Online Casino News and Information

Archive for December, 2006

EU COURT TO RULE ON STATE AUTHORITY TO OUTLAW BETTING AGENCIES

Wednesday, December 13th, 2006

REUTERS

VIENNA, Dec 13 (Reuters) - Austrian online betting operator bwin.com’s (BWIN.VI: Quote, Profile , Research) business model would become obsolete if the European Court of Justice ruled unfavourably in a landmark case due soon, bwin’s head was quoted as saying on Wednesday.

The European Court of Justice is due in the next months to rule whether EU member states can outlaw betting agencies licensed in another member state. The Court’s Advocate General recommended in May to stop them from doing that.

“In principle, the Advocate General’s recommendation reassures us,” bwin Chief Executive Norbert Teufelberger was quoted as saying in an interview in Austrian newspaper Der Standard.

“If the European Court of Justice didn’t follow suit, the effect would be that national lawmakers can do as they want, and then you’ve got to say that a business model such as bwin’s wouldn’t make sense anymore,” Teufelberger said.

MORE - READ THE COMPLETE ARTICLE AT REUTERS

MERRILL LYNCH STUDY CLAIMS ONLINE GAMBLING COULD BE A $528 BILLION INDUSTRY BY 2015

Tuesday, December 12th, 2006

THE REGISTER
Online gambling poised to pull $528bn - US shuns cash cow
By Burke Hansen in San Francisco
Tuesday 12th December 2006

Internet gaming is now the fastest growing segment of internet commerce, according to a report from Gamingpublic.com, an industry trade publication. Revenue in the sector is growing at a rate of 22 per cent per year.

Gamingpublic.com cited a Merrill Lynch study that concluded the global internet gaming market could reach – wait for it - $528bn annually by 2015.

Although the market as a whole is currently estimated by most analysts to be between $12bn and $30bn per annum, and overall growth is strong, fallout from the Unlawful Internet Gambling Enforcement Act passed by the US Congress last summer continues to plague the industry. Sportingbet PLC, one of the leading British companies in the gaming industry, recently posted a $471m loss as a result of the closure of its American operations.

After its CEO, Peter Dicks, was detained in New York by American authorities, Sportingbet PLC unloaded its American operations for a mere $1.

Online gambling currently accounts for only about 3 per cent of the global gambling market.

NEW eCOGRA TEAM TO MONITOR UK ONLINE GAMBLING

Tuesday, December 12th, 2006

BCS
12/12/2006

A new team has been established to monitor online gambling in the UK.

eCOGRA’s new team will monitor all 91 online casinos and 21 poker rooms accredited with the body’s Play It Safe seal to ensure online gambling in the UK is as safe as possible.

The new four-member team, all of whom have experience in the gambling and audit industry, will conduct on-site assessments of online casinos and poker rooms to ensure casinos adhere to its standards and regulations.

They will take over the role previously outsourced to third party auditing firms. eCOGRA’s independent directors, meanwhile, will continue to oversee the accreditation process and compliance issues, while also administering the assessment process.

Andrew Beveridge, eCOGRA’s chief executive, explained: ‘Although the auditors have provided us with an outstanding service in the past, we now have the necessary skills, reputation and player recognition to undertake this work ourselves, giving it our closer and more immediate attention.

‘This is in line with the way other independent standards organizations and regulators operate. These dedicated resources will allow us greater flexibility to meet the continually varying demands of our industry and to respond to the players’ demands for a safe and rewarding online gambling experience.’

South Africa Prepares To Legalize Mobile and Online Gambling

Monday, December 11th, 2006

BUSINESS DAY

CAPE TOWN — Online and cellphone gaming will become legal for the first time in SA if a draft amendment bill adopted by the cabinet last week is finally passed into law.

The South African gambling industry has been frustrated by the length of time it has taken government to come up with regulations to legalise internet gaming.

Foreign operators, particularly British operators, have been waiting for internet gaming to be legalised so that they can enter the domestic market, while provincial governments have been losing out on an additional source of tax revenue.

The draft bill proposes a licensing system for both the players and the online gaming websites.

The manner in which gaming proceeds would be taxed still had to be determined, trade and industry deputy director-general Astrid Ludin said yesterday.

She said a key challenge in drafting the proposed legislation was to find a way to effectively regulate anything on the internet and how to prevent money-laundering.

Additional resources would be required for the proposed regulations to be enforced by the National Gambling Board.

