Dutch minister says self-regulation has “limited” effect on advertising

The minister made the comments in response to questions from members of parliament.

This comes as the country approaches the upcoming 1 July ban on “untargeted” gambling advertising.

The new measures will prevent gambling businesses from advertising on television, on radio or in other settings where it is not possible to prevent vulnerable groups – such as children – from seeing it.

The minister argued that, while self-regulation has a role to play in restricting advertising, it is not sufficient to properly restrict the reach of gambling advertisements. According to Weerwind, this is because not all operators are bound by the self-imposed measures, leading to many smaller businesses not respecting the rules agreed to by the trade body.

weerwind said that self-regulation trade bodies was not sufficent to impose the needed restrictions

This has meant – despite an internal industry push to restrict outdoor advertising – such ads remain common in the Netherlands. Weerwind said that it was important to “bind all parties” to the necessary restrictions and that further tightening is needed in the Recruitment, Advertising and Addiction Prevention of Games of Chance Decree, the ministerial decree that implemented the provisions of the Netherland’s gaming law, the Remote Gaming Act (KOA).

Channelling concerns

Despite the planned ad bans, the minister also said that channelisation concerns remained key.

He argued that it was important to balance protection of vulnerable groups with the need to ensure that enough ads remained directing consumers to legal offerings. Weerwind said that the Italian market, which has a total ad ban in place, has shown that such measures act to boost the size of the illegal market.

“With regard to advertising, it is therefore necessary to strike a balance between the protection of vulnerable groups and the importance of channelling it towards a legal offer,” he said. “That is why I closely monitor developments in the field of remote games of chance.”  

Implementation delay

Prior to the minister’s announcement that the ban would be implemented 1 July, the government originally intended for the measure to take place on 1 January. The government later delayed the measure to February or March 2023, before finally settling on the July date. His parliamentary colleagues questioned Weerwind on why the ban had taken so long to implement and had been subject to so many delays.

Weerwind said that the issue related to a number of points in the direction that required more detail. For example, he said that the initial text did not sufficiently explain what operators were and were not expected to do, as well what the difference between targeted and untargeted advertising was in that context.

“In connection with this, amendment of the explanation and the draft decision was desirable,” said the minister. “This requires care, in which proportionality and feasibility are preconditions. The ban on untargeted advertising for online games of chance will be adopted soon.”

Parthenon Capital completes acquisition of Global Payments’ gaming arm

Under the agreement, which was announced in February, the division has been renamed as Pavilion Payments and will continue to provide omni-channel payments services exclusively to the gaming industry.

Based in a new headquarters in Las Vegas, Nevada, Pavilion will offer kiosk, cashless and igaming technology, including the VIP Preferred c-check network that connects millions of users around the US to more than 400 in-person and online gaming institutions.

Read the full story on iGB North America.

Colorado sports betting handle hits $425.1m in February

Betting handle for the month was 3.5% below the $440.5m wagered during February of last year and 22.3% lower than $547.2m in January 2023.

Of this total, $421.6m was wagered on sports online, with the remaining $3.5m attributed to betting at retail sportsbooks across Colorado.

Read the full story on iGB North America.

Zeal commits to World Lottery Association

As a member of the WLA, Zeal has committed to complying with the organisation’s standards for social responsibility, responsible gaming, security and risk management.

Zeal joins the WLA membership network that stretches across more than 80 countries on six continents.

“We are proud the WLA has accepted us as a member,” Zeal chief executive Helmut Becker said. “As the German market leader for online lotteries, we take our responsibility in the areas of compliance, security and risk management very seriously and attach great importance to social commitments as well. 

“We are pleased to be a part of this important organisation with immediate effect and to support the high standards of the WLA and its members.”

The addition of Zeal to the WLA comes after the organisation in February also announced geolocation and fraud prevention business GeoComply as an associate member.

In January, Scientific Games also secured the WLA’s Responsible Gaming Framework Certificate of Alignment for its global operations spanning five continents.

GAN to file annual report late

By requesting relief from the SEC, the company hopes to receive a stay on the regulatory requirement, as it will not be able to complete the filings “without unnecessary effort or expense”.  

