BETFAIR SET TO MAKE A KILLING IN U.S. ONLINE
GAMBLING
3 July 2009
Betting exchange is in the right place, at
the right time when it comes to American online betting
on the ponies
Betfair was the subject of a glowing article in the
publication Venture Beat this week which looked at the
UK betting exchange's astute move into American horse
racing.
The move legally exploits the
"carve-outs" in the often confusing US political
deal-making process and discriminatory federal laws that
permit online betting in horse racing.
Betfair is
strongly positioned in the sector following its
acquisition of the Los Angeles-based American TV Games
Network (TVG), an online horse race betting company with
its own TV channel, for $50 million in January 2009 (see
previous InfoPowa reports).
Though it operates
in only 16 states, the ten-year-old TVG operates the
largest legal online gambling web site in the U.S., says
Tony McAlister, chief technology officer of Betfair. And
its horse racing channel reaches a massive 72 million
households.
The Venture Beat article reveals that
Betfair is now preparing to launch a social network
around the TVG web site to stoke interest in betting on
the sport.
It is also building applications to
let people bet on horse races from sports bars via their
mobile phones. To do this, Betfair will have to add
about 50 people to its U.S. staff, currently around 170,
and another 150 elsewhere. In the United Kingdom, the
company has 1 400 employees.
Gerard Cunningham,
president of Betfair USA, told Venture Beat that TVG’s
web site is currently a Web 1.0 experience. But three
weeks ago the company launched Ultimate Track Streaming,
a media player on the site that can stream high quality
videos of live horse races to viewers. It has also set
up blogs for gamblers and a Twitter feed.
Future
plans include the addition of live chat so that gamblers
can discuss a race as its happening, says Cunningham
That should be popular, since gamblers can bet on a race
as it progresses.
TVG has apparently stayed out
of 34 states because of unclear state gambling laws or
strict prohibitions. It has rivals who aren’t quite as
cautious, but Betfair is larger than competitors such as
Youbet, Xpress Bet and Twin Spires.
Venture Beat
opines that one possible hurdle Betfair faces is how to
re-energise interest in horse racing, which has seen
declining enthusiasm among gamblers. The rewards for
success are considerable, the article notes - physical
horse racing wagering levels are around $14 billion in
the United States, of which TVG is currently handling
around $500 million, leaving plenty of room for online
expansion.
Betfair appears to have recognised
this, and believes that, properly marketed, both online
and terrestrial wagering could achieve substantially
higher levels. The company is also hopeful that
individual states looking for additional tax revenues
and competing with other states may make them more
amenable to extended horse race gambling.
Cunningham said that these factors all point to good
growth prospects ahead, even if only the status quo in
maintained.
"By and large, Betfair draws more
gamblers because it can more efficiently set favourable
odds than bookies, who build their own commission into
the odds," Venture Beat concludes. "Its servers match
about 1 000 bets a second, which means it’s about as
busy as a stock exchange. The privately held company has
six data centers to support the traffic. In the year
ended April, 2008, it reported earnings of $69.5 million
on revenue of $396 million. (It is not required to
disclose earnings but does so).
TVG's racing
channel is based in Los Angeles while its website will
be based in San Francisco. Tony McAlister, Betfair's
chief technology officer, was in San Francisco this
week, to recruit web developers for the company from
Silicon Valley.
Betfair employs more than 400
computer engineers among a global workforce of 1 600 and
its betting platform processes more than 5 million
transactions on an average day.
Online Casino News Courtesy of
Infopowa
More news here.
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