UK LEVY BOARD WANTS MORE CASH
17 July 2009
Horseracing Levy Board wants offshore bookies
to contribute as well
The Levy Board in UK horseracing appears to be
increasingly concerned at the prospect of major British
bookies relocating overseas, and has called for a
boycott of offshore bookmakers, who are currently not
obliged to pay the levy. The Guardian newspaper reports
that losses of up to GBP 25 million could be sustained
by the Board if more bookie groups leave the UK's shores
for kinder taxation and regulatory climes.
The
Board apparently wants a review of sponsorship and other
commercial deals involving offshpore companies. Rob
Hughes, the chairman of the Levy Board, this week
launched what he described as a "pre-emptive strike" to
stop British bookmakers moving their operations
overseas, calling for a boycott of betting firms that do
not pay Levy on their offshore business.
Douglas
Erskine-Crum, the board's chief executive, later
confirmed that the board is unable to name the
bookmakers concerned "for legal reasons".
A
number of bookmakers taking bets on British racing run
operations that are either partly or wholly based
outside Britain, where there is no legal requirement to
pay either Levy or betting duty on profits generated
offshore.
In a statement released by the Levy
Board this week it suggested that "everyone in the media
and racing … should review the relationships they have
with overseas-based betting operators, specifically
advertising, sponsorship, promotion and indeed betting
with overseas-based bookmakers who are not paying or
contributing to the Levy."
The statement also
suggested that "bookmakers operating overseas, and
taking bets from British customers on British racing,
have a moral obligation towards supporting British
racing by paying a Levy contribution."
Hughes
said later that his call for those involved in the
racing industry to "review their relationships" with
offshore bookies was an attempt to stop other betting
operations following them abroad.
"It is up to us
all to take a view as to whether we want to support
these people who are using UK racing to make profits but
are avoiding the Levy," Hughes said.
"This is
really a pre-emptive strike prior to what we understand
might happen with other bookmakers. William Hill have
made no secret of the fact that they may take their
online and telephone operations offshore, and other
bookmakers have said that they might then have to follow
suit for competitive reasons. If that were to happen, we
estimate that between GBP 20 million and GBP 25 million
would be lost to the Levy, which is a quarter of the
total.
"It is no good racing just looking to the
UK government to sort this situation out, when part of
the answer also lies in our own hands. Too often in
racing, we close the stable door when the horse has
bolted, and the key message here is that part of the
answer lies in our own hands."
There appeared to
be little appetite for the Hughes call.
Steve
Fisher, the founder of Stan James, which has a small
chain of UK betting shops in addition to its Gibraltar
telephone and internet business, told The Guardian:
"Stan James UK of course pays Levy and tax and always
has done. I'm not a shareholder or director in any other
company apart from Stan James UK so I can't comment on
anything else."
A statement issued by Victor
Chandler said that "Victor Chandler have long been a
supporter of British horse racing and have always paid
the required Levy on business through the Victor
Chandler UK business, and continue to pay the Levy on
our operations in the UK." It added that "Victor
Chandler support British horse racing commercially with
an investment in excess of seven figures each year".
Both Ascot and Newmarket, which have major
sponsorship agreements for the Victor Chandler Chase and
Stan James Guineas Festival respectively, said yesterday
that they have no plans to review their relationships
with the firms.
"We have a relationship with
Victor Chandler which is extremely beneficial both for
us and for them," Nick Smith, Ascot's head of PR, said.
"From our point of view, we are happy to continue to
work with Victor Chandler as we have always done in the
past."
Stephen Wallis, the managing director of
Newmarket, said that "Newmarket has a very healthy
relationship with Stan James and we hope that will
continue."
Online Casino News Courtesy of
Infopowa
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