The business said that its audit committee requires the time to complete the review of the document – a result of additional procedures that have been imposed on the company by the two agreements. If the business is successful in seeking relief the company will receive a 15-day extension on its filing date, which GAN said that it “anticipates” would be sufficient to complete the report.

GAN said that it “anticipates” that it would have the document completed by the extended filing date

Last minute agreements

On 29 March, GAN said that it amended and restated a content licensing agreement with a third party content provider which meant a reduced content term ending on 31 March 2024, as well as a $15m reduction in fees. Under the new deal, the third-party company has bought 1.25m of the business’s shares.

The second deal – which occurred on 30 March – concerned a master gaming services agreement with Stations Casino LLC to launch a number of products at the operator’s properties through on-premises and state-wide mobile solutions in Nevada and self-service kiosks. The agreement included provisions that would mean that GAN would have to make a payment to Stations if there was a change in control of the company.

“The pendency of these material subsequent events during the preparation of our financial statements and the timing of the transaction so close to the March 31, 2023 filing date, have resulted in additional procedures for the company,” said GAN. “The compressed amount of time to complete those procedures has resulted in our inability to timely finalise the 2022 financial statements.”

Strategic review

At the end of March, the company announced that it would be conducting a strategic review of the business in order to maximise shareholder revenue. GAN said that the process would investigate a “range of strategic alternatives” that may improve the company’s position.

While the business said it would like to complete the assessment in a short time frame, GAN emphasised that there are no assurances that the review will end in business opting to pursue or complete a transaction, and there is no timetable for the completion of the process.  

On 3 April, GAN-owned sports betting and igaming brand Coolbet exited the Ontario regulated market after a year of operations. The business acquired the Estonian company in January 2021 for $175.9m in cash and stock.  

Swedish regulator reveals board for 2023

The seven-member board will remain the same in size, membership and composition in 2023. The regulator’s director general Camilla Rosenburg will retain her leadership position at the head of Spelinspektionen. The only change is that Per Håkansson is to become the chairman of the organisation, having previously served on the board. The board has a one-year term, serving to the 31 March 2024.

Regulator issues supplier licences

The regulator is currently in a period of reform following the passage of the Enhanced Gambling Regulations Bill in November 2022. Consequently, Spelinspektionen is implementing a number of the bill’s provisions, including the forthcoming introduction of B2B supplier licences.

Since the first licences were issued in mid-March, 16 providers in total have been authorised to offer services to operators in Sweden. The four most recent new licensees include the UK subsidiary for US-based gaming business Inspired, slots developer Nolimit City, platform software business Finnplay and Play’n Go.

“As a Nordic-based B2B platform provider specialising in regulatory compliance, we are especially pleased to be among the first group of companies to receive the Swedish B2B supplier licence,” said Finnplay managing director Jaakko Soininen.

“Sweden is an important neighbouring market for us, and we currently have several exciting new projects in development with plans to launch this year,” he continued. “So, this was an important and necessary achievement for our company.”

This sentiment was echoed by Nolimit City, which said that the acquisition of the licence was a continuation of the business’s commitment to be present in as many regulated markets as possible.

Abios at ten: Where does esports betting go from here?

Esports, and particularly esports betting, remains a young industry but Oskar Fröberg and Anton Janér, co-founders of data experts Abios, could be considered veterans.

They’ve already gone through the classic startup pivot. Abios started out as a B2C scheduling platform for fans to follow esports tournaments, fixtures and results. Products such as a Chrome extension were popular, but difficult to monetise. 

Oskar Fröberg and Anton Janér started Abios in 2013

That prompted a pivot into data, and a focus on APIs and visualisations. This B2B focus, of course, has paid off in spades.

“Sometimes we refer to our current business as one of our backup plans, but that’s not really the truth,” Fröberg says. “When we built the B2C platform we saw that as potentially a good business in itself, but we had a number of paths we could take. 

“One of these was B2B, one of these was building our own betting platform and we saw the best opportunity in B2B.”

Its APIs and visualisations also convinced a high profile betting business to enter the game. Kambi acquired Abios in an SEK270m deal in 2021.

