LIBERALISED U.S. ONLINE GAMBLING UNLIKELY TO BE AN
EASY MARKET
10 July 2009
Top executives have reservations about the
form a regulated Internet gambling market in the United
States might take
Top online gambling executives made some sobering
comments in discussions at the Gaming Executive Summit
in Madrid this week which examined the possibilities of
a liberated American online gambling market.
888’s CEO Gigi Levy predicted that the US will remain
protectionist and restrict Internet gambling licences to
US companies in the event that the country changes
course to a more enlightened and regulated online
gambling policy.
“The US will be protectionist
even if it regulates, and its withdrawal from its GATS
(General Agreement of Trade and Services) commitments
means it doesn’t have to conform to any World Trade
Organisation regulation on internet gambling," he
opined.
Referring to moves at individual state
level in the US aimed at liberating online poker, Levy
added: “There are five other states we know of that are
considering regulating online poker, and we know the
licences will go to US companies,” without elaborating
further.
Bwin co-chief executive Norbert
Teufelberger, Playtech chief executive Mor Weizer and
PartyGaming chief executive Jim Ryan all took part in a
wide-ranging discussion that covered global issues
impacting the online gambling industry.
Ryan
predicted that regulated online gambling will see major
media companies and state monopolies becoming a
significant competitive threat in the industry, perhaps
more so than traditional corporate rivals.
He
said: "The world is changing as regulation takes
different shape in different markets. But upcoming
regulation means new entrants and competition in the
market, and I worry less about direct competitors such
as those sitting on this panel than I do about
government-licensed operators and major media firms
targeting their power markets in the future.”
That said, Ryan commented further on direct competitors
in online poker, observing that those rivals who still
accepted US business presented formidable competition as
they ploughed back huge profits into marketing elsewhere
in the world, and benefited from the significant player
liquidity that the US market provided. He described this
as a "humbling experience" for his company, but one
which had motivated it to "improve our products and
offers and to really up our game."
The
high-powered panel seemed to agree that the global
Internet regulatory model in the industry has been
supplanted by a more regional-national approach as
individual nations, especially in Europe, draw up
protectionist regulations aimed primarily at keeping
their markets to themselves.
Playtech's Mor
Weizer said that this more restrictive and insular
approach had enabled Playtech to become the number three
poker network in Italy, filling the regulatory
requirement for an Italians-only online venue.
Bwin co-CEO Norbert Teufelberger discussed the line
between b2b and b2c models, emphasising Bwin’s
commitment to the business-to-consumer approach.
“We believe the b2c model is what operators should
be striving for," he said. "We will only do b2b
agreements with select partners, and we do this through
our sports content, which is unrivalled in the
industry."
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
|