Kindred authorised to buy back up to 23 million shares

The mandate was issued at Kindred’s extraordinary general meeting.

The buy-back will take place from 1 August 2022 until Kindred’s next annual general meeting. However, no repurchasing will take place during closed periods, which occur before the publication of quarterly results.

The maximum number of shares that can be repurchased is 23 million. Currently, the total number of Kindred issued shares is 230.1 million.

At present Kindred holds 10.0 million of these shares.

Overall, Kindred will not be able to hold more than 10% of its total shares, though the board said it intends to cancel the repurchased shares after the repurchase period.

Currently Kindred’s share price is SEK88.92 (£7.16/€8.54) per share.

Last month Kindred reported a year-on-year decline of 32.2% in revenue during the first half of the year. A major factor in this was Kindred’s cessation of activity in the Netherlands, which it completed to comply with licensing rules set out by the Dutch government.

AGTech secures further terminal tenders in China

AGTech GOT will supply terminals in the Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region and Mongolia Autonomous Region of the People’s Republic of China, as well as in the Yunnan, Sichuan, Jiangsu, Hainan and Hubei provinces.

The latest tender wins expand AGTech GOT’s presence in the Chinese sports lottery terminal market, with the business having in place a wide range of similar deals.

These included agreements signed in January this year to supply technology and services in the Gansu, Zhejiang, Henan, Hebei and Jiangsu provinces, as well as the Shanghai and Tianjin municipalities.

“AGTech GOT has won many tenders in various provinces, municipalities and autonomous regions across China, which reaffirmed the hardware division’s continued dedication to and leading position in China’s sports lottery terminal market, demonstrating the continued effort and competitiveness of AGTech’s lottery terminals,” AGTech said.

In May, AGTech posted HK$35.3m in revenue for the first quarter of 2022, up by 70.2% year-on-year. AGTech attributed this to the increase in lottery hardware sales, lottery distribution and ancillary services and the provision of electronic payment services in Macau.

The growth in lottery revenue came as total lottery sales in China reached CNY86.27bn for the first three months of 2022, which is up 2.0% from the same period in 2021.

Lottery hardware sales rose by HK$9.4m, while lottery distribution and ancillary services revenue also rose by HK$4.7m.

Star forecasts AUS$1.53bn in revenue for FY22 as licence reviews continue

In a market update, Star said revenue in its native Australia was up 11% on pre-pandemic levels in the final quarter of the financial year, amounting to $512m for the three months to the end of June.

Star said slots revenue was 28% higher in the quarter and non-gaming revenue was also up 26%. While domestic table revenue is yet to fully recover despite the reopening of venues in Australia, it was within 5% of pre-Covid levels.

The operator singled out its Star Gold Coast in particular, with domestic revenue at the site up 48% on pre-pandemic levels. This, Star said, was driven by a recovery in domestic tourism and the opening of The Dorsett Gold Coast Hotel and The Star Residences during the year. 

Domestic revenue at Star’s Brisbane casino was up 13% on pre-pandemic levels while Star Sydney domestic revenue returned to pre-Covid levels.

However, Star said property closures, operating restrictions and border closures that were put in place in response to the Covid-19 outbreak did impact its performance in the early part of 2022 and this would be reflected in its full-year results.

The operator also said costs associated with regulatory reviews and its increased investment in regulatory and compliance functions would also be reflected in its results, which are due to be published on 22 August.

A review into operations at Star Sydney is due to complete by the end of August, while in June it was also announced that an independent review of Star’s suitability to hold a casino licence in Queensland will also take place.

In terms of its performance in July, Star said trading was above pre-pandemic levels. The operator said its Star Sydney property, as well as its two locations in Queensland, were trading above pre-Covid levels. 

Meanwhile, Star also issued an update on its Queen’s Wharf Brisbane Integrated Resort Development, which is now not expected to open until the second half of 2023 due to a series of delays caused by the pandemic and higher than average rainfall in 2022. It was initially planned for the facility to be open by the middle of next year.

Total project costs are expected to be approximately 10% up on original guidance of $2.6bn due to escalating construction material costs, labour shortages, supply chain challenges and the programme delay, as well as the inclusion of capital equipment.

Star, together with its joint venture partners, proposes to fund the majority of these costs through additional equity contributions in accordance with the existing joint venture interests.

Hippodrome co-founder Jimmy Thomas dies aged 88

Thomas died at the London Clinic on 30 July after a short illness.

He leaves behind two sons, Simon and Jordan, and two daughters, Lisa and Carla, along with seven grandchildren and three stepgrandchildren.

Thomas opened his first casino in Leicestershire in 1956, which was followed by casinos in Nottingham and Derby.

