The [Kelly criterion](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kelly_criterion) gives a simple formula to calculate the **fraction** of one's current wealth/bankroll.

On the page above it says

> Assuming that the expected returns are known, the Kelly criterion leads to higher wealth than any other strategy in the long run (i.e., the theoretical maximum return as the number of bets goes to infinity).

Down below in article also, there is a heuristic argument given, saying that it maximizes some expected value. The heuristic argument of course remains vague.

To me the argument remains unconvincing, since obviously the set of all strategies is uncountable (i.e. at each step choose a real number between 0 and current wealth) and a natural measure on that set, does not appear to be obvious.


Now the question:
 1. Is there a simple reason or heuristic argument that explains why there should even be a **unique** single strategy out of the uncountably many that is optimal? A nice compactness argument would make me happy.
 2. Assuming 1), is there a simple reason or heuristic argument that explains that Kelly's criterion takes such a simple form - namely a constant factor of the wealth rather than some other more complicated function of wealth.

**Update**

Let me address some of the criticism in the comments.
First of all I did, I tried reading the original paper but could not get far due the different framework of information theory. Also I read both the proof for fair bet case below, which I can follow, but even the sentence:

*So in the long run, final wealth is maximized by setting* {\displaystyle \Delta } *to zero, which means following the Kelly strategy* seems handwavy to me.

Another thing I realized is, that the argument given for my question 2 below I found completely convincing, with one caveat: We implicitly assume that the random variables are non-discrete, as the scaling invariance would break down if there were discreteness involved (which actually would be the case for real-world money where we can only can go down to 1 cent).

This and also "So no matter what heuristic argument is proposed, one can fault it for being not totally convincing." made me thinking, that my real question is more about having the framework for stating the Kelly criterion and proving the existence of a solution as in question 1. So let me try to make this more precise.

**Question 1'**: Do you know of any general formulation/framework for betting strategies (e.g. covering both continous and discrete random variables) which covers the situation of the Kelly criterion together with results that either imply a unique solution or maybe show that an optimal strategy might not need to be unique.

P.S.: I am still hoping that compactness, will pop up somehow.