NY TIMES TAKES A POSITIVE LOOK AT ONLINE GAMBLING
1 May 2009
Is online gambling coming in from the cold?
The New York Times has taken a positive look at Internet
gambling in the United States in an interesting piece
written by Eric Pfanner and titled "Is online gambling
coming in from the cold?"
Pfanner goes back to
the introduction of the Unlawful Internet Gambling
Enforcement Act in 2006 and examines its implications,
with major European listed companies departing the US
market, and the commercial damage they suffered at the
hands of US legislators who pushed the UIGEA through in
questionable circumstances.
Moving to current
times, the article notes recent developments which have
international gambling groups considering a second tilt
at the US markets, and the growing trend toward more
enlightened gambling laws in European Union countries,
spurred by the compliance actions of the European
Commission.
With the need for governments and
states to raise revenues under the pressure of dwindling
taxes due to the tough economic times, and a more
liberal and citizen-oriented Democratic administration
in power in the United States, the time may finally be
right for the legalisation of online gambling which
upcoming legislation from House Financial Services
Chairman Barney Frank envisages, the articles points
out.
The New York Times article reprises the
results of a PricewaterhouseCoopers study that the U.S.
government could raise more than $50 billion over the
next 10 years from taxes on legalised online gambling,
and quotes the UK's trade organisation the Remote Gaming
Association, Clive Hawswood, as saying: “I’d be amazed
if it [the legalisation os US Internet gambling] didn’t
happen over the next two or three years. It’s just a
question of what exactly the regulations will say.”
The article recognises that the passage of US
legalisation may be a stormy one, noting that
organisations like the Christian Coalition of America
and the National Football League, have vowed to fight
any new effort to end the ban.
Michele Combs, a
spokeswoman for the Christian Coalition, told the Times
that it was gearing up for a “massive campaign” of
letter-writing and lobbying to try to prevent any
loosening of the UIGEA.
“We’re not saying people
shouldn’t go to Las Vegas,” she said. “But when it’s in
your home, it’s too easy. It breaks up families.”
“There’s a better chance now for some sort of gaming
legislation to be approved,” Nick Batram, an analyst at
KBC Peel Hunt, a brokerage firm in London told the NY
Times. “But it took longer than expected to put
anti-gaming legislation in place, and it will probably
will take longer than expected to remove it.”
Interestingly, the piece quotes figures from H2 Gambling
Capital to support its claim that Asia and Europe have
now overtaken the United States as online gambling
markets. H2 says online gambling generated revenue of $6
billion last year in North America, more than a quarter
the global total of $22.6 billion, up from $17.6 billion
in 2006.
Writer Eric Pfanner recalls that Party
Gaming suffered massive losses in player revenues in the
wake of the UIGEA, but now has a more hopeful future
following its guarantee against prosecution for
pre-UIGEA activities that flows from its recent $105
million settlement with the US Department of Justice.
Pfanner writes: "Analysts say one possibility for
European companies like PartyGaming, should the ban be
lifted, would be to form partnerships with American
casino operators. That would allow the European
companies to share their online expertise. Operating
alone, they might struggle to obtain licenses, given
their history of run-ins with U.S. law enforcement." But
some analysts opined that in the event of a US
breakthrough, the licensing regime would favour American
operators.
Several other online gambling
companies whose shares are traded in London, including
888 Holdings and Sportingbet, are still in talks with
the U.S. Justice Department, Pfenner notes. Analysts
expect them, along with companies like Bwin
International, whose stock is traded in Vienna, to be
involved in a round of consolidation in the industry —
along with a possible eventual move back into the United
States.
Although land gambling groups like
Harrah's and MGM Mirage appear to eyeing the online
market with interest, other major land grouip may be
less enthusiastic. Approached by Pfenner for comment,
Steve Wynn. chief executive of Wynn Resorts, said in an
e-mail message that he thought [online gambling in the
US] would be “impossible to regulate.”
“Even
though it would be a benefit to our company, we are
strongly opposed,” he said.
Online Casino News Courtesy of
Infopowa
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