Problem solving and passion

At a time when other companies in the sector are struggling, running out of runway or struggling to establish themselves, Abios is arguably an outlier. It secured funding from its early stages. Now with Kambi’s sports betting expertise it is shaping how esports betting is consumed. 

But they’re not sure about being tagged veterans. “We started out early; I feel young and alive still,” Janér laughs. 

To him, a business’ value lies in its ability to solve problems, which in turn contributes to Abios’ relative longevity. 

Janér believes Abios’ decade of experience solving esports’ major challenges gives it a huge head start on the competition

“Having worked on those problems for ten years, doing everything from handling real-time esports data from servers to working with analogue information, we’ve been solving these problems to an extent,” he explains. “That experience is very hard to replicate.”

A passion for the sector underpins this experience, alongside the right people. 

“By ‘the right people’. I mean people who know esports, who live and breathe it, and who are passionate about entrepreneurship, and building a company from the ground up. We people around us who support us in every aspect, the best possible people in every single role, and if you have that the rest takes care of itself.”

Facing down a market correction

While Abios now sits at the centre of esport betting’s effort to break into the mainstream, recent events have caused disquiet in about the sector’s prospects. 

Plenty of esports betting operators have got banks and investors excited, raised capital then burned through it without much in the way of returns. Some pivot away from esports and launch a firesale of assets, some lurch from one crisis to another.

This isn’t confined to esports betting. Organisations’ valuations have also plummeted, in some cases by more than 90%. 

In Fröberg’s eyes the current struggles definitely serve as a market correction.

“Having been in the industry for ten years we’ve seen a lot of businesses come and go, a lot of brands that have created a lot of noise, raised loads of capital then are never heard of again two or three years later,” he says. “Around the pandemic years there were a lot of businesses that were listed, but were never able to show any end product.”

Ultimately having the macro environment take care of itself “is probably quite good for the industry”. Those that find the right product-market fit will to stick around, and will come out strongly, he predicts. 

Esports may be undergoing a market correction, but that doesn’t mean it’s necessarily fair, Fröberg says

That’s not to say it’s necessarily a fair market correction. “We’ve seen a lot of ventures out there, where we think the idea is right, the product is good, but it’s a matter of timing,” he adds. “Maybe the industry isn’t mature enough, maybe it’ll take longer for these businesses to find their place.”

Janér points out it’s happening in every industry, in every country around the world. 

“Most people should have been a little bit attuned to the risk of this happening,” he says. “It impacts healthy companies less, but it impacts everyone.”

Standing up for esports’ future

Janér believes the digital-first nature of escorts means the sector as a whole will weather the storm better than most. And there’s still plenty of optimism around the industry – considering how young the esports sector is in 2023, each year still marks a massive improvement on the one before.

He’s also excited by the technology available in the industry, which doesn’t exist in any traditional, analogue sports. “That’s bound to create some really interesting products and opportunities going forward.

Fröberg believes esports’ detractors either don’t know the sector, or haven’t done enough research. At worst, they might have a degree of prejudice around gaming in general. 

“It’s still a rapidly growing market that’s finding its way but if you have an intimate knowledge of the sector, you know it’s here to stay and it’s going to get bigger and better,” he says.

Despite its current challenges Fröberg and Janér remain bullish about esports’ future prospects

“There’s a lot of things that are exciting, but from a pure economic perspective esports audiences are still very young, and have low disposable incomes. As it matures these fans will be spending money to entertain themselves. That’s going to change the industry.”

Janér notes there’s different pros and cons to all emerging, established and popular betting sports, and he can’t see why esports would be any less suited. However, there is still a “big lag” in terms of what information is available regarding the performance of esports across different platforms and customers. In short, the evidence could be there, we just haven’t seen it yet. 

“[But] it’s rooting in properly, and we’ll only see it grow from here,” he adds. “When it becomes as big as American football I can’t answer but it’s going to be in an interesting place.”

Life in the Kambi family

Of course, being part of a business that has successfully leveraged American football’s popularity to build a sizeable presence in the nascent US market is probably a good place to be as esports goes on that journey. 