The department also had to look at the economic effect of interactive gambling and attempt to restrict access to a select audience, which would exclude young people.

A proposed way of limiting the scope of online gambling would be to make it illegal for advertisers to advertise on gambling sites, Ludin said.

Interactive gambling was outlawed by the National Gambling Act of 2004 because government considered that more time was needed to conduct research into this form of gaming, which has assumed massive proportions worldwide.

The act gave Trade and Industry Minister Mandisi Mpahlwa two years to draw up regulations to govern internet gambling, which will be regulated in terms of the proposed Gambling Amendment Bill.

The long-awaited regulations stem from a report compiled by a National Gambling Board committee and the recommendations of a national gambling policy committee consisting of Mpahlwa and the provincial MECs responsible for gambling.

Research was conducted on how other jurisdictions such as Britain, the US and Australia regulated online gambling.

Unlike the US, which decided to outlaw internet gambling to prevent money-laundering and funding terrorism, the South African government has decided to allow interactive gambling within a regulated framework. This is consistent with its general approach to gambling.

Gambling is a concurrent competence between national and provincial governments in terms of the constitution, so provinces were closely involved in framing the regulations.

The US law prevents credit-card companies from collecting payments for online bets, which effectively closed down a multibillion-dollar-a-year industry.

Estimates by foreign market-research companies suggest that the global gambling industry — worth more than $8,2bn a year in 2004 — would triple to $25bn a year by 2010.

Online poker in particular is a major source of online gaming revenue.

READ THIS ARTICLE AT BUSINESS DAY

Online Casino Tycoon Prepared to Pay Palistine and Israel $1 Billion Each For Peace

Friday, December 8th, 2006

ZAMAN (zaman.com)
By Anadolu News Agency (AA), Jerusalem
Thursday, December 07, 2006

An Israeli businessman has offered $1 billion dollars to Palestinian Prime Minister Ismail Haniye if he reaches a peace agreement with his Israeli counterpart.

Billionaire Israeli businessman Avi Shaked, whose great fortune came from running internet gambling sites, told the Reuters news agency that he wanted the killing to stop.

“My offer is to both leaders: please sit down, start negotiations and try to reach an agreement.”

The Internet tycoon said that he was ready to hand over the money through a consortium of international financiers he has lined up if a deal was made.

He emphasized that an initial installment of $100 million would be made the moment Ismail Haniye, the Hamas leader who is the prime minister of Palestine, and Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert sat down and started the negotiations.

A supporter of Israel’s Labor Party, Shaked remarked that his offer could create a million job opportunities in the most impoverished parts of Palestine.

Palestinian Prime Minister Ismail Haniye was reported to have rejected the offer on Tuesday.

European Online Gambling Industry Takes Dim View of Sands Launch Into Online Gaming

Friday, December 8th, 2006

Telegraph.co.uk
By Harry Wallop
Last Updated: 12:02am GMT 06/12/2006

The European gambling industry has attacked the launch of an online gaming website by Las Vegas Sands, the US giant.

Torbjorn Ihre, the head of public affairs at the European Betting Association, said: “It’s hypocrisy and discrimination. These two words fit. This proves that the US being open to competition is a false claim.”

The move, which Las Vegas is launching next year in partnership with Cantor Gaming, comes just a few months after the US launched a major crackdown on internet gambling. British executives were arrested and the US Senate outlawed banks from accepting online wagers. Las Vegas Sands is specifically targeting the UK market. One of its would-be rivals, Sportingbet, said it doubted the seriousness of Las Vegas Sands’ UK plans.

Andrew McIver, the chief executive, said: “They’ve put a stick in the wasp nest to see what comes out. They want to see what happens – who comes to them and whether others will follow.”

He said he was not worried by such a big name entering the market. “Not at all. I wish them all the best. They are a very good company, but their strength is offline gambling not the internet. It will take them a few years to get going.”

Las Vegas Sands said that the website, which would not accept US customers, would feature the companies’ brands, including The Venetian, Sands and Paiza.

READ THIS ARTICLE AT Telegraph.co.uk

Bodog Pulls All US Advertising, Moves Global HQ to Antigua

Friday, December 8th, 2006

PRNewswire
December 5, 2006
St. John’s, Antigua and Barbuda

Bodog.com Entertainment announced today a plan to pull all its U.S.-facing gaming-related advertising, mostly for its free-play and educational site, Bodog.net. The advertising pullback, which is quite extensive, includes television, radio, magazine and newspapers in the U.S. market as the online gaming giant has chosen instead to focus its gaming and educational site advertising efforts on European and Asian markets in a strategic decision based on the entertainment company’s long-term business objectives.