In the 1960s he founded Thomas Automatics Co Ltd, which supplied amusement and leisure equipment. He then went on to found more companies, including Showboat Entertainment Centre Limited and Beacon Entertainment Limited.

L-R, SIMON AND Jimmy THOMAS

A number of these companies were sold to The Rank Organisation in 1987, while others were demerged. The demerged companies came under the umbrella of a new business, Thomas Holdings Limited.

Jimmy Thomas acted as chief executive of Thomas Holdings, while son Simon was managing director.

Thomas Holdings companies Thomas Estates Limited, which trades as Showboat Amusement Centres and Beacon Entertainments Limited (trading as Beacon Bingo and Social Clubs) operated until they were sold in 2006 to Mayfair Acquisitions Limited.

Following this, Jimmy and Simon Thomas opened the award-winning Hippodrome Casino in Leicester Square in 2012.

“My father achieved enough for several lifetimes and was respected the world over for his business leadership and pioneering vision,” Simon Thomas said.

“I had the privilege of his advice and guidance not only as a business partner but as a son. He was one of a kind and will be greatly missed by his family, many friends and staff members.”

Jimmy Thomas was a member of many industry bodies. He was a life member of the British Amusement and Catering Trades Association (Bacta) and was the vice president and chairman of the Bacta Charitable Trust.

In 2013 he received a Lifetime Achievement Award from the Casino Association. He also received a Lifetime Achievement Award in 2019 at the British Casino Awards.

Holding back the tide

After eight years of anticipation, it could have been difficult for the launch of the Netherlands’ online gambling market to fulfil expectations.

For Jansen, chair of regulator de Kansspelautoriteit (KSA), the launch did indeed live up to what he anticipated.

“It’s been a success in several aspects,” he says.

But going as expected is only a good thing if the predictions are optimistic. And it’s hard to miss the fact that one aspect of the market launch went exactly as Jansen predicted, in exactly the wrong way.

Advertising turmoil

In May 2021, the KSA chair warned of an advertising “bombardment” when the legal market opened.

Looking at countries such as Belgium, Italy, Spain and Great Britain, Jansen said that regions where operators “look for the edges” in marketing laws often experience a backlash and ultimately face much stricter rules.

That’s almost exactly what happened from 1 October.

Research published in the KSA’s annual report found that more than 35 gambling ads were shown on average between 9pm and 10pm from October to December 2021. This figure rose to more than 40 between 11pm and midnight. Data from Nielsen cited in the report also suggested that total monthly ad spend for the sector peaked at almost €30m in December 2021.

With two different trade groups – one representing online-first new entrants and the other those already involved in other sectors of Dutch gambling such as Holland Casino and Nederlandse Loterij – industry codes of conduct took time to be finalised.

And by December, parliament had already voted for a ban on “untargeted advertising” of “high-risk games”.

“What is less successful is the turmoil in our society, the controversy in our society about the amount of advertising,” Jansen continues. “And that advertising has caused a lot of discussion and debate and anger among many people.

“People are not understanding why in a few weeks or within a week, starting from zero, you saw a huge amount of advertising which caused an intense political debate and also created some consensus in our parliament that something should be done about it.”

So was all of this avoidable? Jansen certainly thinks so.

“I think they could have avoided it if they had shown more restraint on the advertising,” he says. “Shown some more responsibility, social responsibility, having more thought about the effects on society of this huge amount of advertising, mostly around football matches, especially international games.

“Self-regulation I think feels too little too late.”

So will the ban now undo much of the good work in creating a regulated system that has attracted 90% of players? Jansen does not believe this is the case, noting that while a total ad ban might be a risk to channelisation, the ban on untargeted ads would still leave the industry with ways to reach players.

“It will take some time, but there’s one thing I think that makes me not have too bad a feeling about it,” Jansen says. “And that’s that there will not be a total ban on advertising. It will be a ban, as the minister has told parliament, on untargeted ads and for high-risk games. And he’s thinking about forbidding the use of role models, like former football players.

“So we’ll have to see. It’s very important to see how the legislation will be.”

Cooling-off controversy

One crucial aspect of the Dutch launch was the “cooling-off period”, which prevented operators that had accepted Dutch customers before the market opened from receiving licences.

This left many of Europe’s highest-profile online gambling businesses – such as Entain, LeoVegas and Kindred – locked out of the Netherlands for at least six months.

During that time, these operators were also told they could not take business from Dutch customers, even passively, and were required to block access to their sites.

“We had many European-wide gambling operators who were quite visible in our country,” Jansen explains, “who had many customers in our country, illegally, and that is something we, and our minister also, wanted to address with a stricter enforcement policy and with higher fines.”

He has no doubt that the policy was a success. So could it catch on elsewhere? Jansen notes that there are few other new markets left to open in Europe, but the example could be a datapoint for those that do.