That access to sports betting expertise, both in terms of the core product and the know-how to navigate a tricky regulatory landscape, is arguably what a lot of early-stage esports betting hopefuls have lacked. 

Janér says Abios was “a bit humbled” by just how tricky the sports betting industry is to navigate. 

Abios can act as a ‘black ops’ esports specialist for Kambi

That makes the partnership particularly valuable; Abios can lean on Kambi’s expertise around compliance, while Kambi has a ‘black ops team’ for esports, providing an extra edge and products beyond the core wagering suite. 

The supplier is still “delivering infrastructure to the esports industry” as Fröberg puts it, though under Kambi’s ownership the focus zeroes in on the betting component. “It was obviously interesting as there was money to be made there, but beforehand we were just looking at it as one [of many] sectors to be in.”

Overhauling esports odds

So what does that mean for its product roadmap? The odds product is the focus, but it’s less about innovation – at this point – and more about rolling out new products and features. Though those plans are particularly ambitious – the odds product, Fröberg predicts, will be industry leading by 2024. After 2024, that’s when they’ll start innovating. 

He argues it’s similar to the original API product. “[That] created the field and set the tone, and really broke new ground.The same is true for our widgets and visualisations. 

“With odds we’re now bringing the best things traditional sports has to offer, bringing esports up to par with odds [in 2023] then next year we want to innovate, break new ground, and try to find the types of products that have never been seen around traditional sports.”

Whether or not they consider themselves veterans, Fröberg and Janér have demonstrated staying power in a sector that is young, subject to growing pains, and yet to convince all of the gambling industry of its value. 

There’s no secret sauce but if they were to give others some advice, it’s very simple. Founders should move slowly, but deliberately.

Ignore the entrepreneurial jargon

“Don’t be too keen to get too big and make money too quickly,” Fröberg says. “When we started out esports was young, we didn’t aim to be a billion Dollar business in three years.

“The industry was growing. We knew it would grow further.”

Equally crucial, he adds, is for esports entrepreneurs to think for themselves. 

“There’s all this entrepreneurship jargon that’s meant to be conventional wisdom of how you should grow businesses,” he says. Ignore it. “Keep your eyes open and see what your industry looks like, the competitive landscape and think for yourself. 

“Make smart, well founded decisions based on your own analysis. That’s something we’ve lived by, that helped avoid stepping on many different mines.”

But while they’ve done ten years in the sector, neither Fröberg nor Janér feels they’re anywhere near finished. There’s plenty of innovation around data APIs, and massive opportunity to create something totally new around odds and betting products for esports. 

“We’re building infrastructure for esports,” Janér says again. “Whether we’re new or veterans, we’re happy to continue doing that.”

Allwyn partners with Vodafone, Camelot appoints new retail director

As part of the deal with Allwyn, Vodafone will upgrade the National Lottery’s communications infrastructure to a mobile-first approach and provide Allwyn with Wide Area Network (WAN) connectivity in its offices.

Vodafone will provide Internet of Things (IOT) connectivity and broadband, which will be delivered as a private secure network for retail sites, and will also host the National Lottery in its UK data centres.

In addition Vodafone will provide digital skills training for retailers in the UK, forming part of Allwyn’s strategy to support high street retailers during its ten-year licence period.

“We understand the role that digital technology can play in transforming a business and improving customer experience,” said Nick Gliddon, UK business director at Vodafone. “Since the lottery began, local shops have used pen and paper at lottery kiosks and, despite the significant technological shifts, not much has changed.”

“This partnership is a significant digital step forward that will help high street retailers keep up with changing consumer patterns, engaging new audiences and supporting Allwyn with reinvigorating the UK National Lottery so that it can continue to raise funds for good causes.”

Robert Chvátal, CEO of Allwyn said that the finalisation of the deal was a sign of how Allwyn planned to operate the National Lottery.

“What we have now, with Vodafone, is a clearly defined scope and plan that will lead to numerous improvements on the current technology offer,” said Chvátal. “In line with this improvement, there will be a number of benefits for retailers.

“Physical retail is a critically important part of our plan to grow the National Lottery and this is just one of the many things we are committed to doing over the course of the Fourth Licence to better support our retail partners with the investment and equipment they need to grow their own businesses.”