The digital entertainment powerhouse, which has become as well known for its television production, music distribution and other digital entertainment properties as it has for its world-class gaming enterprise, will continue to advertise its other digital entertainment products,
including television, music and publishing, in North America and markets around the world.

Bodog.com Founder Calvin Ayre, citing current uncertainties in the U.S. market, said the recent legislation passed by Congress was a reason behind the decision. “Though the online gaming environment in the U.S. seems to be headed down a path toward eventual regulation, the current climate calls for even more focus of our gaming-related advertising dollars into markets that face Europe and Asia,” says the billionaire founder of
Bodog.com Entertainment. “We couldn’t be better positioned to build upon our current success and growth and to continue our aggressive push toward international expansion into markets such as Europe and Asia.”

(more…)

US Newspaper Features Online Gaming /Sportsbetting/Poker Section

Tuesday, December 5th, 2006

In August 2006, the Metro Philadelphia Newspaper established a weekly Wednesday “Gaming Section” which publishes editorials containing Online Casinos, Poker and Sports Betting.

Metro Philadelphia is the largest daily newspaper in Philadelphia. To stay in touch with their readership the paper considers the fact that a large part of their readership is young, internet savy and many visit casinos in nearby Atlantic City. Philadelphia also has several new slot parlors opening soon.

They’re very excited to have just added Bodog.com as their latest full page advertiser.

GAMBLING CHANNEL FOLDS DUE TO UNCERTAINTY OF GAMBLING

Tuesday, December 5th, 2006

Variety
Tuesday, December 5, 2006
By ED MEZA

BERLIN — Paybox Premiere is pulling the plug on its much ballyhooed gambling channel Premiere Win due to the legal uncertainty of gambling offerings in Germany.

Premiere ended its partnership with U.S. gaming firm Magnabet, which was the basis of Premiere Win.

International online gambling companies have suffered an autumn of discontent after the U.S. Congress passed legislation prohibiting the use of credit cards, checks and electronic fund transfers for online gaming in October.

In Germany, three federal states have imposed bans on commercial betting, making the overall gaming market a risky venture.

Premiere is said to be looking for another partner in order to continue the channel, but with lawmakers here unlikely to loosen gaming laws, a new channel may be severely restricted.

The end of Premiere Win is the latest blow to Premiere, which is facing growing competition from upstart pay TV and video-on-demand operators and was forced to stomach the loss of top league Bundesliga soccer.

READ THE ARTICLE AT Variety

LAS VEGAS SANDS SIGNS DEAL FOR ONLINE GAMLING SITE

Monday, December 4th, 2006

PR NEWSWIRE
Agreement with Cantor Gaming will provide End-to-end Online Gaming Portal

LAS VEGAS, Dec. 4 /PRNewswire-FirstCall/ — Las Vegas Sands Corp. (NYSE: LVS) today announced that an agreement has been reached between one of its affiliates and Cantor Gaming, an affiliate of the global financial services company Cantor Fitzgerald, to launch an online casino and poker site initially aimed at serving the United Kingdom market.

Cantor Gaming will provide a complete online casino and poker destination featuring Las Vegas Sands brands, including The Venetian, Sands, Palazzo, and Paiza brands. The site will offer the most popular casino games, including blackjack, roulette, baccarat, video poker, slots and online poker. The offering will be part of a full end-to-end gaming service, including customer age and location verification, online payment processing, and customer services. The site is expected to be launched
during the second quarter of 2007. The site will be hosted, and the operator will be licensed, in compliance with the laws of Alderney, British Channel Islands. It will not accept U.S. customers.

“This is another opportunity for our company to create greater awareness of our global brands and further establish our presence and interest in the UK market,” said Bill Weidner, president and chief
operating officer of Las Vegas Sands Corp. “Additionally, as the internet gaming landscape continues to evolve this effort will put us in a strong position to evaluate and react to other potential opportunities.”

Weidner said Cantor’s expertise in managing sophisticated financial transactions, the regulatory environment in which they operate, and their successful licensing within the state of Nevada made partnering with them an easy decision.

MORE - READ THE COMPLETE PRESS RELEASE AT PR NEWSWIRE