“We were one of the last in Europe of course, and there’s not that many countries still to follow,” he says. “But having a look maybe in Germany or in Ireland, maybe there’s some changes to be waited for. They might have a look at the experiences in other countries like the Netherlands, because we are an example of a recent market opening.

“They might look at that, but it’s always also going to depend on the specific circumstances in a jurisdiction.”

For those operators that couldn’t launch right away, 1 April was a key date, as the “cooling-off period” came to an end, and many of the operators in question said they expected to receive licences in Q2 of 2022.

Sure enough, in early April, Jansen revealed that the KSA was considering a total of 30 licence applications, the majority of which had been recently submitted, meaning it may only be a matter of time before a number of big names enter the regulated market.

“Some of them announced they would apply for a licence in the country and they did,” he points out. “So that’s not a secret.

“Of course it depends on how they bring forward their ideas about their licence and how they fulfil all requirements. But if they do that in a proper way, then you might expect some bigger names in the Netherlands soon.”

These licensees – like the 10 initial operators to be licensed and those that have been approved in the meantime – will be judged on their ability to meet 18 licensing criteria. Jansen explains that the most challenging of these often relate to data protection.

“We’ve got 18 elements that we are investigating in this procedure,” he says. “Many are about data. And consumer protection preventing addiction is a very important issue, and there’s all kinds of financial requirements.

“The data safety and being connected to the exclusion register, these are quite demanding processes to get in place and to get them functioning and working. So those requirements are what we are dealing with now.”

Hurdles for new entrants

When viewed in tandem with the marketing ban, this policy may appear to create a two-tiered system. The incumbents – such as Bet365, Tombola and Holland Casino – had their chance to advertise before any ban was approved.

But new entrants will face stricter rules and a population apparently already tired of gambling marketing.

Jansen, however, does not believe that this makes things too challenging for the businesses that weren’t allowed to apply for a licence when the market opened.

“I don’t know the effect, but my idea would be that many players in the Netherlands know and have known those former illegal operators by name and they know what they can offer,” he says. “So I don’t think it will be a much higher threshold for those entering the Dutch market.”

Looking ahead, meanwhile, Jansen notes that the job of the regulator is naturally becoming a lot busier than it ever has been before, saying that it makes the next six to eight months a crucial time in the regulation of the Dutch market.

“There are for sure challenges in the months to come,” he says. “Of course we are still dealing with something like 30 applications for a licence and there might be maybe five or six more to come in the next couple of months, so it takes a lot of effort to review all the applications. We’ve got our enforcement challenges, keeping the illegal market as small as possible.

“And thirdly, we have to develop our new way of supervisory activity, [monitoring] the licensees more than we did in the past. So we have to translate the amount of data from all licence holders to information that can be used by our inspectors and our supervisors.

“These are new challenges we’re facing in the next six to eight months.”  

Casino closures push Macau to worst-ever monthly revenue in July

Total revenue for the month was MOP398m (£40.2m/€48.0m/$49.2m), down 95.3% from MOP8.44bn in July 2021 and significantly lower than MOP24.45bn in 2019 prior to the pandemic.

The July figure was also an 86.0% decline from MOP2.48bn in June this year before casinos were forced to close in line with local Covid-19 measures.

For the year-to-date, revenue in the seven months to the end of June was MOP26.67bn, down 53.6% on last year.

Macau first closed, and then extended, the closure of all non-essential industrial and commercial activities from 11-22 July as the outbreak mounted, with many people stuck in place at locations throughout the city, including in the Hotel Lisboa casino.

Casinos, along with other businesses engaged in industrial or commercial activities, did not begin to reopen until 23 July, albeit on a limited basis.

The record-low month comes after Macau chief executive Ho Iat-Seng last week announced the beginning of the public tender process for the six available casinos licences in a process that will run from 29 July to 14 September.

The public tender is the result of a reform of Macau gaming law approved in May that replaces the previous system of three concessionaires and three subconcessionaires with a simplified model of six concessions.

Currently, the six operators permitted to offer gaming are Las Vegas Sands, SJM, Melco, Galaxy Entertainment, MGM China and Wynn, with little substantive difference between a concession and subconcession.

A new nine-member body, the Committee for Public Tendering of Concessions for the Operation of Casino Games of Fortune was also announced to oversee the tender process.

Massachusetts House and Senate agree on sports betting bill in final hours

Each of the state’s two legislative chambers passed a sports betting bill, but with drastic differences. 

The House had passed a bill in July 2021 in line with other US sports betting bills, featuring a 12.5% tax rate, a $5.0m licence fee and little product or marketing restrictions. 

