FRENCH TREAT
25 September 2009
Liberated French market seen as a
multi-million Euro boost for online companies
Bloomberg business news is currently carrying an
interesting feature on the potential of a liberated
French gambling market for online gambling companies,
opining that major online operators like Party Gaming,
888.com and William Hill could enjoy a boost next year
when the French plan to open the market beyond its
current monopolised status.
Legislation giving
effect to the liberalisation comes before the French
parliament next month on October 7th, giving entre to
suitable foreign companies offering sports betting and
poker, and ending the total domination of state
monopolies such as Groupe Francaise des Jeux and Pari
Mutuel Urbain.
Jim Ryan, CEO of Party Gaming
plc, told Bloombergs: “The size of the population and
the appetite for gambling, and the group’s historically
cautious approach to France make this a particularly
exciting opportunity for us."
Sales from
electronic gambling in France will more than double to
Euro 671 million in 2010 when the new rules come into
effect in the middle of next year, according to
estimates from H2 Gambling Capital, a Manchester,
England-based consulting company. In 2011, the market
will be worth Euro 1.03 billion, an additional 53
percent increase.
Bloombergs recalls that U.K.
gambling companies battled a recession-bedevilled
economy this year which saw first-half net income fell
by 26 percent to GBP 58.7 million at William Hill, the
country’s second-largest online- gaming company, and by
57 percent to US$8.1 million at 888 Holdings.
PartyGaming posted a net loss of US$66.9 million.
French revenues could help redress the situation.
“The U.K. is fairly flat if you like, or at
least slowing down,” said Simon Holliday, director at
the researcher H2. He added that France is “the largest
single market on the horizon.”
The French move
toward a more open market is partly to respond to
increasing competition from online gambling firms and
partly to placate the European Commission, which has
pursued France for failing to allow free movement of
goods and services between member nations when it comes
to gambling.
Martin Higginson, CEO of the
up-and-coming British interactive television gambling
firm NetplayTV plc, told Bloombergs that the French
market is “large and sophisticated,“ and will be as big
as that in the UK as it becomes more open.
David
Hood, a spokesman for William Hill plc, said the company
is “very aware” of potential opportunities in France.
“We would have ambitions to attract business from
there,” he said.
Sigrid Ligne, secretary-general
of the European Gaming and Betting Association, said the
attractiveness of France to foreign operators will
depend in part on tax rates and other rules.
France’s original proposal in March 2009 included a 7.5
percent tax on sports bets and a 2 percent tax on poker.
Final tax levels will be set by parliament.
“The
tax conditions that have been put in place by the French
question how economically viable this is going to be for
new market entrants," Ligne said.
EGBA has also
criticised proposed restrictions on the types of
gambling and payouts that can be offered, which cause
“huge concerns about how the project is going to allow
fair access” to outside companies, Ligne said.
“The law does not protect monopoly activity,” a
spokeswoman for the French budget ministry said in an
e-mail. Existing gambling companies “will have to file
an application for approval and conform to
specifications. Only lottery, scratchcards, and games of
random chance remain under monopoly” of Francaise des
Jeux, she said.
The current monopolies are
preparing for the new regime. Patrick Germain, a
spokesman for Francaise des Jeux said: “The competition
will be strong” with new operators. The new law will
create “the same taxation, the same rules on responsible
gaming, the same rules on the struggle against
corruption in sport, and permit Francaise des Jeux to
compete equally,” he said.
Changes in the law
may not benefit all foreign operators. Some foreign
companies already do business with French gamblers,
using offshore sites not subject to oversight or
taxation in France, said Ivor Jones, an analyst at
Evolution Securities Ltd. in London.
Such
offshore revenue from French gamblers will be about Euro
346 million this year, declining to Euro 277 million by
2011 if the market is opened next year, researcher H2
estimates.
Whatever the specific regulatory
regime adopted, France is “ripe for gambling, and it’s
been sort of suppressed to an extent,” said Wyn Ellis,
an analyst at Numis Securities Ltd. in London. “Any
market that liberalises is central to everybody’s
strategy.”
Online Casino News Courtesy of
Infopowa
More news here.
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