888.COM INCREASES PROFITS DESPITE UIGEA
4 May 2007
34 percent lift in pre-tax profits from
Gibraltar-based group
The Gibraltar-based 888.com gambling group has shown
investors just how resilient it is with a set of results
that includes a 34 percent increase in year pre tax
profit and first-quarter revenues that are 16 percent
ahead of the preceding quarter. And all despite the
depredations of last year's Unlawful Internet Gambling
Enforcement Act which caused the group to exit the US
market.
Profit before tax was $90.5 million (GBP 45.4 million)
in year 2006, compared with $67.4 million a year
earlier, and the company reports overcoming a 55 percent
drop in revenues after the US banned internet gambling
late last year to post full year pre-tax profits up by
more than a third. Net gaming revenues for the period
rose 7 percent to $289.9 million.
However, it is thought that a potential deal to sell
888.com to betting group Ladbrokes (see previous
InfoPowa report) was halted due to complications over
the US law change, with Ladbrokes said to be looking at
ways to cap any liability in the US which could arise
from a takeover of 888 as America continues its online
gaming crackdown.
The two firms said last week they were no longer in
talks, but remained tight-lipped over the nature of the
deal, saying only that they had been in discussions
about “a business transaction”.
888.com CEO Gigi Levy said that after his company ended
talks with Ladbrokes last week its focus was now on
being a predator rather than prey. "We don't look at
ourselves as anybody's lunch," he told Reuters. "With
that very fast Q1 growth we should be growing ourselves
and acquiring other companies." Levy said the company is
looking at "medium-size" deals, highlighting its net
cash position of $114.4 million at the year-end.
"We're looking at a number of things," he added. "It's
probably going to be where our core business is, which
today is the UK and Europe."
Levy said he saw huge growth opportunities for the
online bingo business that 888 bought from Globalcom for
up to $43 million last month. "Bingo is a late bloomer
in online gaming," he said. "This is predominantly women
and a whole different segment that most online gaming
companies do not address."
"Bingo is huge in central Europe and Latin America.
There's huge growth opportunity that nobody's tapped yet
- Bingo will not stay in the UK."
Asked whether expansion into Spain was on the agenda,
Levy said: "That's one of the first places we're looking
at."
Online Casino News courtesy of InfoPowa
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