However, the Senate’s version of the bill included more restrictions, including a ban on many forms of marketing such as promotional bets. The bill would also ban marketing during a live sporting event and would only allow online marketing if 85% of the audience “is reasonably expected to be 21 years of age or older”.

Read the full story on iGB North America

Rhode Island betting handle surpasses $500m in 2021-22

Total handle for the 12 months through to the end of June 2022 was $517.2m, an increase of 46.5% from $353.0m in the previous financial year, according to figures published by the Rhode Island Lottery.

Some $290.5m was wagered via mobile during the year, while players also spent $226.8m at retail sportsbooks, split $164.9m across the Twin River casino and $61.9m at the Tiverton Casino.

Combined online and retail revenue for the year was up 9.7% from $36.2m in 2020-21 to $39.7m.

Online betting accounted for $122.1m of total revenue for the financial year, with $17.7m coming from retail. Twin River was responsible for $11.7m of all retail revenue and the Tiverton Casino $6.0m.

Meanwhile, the Rhode Island Lottery also published figures for the final month of the year, with handle for June climbing 29.1% year-on-year to $34.2m. However, this was 16.8% down from $41.1m in May and the lowest monthly figure since August 2021.

Of the total spent by players in June, $20.9m was wagered online and $13.3m in-person at retail sportsbooks, with the split at $8.9m for the Twin River casino and $4.4m the Tiverton Casino.

In terms of revenue, combined online and retail revenue for June was $2.4m, down 35.1% from $3.7m in June 2021m but marginally higher than $2.3m in May this year.

Online revenue for the month reached $1.7m, while $340,132 in revenue from Twin River and $279,211 from Tiverton Casino resulted in $619,343 in retail revenue.

Lottomatica monitoring M&A opportunities after H1 revenue rockets

Lottomatica in its current form is a relatively new entity: having been created as a gaming multi-national IGT sold its Lottomatica-branded B2C operations to Gamesnet Group – which then adopted the Lottomatica brand.
As a result, much of the revenue and profit growth was due to the acquisition.

Revenue was up by almost 350%, to €801.0m.

Online revenue grew from €128m to €164m for the period of six months ending 30 June, a 27.3% increase, while retail betting grew from €10m to €174m, and gaming machines segment from €40m to €463m – both representing an over tenfold increase due to the sector’s 2021 affection by Covid-era changes in consumer behaviour and government enforced shutdowns of retail premises.  

The operator reported a €61m profit for the six-month period from 31 December 2021 to 30 June 2022 as opposed to losses of €54m and €67m for the two previous six-month periods respectively.

In Q2, the business recorded earnings before interest, tax, depreciation and amortisation (EBITDA) of €234m, compared to EBITDA of €125m for Q1.

The growth was driven by both strong online growth and a recovery of the businesses retail operations which were affected by the covid-19 pandemic.  

Online accounts now account for 39% of total EBITDA compared to 16% in H1 2019, a long-term trend accelerated by social changes wrought by the pandemic.

The report also heralded the positive regulatory outlook due to the Italian government’s 11 July decision to extend Italian betting concessions a further two years until 2024, amid a wider Italian gambling reform effort.

Lottomatica additionally noted the success of its integration efforts in which the business migrated its retail and digital offerings to a single platform, merged its Lottomatica Scommesse and GoldBet divisions and rolled out a single shopfront virtual betting product.

The strong Q2 showing led to higher cash reserves and lower debt, and therefore created questions during the earnings call regarding the company’s M&A appetite.

“We are actively monitoring the market, assessing those assets with the same approach we have previously discussed. But for now there is no update. When there is an update we will clearly communicate to the market that is what we want to do,” said chief financial officer Laurence van Lancker.

Van Lancker continued arguing that there needed to be a business case for an acquisition.

“We don’t want to do acquisitions for the sake of EBIDTA or the sake of growth, we want to have a profitable, sustainable and disciplined growth for the right conditions – but we keep on being very active in this space.”

Zebet scores new partnership with FC Nantes

Under the deal, Zebet branding will appear on first team players’ shorts for the next three seasons, beginning with the 2022-23 season that kicks off this coming weekend.

Zebet will also work with the club on a wide range of activities to promote its sports betting offering, with a number of actions planned for the upcoming campaign.

In addition, Zebet and FC Nantes will work together to encourage responsible gambling among fans.

FC Nantes finished ninth in the 2021-22 Ligue 1 season and also won the Coupe de France, securing the team’s place in the Uefa Europa League in 2022-23 group stage.

Yesterday (31 July), FC Nantes lost 4-0 to Paris Saint-Germain in the 2022-23 Trophée des Champions, the traditional opener to the French domestic season, whereby the winner of the previous year’s Ligue 1 faces off against the reigning Coupe de France holder.