BINGO IS BOOMING SAYS BLOOMBERGS
14 August 2009
$1.6 billion annual online bingo sales in
prospect
The Bloomberg business news service had encouraging news
for online bingo operators this week, reporting that
giant, publicly listed gambling companies William Hill,
PartyGaming and 888 Holdings expect sales from Internet
bingo to increase in Europe.
Revenue from online
bingo will rise more than 20 percent both this year and
next, totaling about $1.3 billion by the end of 2009 and
$1.6 billion in 2010, the research company H2 Gambling
Capital, confirmed.
The online version of bingo
has proven more resilient than other kinds of gaming as
the worst recession since World War II restrains
consumer spending, H2 director Simon Holliday told
Bloomberg, explaining that bingo is “the least mature”
area of Internet gambling.
“Online bingo is in
such an early growth phase that any recessionary impacts
are outweighed by its newness,” Holliday said. “This is
often supply-driven demand. It relates to availability
and how heavily things are marketed.”
A William
Hill spokesman said net revenue for online bingo and
“skill” games like backgammon rose 50 percent in the
first half of this (2009) year. The London-based
company, which will soon be relocating its online
operations to Gibraltar, expects bingo gross sales,
which include players’ winnings, to grow 50 percent in
2010 from GBP150 million this year, spokesman David Hood
said.
Ladbrokes reported a 30 percent increase
in online bingo revenue but declined to comment on its
revenue forecasts for Internet bingo.
Gibraltar-based 888, expects to generate close to $100
million in annual revenue from bingo “in a few years,”
up from about $40 million today, CEO Gigi Levy said
earlier this (August) month.
“Online bingo
should not be smaller than online poker” in five years,
Levy said. He predicted “about 50 to 100 percent a year
growth” for bingo in countries like Italy and Spain as
the game becomes more popular.
Global revenue
from online poker, less players’ winnings, will probably
reach $3.9 billion this year compared with $3.5 billion
in 2008, according to figures from Isle of Man-based
Global Betting and Gaming Consultants.
Meanwhile, live U.K. bingo club revenues will probably
fall 17 percent to GBP 2 billion this year, hurt by the
economic slump, an indoor smoking ban, and a tax
increase introduced in April, according to a study by
consultants Mintel International Group Ltd. published in
April this year.
Bloomberg observes that the
growth of online bingo has spurred expansion and
consolidation in the gaming industry.
In July,
PartyGaming acquired bingo provider Cashcade for over
GBP 95.9 million. Time Warner Inc.’s AOL UK and
Microsoft Corp.’s MSN UK have also launched online bingo
sites in the past year.
“They’re all moving
heavily into online bingo," Wyn Ellis, an analyst at
Numis Securities Ltd. in London, told the news agency.
“It really has been an area of very significant growth,
particularly in the U.K.”
Female players are a
major factor in the continued expansion of online bingo,
with a growing demographic of female, 25 to 45-year-old
players.
About 70 percent of registrants on
Cashcade’s large U.K. sites are females with the most
aged between 25 and 45, Simon Collins, chief operating
officer for PartyGaming’s Cashcade bingo division, said.
The reach of online bingo partly depends on “the
breakdown of broadband internet usage,” which is higher
among younger players, said Greg Johnson, an analyst at
Shore Capital Group plc in Liverpool.
Online Casino News Courtesy of
Infopowa
More news here.
Top of page |
Home |
News |
Forum |
Webcast |
Vortran |
Accredited Casinos |
Evil Ones |
Pitch a Bitch |
Online Gambling Resources |
Poker
|