t share here.
The idea is to find five of these ‘dodgy’ favourites and lay them in turn until you get your target profit for the day. Essentially, ‘stop at a loser’.
Now, before you start, you should use the supplied calculator software, to establish your maximum liability for the day. It’s important that if you are not comfortable with the final figure (if all five horses lost), that you lower your target profit for the day, or perhaps wait for tomorrow.
The selections are then taken in sequence with the first one layed to win a certain amount of money, your target profit.
If the horse loses, and therefore you win, that’s it for the day. Go and make a cup of tea and get on with some proper work! However, if the first horse wins, and therefore you lose, we move onto Nag 2.
On Nag 2, we must lay to lose our lost cash from Nag 1 plus our daily profit target. If it loses, it’s tea time. If it wins, we move onto Nag 3 (good name for a website methinks!), and perhaps have an Irish coffee.
If Nags 3 and 4 also win (remember, the scenario here is that we have taken on four eminently opposable favourites, and they have all won: unlikely but it can happen), we are in the toilet with a whisky awaiting the outcome of Nag 5’s performance.
During our week trialling Bank Vault Report, the first horse has lost every day, which is great. A system like this, however, does really require a longer trial to prove its mettle. In the absence of a licence to do that here, I have the records of one BVR punter from last year (thanks Kev):
“I kept an accurate record of the first 29 bets.
15 lost and 14 won (came first)
of the 14 that went to the 2nd rung of the ladder, 7 lost and 7 won
of the 7 that went to the third rung, 3 lost and 4 won
of the 4 that went to the 4th rung, 3 lost and 1 won
the 1 then lost.”
So, in 29 days, there was one brown trouser day, which is probably fairly indicative.
Kev also mentioned that his greatest exposure for the ‘Day of the Pantalons Brun’ was £370 to win £15 (his daily profit target). Extrapolating that up, over 29 days, he was £435 to the good, and could have dropped back to £65 to the good had things gone the shape of an unfashionable fruit that used to be used in cider making.
So I hope I’ve sounded a clear enough note of caution here. Comments from readers (thanks Scott and Kev), which appear very fair to me, rightly identify that it will not always be sweetness and light. But if you take a medium to long term view, I’m pretty confident that the system will show a nice profit. How much depends on those ‘cast iron undergarment’ days of course.
So how has Bank Vault Report fared in the trial?
At the time of writing, and with a few more to run this evening, the scores on the doors are as follows:
Selections: 23 (up to and including 5.15 Market Rasen tonight)
Losers: 17
Lose %: 74%
Highest Liability: £27
The results this week have been excellent, and the number of horses beaten really adds weight to the strength of the system, inasmuch as every day we’ve got at least three from five beaten. This means that there have been at least three ‘take the money’ opportunities in each streak of five.
As with all systems reviewed here at Nag3, BVR comes with a full money back guarantee. If it’s not your cup of tea, no problem: though, that said, having read this and tracked it all week, you have a good idea what’s involved!
To read more about Bank Vault Report, and to secure your copy, visit:





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