RGA CHIEF BULLISH ON INTERNET GAMBLING
13 March 2009
Europe's Internet gambling groups will buck
the recession and deliver an average ten percent growth
in 2009, says Hawkswood
The chief executive officer of the UK-based Remote
Gambling Association, Clive Hawkswood, was in bullish
mood during an interview this week with the Reuters news
agency, predicting that European gambling groups should
return an average growth of ten percent in 2009.
Hawkswood's view was preceded earlier in the week by
the projections of the respected Global Betting and
Gaming Consultants company, which revealed that online
gambling gross gambling yield passed the $20 million
benchmark in 2008 and that a resilient industry
continues to perform strongly going into 2009 (see
previous InfoPowa report).
The Remote Gambling
Association is a good barometer of the Internet gambling
market in Europe, comprised as it is of leading European
gambling groups handling much of the Internet business
in the region.
Hawkswood told Reuters that
Europe's online gambling groups should buck the economic
downturn with around 10 percent growth in revenues this
year. "The online betting market is coping very well
with the slowdown and is bucking the trend," he said.
"The main thing that we still have going for us is that
our markets are still growing and our markets are very
diverse."
Last month, Britain's top two
bookmakers Ladbrokes and William Hill both posted a rise
in profits, and the latter has made no secret of its
intention to ramp up Internet activity. Paddy Power
similarly announced that Internet revenues had made up
70 percent of its operating profit.
Hawkswood
said his members, which also include Unibet, 888.com and
Paddy Power, were not completely immune from the worst
financial crisis in nearly 80 years and were making
adjustments to their businesses.
"Projections
from 12 months to 18 months ago are certainly not the
same, but if you compare this to other industries, the
online gambling industry can still expect to do very
well," Hawkswood said. "I would expect to see growth for
the industry of around 10 percent this year."
The
executive said that many punters are switching to the
Internet, forcing traditional high street betting shops
to close. "There is a general trend of moving from
traditional outlets to online operators. Online betting
has less overheads and costs for both the operator and
consumer," Hawkswood continued, citing the convenience
of the Internet as an important advantage.
Forecasting that the online gambling industry should
maintain its resilience as the impact of the recession
spreads into the real economy, Hawkswood concluded:
"Betting is not an expensive hobby. Stakes are small and
affordable. People will continue to have a flutter even
when times are tough."
Online Casino News Courtesy of
Infopowa
More news here.
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