POSITIVE SIGNS ON U.S. LEGALISATION FOR ONLINE
GAMBLING
3 July 2009
These are the folks in the know....
Two positive but unrelated opinions on the legalisation
of online gambling in the United States were given this
week, adding credibility to a growing optimism that this
year will see the United States joining other
progressive Western nations in permitting controlled and
regulated betting over the Internet.
The first
opinion comes from the highly respected business
analysts at investment bankers Goldman Sachs, who have
issued a note to investors predicting that the Americans
will legalise and regulate the online gambling industry,
woth up to $12 billion a year according to a report from
The Examiner.com.
The note covers the latest
attempt by Barney Frank, chairman of the House Financial
Services Committee, to introduce legislation that
recognises the rights of individual states in legalising
and regulating carefully vetted online gambling
providers. If passed (see previous InfoPowa reports)
this bill would largely negate the controversial
Unlawful Internet Gambling Enforcement Act which has
cost the industry billions.
Goldman Sachs advises
investors "We believe it is logical to assume that the
US market will eventually regulate, given the potential
implications for US tax take, if nothing else."
“Based on a simple ‘grossing up’ of PartyGaming’s rake
relative to its 9 percent market share, the US poker
market alone was worth $1.5 billion in 2008,” the report
noted.
“Were the market to be legalised, we
believe that the size of the revenue opportunity could
increase materially,” it continued. “Based on an
assumption of 30 percent penetration of offline poker
players and $300 gross gaming revenue (GGR) per player,
we estimate that a legal poker market could be worth $3
billion a year.”
“Were GGR to increase to 45
percent and GGR per player rise to $400, the size of the
poker market alone could be worth $6 billion. We also
estimate that the casino market could expand to a
similar scale, based on various offline penetration
assumptions.”
But US players will have to be
patient, it appears. There is a strong likelihood that
online poker may be legalised in a number of states
before the federal government makes any changes to the
current laws, the analysts opined, noting that Florida
and California in particular could be possible early
adapters. And the Franks legislative proposals to
liberate the US online gambling market have been delayed
until September due to pressure of other work in
Congress, and may not be politically debated until the
new Congress.
“The momentum at state level, where
widening state budget deficits are ratcheting up
financial pressures, is clearly building,” the report
pointed out. “Indeed, if California and Florida move
forward with legislation to legalise online poker, this
could prove the catalyst for other states to follow
suit”.
The second perspective came from the
highly experienced Canadian online gambling executive
Mitch Garber, who until recently headed up Party Gaming
and is now managing the new online gambling division of
Harrah's Entertainment.
In an interview with EGR
Garber was bullish about the future of the online
gambling industry in Northern America, opining that the
egaming scene would be dominated by “a few strong,
global operators” where Americans would be free to
gamble online legally.
“The future of online
gaming is going to be not dissimilar from the current
situation with land-based gambling," Garber predicted.
"There will be a few, very strong global operators that
dominate, and obviously it is Harrah’s strategy to be
one of those leading global operators, and to leverage
our brands and the expertise of the people that I’m
bringing on board to see that that happens.
“Caesar’s, Harrah’s and the World Series of Poker are
all strong brands and part of our strategy is to
leverage those. Caesar’s, Harrah’s and the WSOP are the
most powerful brands globally, and even if you don’t see
them in Europe they are still strong and we will use
them online.”
Garber emphasised that Harrah’s is
not yet a global business. “The idea is that ultimately
Harrah’s will be a global business,” the executive
explained. “Today it is not yet a really global business
because online gaming is an activity not yet legal in
the US, which is the biggest internet market in the
world, but the UK and the rest of the EU and the
positions they have taken are creating a positive market
for opportunity, and we are exploring those
opportunities.”
Commenting on US regulation,
Garber said: “I’m very confident that legislators will
see that this is an industry that can be properly
regulated, and that the technology exists to alleviate
concerns about money laundering or age verification.
"It boils down to the activity being properly
regulated and properly taxed. Gaming is an important
revenue source in the USA and interactive gaming could
be an important extension of that.”
Online Casino News Courtesy of
Infopowa
More news here.
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