IT'S AN ILL WIND....
6 March 2009
But it is presently doing the online gambling
industry some good
The business news agency Bloomberg has realised what
many online gambling operators are starting to
acknowledge - times may be tough, but there are great
business opportunities for the industry being generated
by the current economic crisis and its impact on the
consumer.
In an interesting article this week,
the news outlet found that in Ireland the
man-in-the-street is feeling the economic pinch and has
started to cut down on two major pastimes - social
drinking and [land] gambling.
Focussing on the
gambling element of the story, Bloomberg noted that
Paddy Power plc, Ireland’s largest bookmaker, revealed
this week that the average stake at its Irish land
betting stores fell 3.4 percent last year. About a fifth
of Ireland’s 1 300 betting offices may close by the end
of next year, Goodbody Stockbrokers said of the trend.
And yet, in company with Internet gambling companies
elsewhere in the world, Paddy Power's Internet gambling
division produced strong 2008 results, contributing some
70 percent to operating profits and becoming the group's
main vehicle for accessing international markets. In the
UK, William Hill plc revealed this week that it
continues to expand its online gambling operations as a
critical component in its international strategy (see
previous InfoPowa reports).
“The [Irish] economy
is having an impact now,” said analyst Liam Igoe at
Goodbody in Dublin. “Rather than going to pubs and
betting shops, people are staying home and ordering
pizzas, buying beer in and betting online. That’s going
to continue.”
Ireland's gross domestic product
may contract by about 6 percent this year and consumer
spending will plunge 7 percent, according to Goodbody.
It also forecasts that unemployment will rise to 15
percent by the end of 2010, as companies including Dell
Inc., SR Technics and Intel Corp. cut jobs.
Retail sales plunged an annual 8.3 percent in December,
capping the worst year for stores in more than a quarter
century.
Forty betting stores have already
closed across Ireland, Paddy Power said this week.
William Hill Plc is closing 14 of its Irish outlets and
in all, bookmakers will shut 250 by the end of next
year, according to Igoe, as the economic slump combines
with a doubling of Irish betting tax to curb demand.
“Gamblers just want to cut their cloth a little
bit,” Paddy Power CEO Patrick Kennedy told Bloomberg
this week. The average bet placed at his outlets has
fallen to Euro 21.45, he said.
Online Casino News Courtesy of
Infopowa
More news here.
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