ANALYSTS UPBEAT ON INTERNET GAMBLING
24 April 2009
Settlement of legal dispute and land gambling
self-interest could be creating a more positive
landscape
Specialist online writers in several media this week
started to paint a somewhat rosier picture of the online
gambling sector, with the senior Moneyweek journo Eoin
Gleeson setting the tone. Gleeson pointed to the
PartyGaming deal with the US Department of Justice (see
previous InfoPowa reports) as a positive move that would
enable Party and possible rival companies in the
business to move forward with M&A activity, raise
capital for further development, or become more
attractive targets for investors or even acquisition.
Gleeson posits that a change in mood from the US
authorities may have helped, spearheaded by the attempts
of House Financial Services Committee chairman Barney
Franks to overturn the Unlawful Internet Gambling
Enforcement Act which is likely to be reintroduced to
Congress later this (April) month, now that a more
enlightened administration is in power. The agreement
with PartyGaming was also struck just a couple of weeks
after the European Commission complained that the US ban
was discriminatory and even a breach of World Trade
rules, which is also a positive development.
But
at the end of the day it may have been sheer pragmatism
that won, observes Gleeson.
He quotes Daily
Telegraph writer Alastair Osborne, who wrote earlier:
"The US's real motive in passing its King Canute-like
anti-gambling legislation was entirely protectionist. It
was all about making sure the big, established [land]
casinos on the Las Vegas strip weren't overtaken by the
nifty online newcomers."
Matthew Goodman in The
Times notes: "But Las Vegas has recently hit the wall
with gambling revenues falling sharply. So some of its
biggest operators, such as Harrahs, the group that owns
Caesars Palace, are now thought to fancy a move into
online gambling. And a settlement with PartyGaming could
be a big step towards full legalisation. The American
authorities also seem to have concluded, as they did
with Big Tobacco, that it's better to regulate and tax
the vice industry than to pursue a ban that is unpopular
and difficult to enforce."
Gleeson points out
that PartyGaming's $105 million US settlement will put a
dent into its cash flow for some years, but make it an
overall more attractive proposition for the future. The
company has invested heavily in advertising to keep and
acquire customers, but it has become apparent that
online gambling firms will need to scale up to reduce
costs if they are going to survive.
Pulling off
a big acquisition will be tough in a market where credit
is hard to come by, Gleeson opines before identifying
Playtech as probably the best stock in the Internet
gambling sector.
"This company provides the
platform for gamblers to come together over the internet
to play casino, poker and bingo online," Gleeson writes
in explaining his choice. "The average daily earnings
growth is a healthy 8 percent this year compared with
the last quarter of 2008.
"No gambling business
is recession-proof, but Playtech is robust: it operates
in 45 countries and is expanding into sports betting. A
29 percent stake in William Hill [Online] is also paying
off handsomely, with the average daily income from the
group 40 percent higher in the first eight weeks of 2009
compared with 2008.
"That helped lift pre-tax
profits to Euro 41.45 million last year from Euro 26.85
million the year before," he concludes, observing that
Playtech also has a strong pipeline of new potential
licensees, with a large number of online gambling groups
buying up its software to broaden the range of games
they offer.
Gary White of The Daily Telegraph
seems to agree: "There are exciting prospects for the [Playtech]
group in the next two years," he writes. The shares
trade on a modest forward p/e of ten and offer a healthy
dividend yield of 5.0 percent.
Reuters news
services coincidentally carried the recommendations of
broker firm Daniel Stewart, which identified Playtech,
William Hill and Sportingbet as its three top "buys" in
the online gambling sector.
The broker issued a
"buy" recommendation and 64 pence price target on
Sportingbet, which rose 5.7 percent to 60.25 pence. The
broker highlights Sportingbet's strength in Spain,
Greece, and Australia and a number of Eastern European
territories, and says it will play an active role in
industry consolidation.
Daniel Stewart keeps its
"buy" stance and 543 pence target price on Playtech,
which gained 0.6 percent to 457.75 pence. It says
Playtech has solid expected European upside and strong
performance potential in Asia.
The William Hill
group is Daniel Stewart's third top pick as a buy, with
a 225p price target, saying its discount to the sector
following its GBP 350 million rights issue was
excessive. William Hill shares were up 0.1 percent to
188p and the rights issue, placed to help the business
pay off debt, was a success, although operating profit
at financial year-end dipped 1 percent.
Online Casino News Courtesy of
Infopowa
More news here.
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