1 estrella2 estrellas3 estrellas4 estrellas5 estrellas (Ninguna valoración todavía)
Cargando...

£1.2 Billion Wiped Off British Betting Market Value as UKGC Considers £2 Online Slots-Cap Plan

27

£1.2 Billion Wiped Off British Betting Market Value as UKGC Considers £2 Online Slots-Cap Plan

Shares in UK betting companies took a battering on £BillionWipedOffBritishBettingMarketValueasUKGCConsiders£Friday morning after the UK Gambling Commission (UKGC), the country’s gaming regulator, said it was prepared to explore the idea of capping the maximum stakes for slots at UK-licensed online casinos at £2.

UKGCCarolyn Harris MP says she is pleased the UKGC is “finally seeing sense,” but a cap on stakes would drive players to the black market. (Image: Flipboard)

On Thursday, Neil McArthur, UKGC chief executive, told politicians he would consider the proposal and would deliver a decision within the next six months.

Investors immediately took fright, shaving £1.2 billion ($1.6 billion) off the value of UK betting stock by Friday morning. Shares in William Hill fell 6.2 percent on the news, and GVC Holdings declined by 5.7 per cent. 888 Holdings fell 1.5 per cent.

In Line with FOBTs

In November, an all-party parliamentary group (APPG) recommended radically slashing the stakes on online slots to bring them in line with fixed-odds betting terminals (FOBTs). These machines offer electronic versions of slots and casino games like roulette, and can be found in retail betting outlets throughout the country. But they have been described by politicians as a social blight.

In 2018, the government approved a proposal to on FOBTs from £100 ($130) per spin to £2 ($2.60) from January last year. The move brought job losses and the

Labour MP Carolyn Harris, who chairs the APPG, said she was glad the UKGC had “finally seen sense on this.”

“A review of stake limits online has been clearly recommended by the all-party parliamentary group and is long overdue,” Harris said in an official statement.

“Online slot content games should be reduced to £2 a spin in line with the rules in betting shops. The Gambling Commission must stop being reactive and take action to protect the vulnerable from harm in line with their licensing objectives.”

Faulty Logic

But at a gambling conference in London in November, GVC CEO Kenny Alexander warned that the comparison between FOBTs and online slots was a false one, primarily because there is no black market in FOBTs,

“If they put a £2 limit on online casinos, the day after that, virtually the same amount of people who used to stake more than £2 will go to the black market,” Alexander said, as reported by iGaming Business.

“They’ll play at sites in Costa Rica, they’ll play at sites in Curacao, they’ll play at sites that may not be licensed anywhere. These sites will not be paying taxes … they will have no interest in responsible gaming, no interest in protecting the player,” he added.

A recent report found that around 200,000 people in the UK engaged with black-market gambling sites in the past year. The unregulated market is estimated to generate revenues of $1.8 billion from UK customers each year.

1 estrella2 estrellas3 estrellas4 estrellas5 estrellas (Ninguna valoración todavía)
Cargando...

MGM Boss Jim Murren, Former Opponent, Says He’ll Work with Trump on Gaming Issues  EBCI Holdings Gets Council Approval to Launch $10M Gaming Tech Incubator Fund  San Bernardino Gang Raids Close 30 Gaming Operations, 180 Suspects Nabbed  Bally’s Evicts Tribune Printing Plant from Future Chicago Casino Site  Las Vegas Crime Round Up: Metro Cops Increase Patrol On Super Bowl Sunday, Funds Raised to Address Sex Trafficking  Pennsylvania Budget Shortfall Seeks Holiday Gift From Gambling Expansion  Nevada Blacklist Growing as Gaming Regulators Curb Crime  Philippines Gaming Regulator PAGCOR Claims Missing Casino Owner Not Paying His Fair Share of Taxes  Rio de Janeiro May See Regulated Sports Betting This Year  Singapore Casinos Singing the Blues as Gaming Loses to Shopping