Camelot appointment

Camelot appointed Green to the role of retail director yesterday (3 April). Former retail director Jenny Blogg has now been promoted to commercial director.

Green first joined Camelot in 2004, in the role of retail field sales executive. Green then joined Camelot’s marketing team, in a role focused on scratchcards product management before being moved up to oversee the launches of the National Lottery’s Scratchcard and Instant Win Game products.

In 2015, Green moved to Camelot Lottery Solutions – then known as Camelot Global – as a marketing consultant, before moving back to Camelot UK to take on the role of head of instant games in 2017.

Most recently, he held the role of head of games.

“I’m delighted to be returning to retail, where I started my Camelot career,” said Green. “Our retail offering has since moved on quite a lot, but one thing that’s been consistent throughout is our fantastic retail partners.”

“They’re the public face of The National Lottery and the importance of their role in helping to raise over £30.0m a week for Good Causes cannot be overstated enough.”

In his new role, Green will report to Blogg and will oversee Camelot’s retail operations.

“Alex knows the portfolio of National Lottery games inside and out, so was a natural choice for this role,” said Blogg. “In-store sales make up around 55% of all National Lottery sales, and I know Alex will do an excellent job of leading our retail team and ensuring our dedicated retail partners continue to make the most of having the National Lottery in their stores.”

National Lottery tender

Allwyn will take over as the new operator of the National Lottery in February 2024, replacing Camelot.

Two weeks later, Camelot launched a High Court legal challenge regarding the matter, which was dropped six months later in September. Allwyn was formally awarded the licence the same month.

In October, Allwyn confirmed rumours that it was in “advanced talks” to purchase Camelot UK. This was agreed the following month.

In January, Allwyn agreed to acquire Camelot’s US business, Camelot Lottery Solutions from the Ontario Teachers’ Pension Plan Board. This was completed in March.

Two Texas gaming bills clear House committee

The bills will now head to the House Calendar committee where lawmakers will decide whether they will come up for a vote on the floor of the House.

The first piece of legislation – House Bill 1942 – seeks to legalize online sports betting in the Lone Star state.

The law would establish a regulatory regime with a $500,000 access fee, and a 10% tax on gross gambling revenue. The bill has the support of the Texan sports franchises, mobile operators and former governor Rick Perry.

House Bill 1942 would authorize sports wagering in Texas

Since gambling is specifically prohibited under the text of the Constitution of Texas, the bill is accompanied by House Joint Resolution 102 – which would seek to authorize the activity via amendment.

In order for such a measure to pass, the resolution would require two-thirds of both chambers to agree to it, as well as a majority of Texan voters in a November special election.

The second proposed law – which is more expansive – is House Bill 2843, which would regulate casino gambling and sports wagering, as well as establish a new regulatory body the Texas Gaming Commission. Similar to HB 1942, the legislation is accompanied with House Joint Resolution 155, which would alter the state constitution.

[Read full story on iGB North America]

Scott steps down from senior trading role at Entain

Scott took up the New Jersey-based role in December 2019, having previously served as the chief executive of Ladbrokes Australia.

Prior to this, he was trading director at Ladbrokes.com.au for five years and had a spell as racing bookmaker at Tatts Group, while he was also a racing analyst for Humbleton. 

Scott confirmed his departure in a LinkedIn post published on 31 March. 

“It is with a mix of sadness and happiness that after 11 years in the Entain/BetMGM family today is my last day and I’m heading back to Australia,” Scott said. “It’s been a fun ride, playing my small part in the growth of two business evolving into a couple of fairly substantial entities.

“There are far too many people to name, however I must single out Adam Greenblatt (BetMGM chief executive), who I first met in 2013 when on behalf of Ladbrokes UK he acquired a small Australian business called boookmaker.com.au, which evolved into the Ladbrokes and Neds juggernaut. 

“I have spent the last three-and-a-half years working for Adam at BetMGM and there is no better leader in any category anywhere on the globe. Under Adam, with the guidance of the executive team, I’m excited to watch from afar the inevitable progress of BetMGM over the next 24 months.”