BETFAIR CLASH WITH AUSSIE RACING IMMINENT
20 November 2009
Racing New South Wales levy described as
discriminatory and anti-competitive
Wednesday this week will see the Australian branch of
online gambling giant Betfair in court again, this time
fighting a 1.5 percent levy on its turnover attempted by
Racing New South Wales.
The head of Betfair's
operations Downunder, Andrew Twaits, is expected to give
evidence to the court that the NSW racing authority is
colluding with Betfair's local rival Tabcorp in trying
to force his company out of the state.
Betfair
initiated the litigation against Racing New South Wales
following the imposition of the 1.5 percent levy on
turnover, decribing the action by the racing authority
as anti-competitive and discriminatory between different
businesses.
Another corporate bookmaker,
Sportsbet, is challenging the constitutionality of the
legislation that was used to introduce the levy, reports
the Australian newspaper "The Age".
Betfair and
other low-margin corporate bookmakers say the levy
should be calculated on gross revenue, as it is in
Victoria, South Australia and Tasmania, because the NSW
model heavily favours the incumbent TAB operator,
Tabcorp.
The 1.5 percent levy constitutes 60
percent of Betfair's gross revenue, the company
complains, contrasting this with the fact that Tabcorp
pays only 9.75 percent of its gross revenue due to a
different business model.
The disparity comes
about because the TAB has far thicker margins than the
corporate bookmakers. The TAB takes 16 cents out of
every dollar in the betting pool, while corporates like
Betfair take out between 1 percent and 3 percent, giving
the punter a better deal.
Sources in the industry
have alleged that Racing NSW consulted extensively with
Tabcorp before introducing the levy, and that
legislation was drawn up specifically to protect
Tabcorp's position as the dominant bookmaker in NSW.
This accusation has been emphatically denied by Racing
NSW's chief executive, Peter V'Landys.
"There was
consultation with all wagering operators," V'Landys told
reporters. "Before we determined the fee, we consulted
with all the corporates. We had more meetings with
Betfair than we did with Tabcorp, and at all times we
have treated everyone equally.''
Online Casino News Courtesy of
Infopowa
More news here.
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