XLMedia signs media partnership with WRAL.com

North Carolina-based Capitol Broadcasting Company owns WRAL.com and its subsidiary WRALsportsfan.com.

North Carolina must publish regulations for online sports betting before 8 January ahead of accepting wagers on 14 June 2024.

Furthermore, the partnership is in line with XLMedia’s strategic objective “to expand its North America footprint and media partnership business (MPB)”.

David King, XLMedia CEO, said that the acquisition adds scope to the affiliate in the market.

“We are very pleased to be able to build upon our MPB success by adding another prominent publisher in a key state with strong presence for both professional and college sport.

“This is an important revenue opportunity for both businesses,” the CEO further added.

“In line with our stated strategy, this agreement furthers our efforts to expand our North America footprint in select markets to capitalise on the US’s growing sports betting market.”

Chris Weatherly, VP of digital at Capitol Broadcasting Company, spoke about excitement in partnering with the gaming affiliate.

“WRAL Digital is excited to partner with XLMedia’s experienced team to generate relevant and engaging sports betting content for our audience.

“We know the anticipation and demand around this content will be at an all-time high entering 2024,” added Weatherly. “Being able to partner with XLMedia gives us a big advantage.”

GGL says Malta Bill 55 not compatible with EU law

The GGL said it believes the legislation – which Malta’s president George Vella signed into law in June – goes against the Recast Brussels Regulation. This is the 2013 European law which regulates the jurisdiction, recognition and enforcements of legal judgements between EU member states.

However, despite coming to this conclusion, the GGL made clear it is not its responsibility to decide whether the law is compatible with European law or not.

last month, the european commission said it would scrutinise bill 55

While last month the European Commission said it would examine Bill 55, historically the European Court of Justice has been the final decision maker on the relationship between EU and domestic law.

The GGL has told the German federal states of its assessment and added it is in contact with the relevant authorities.

As the German Ministry of Justice has already approached the European Commission, the GGL said it does “not see any reason to take action beyond this”.

“We therefore assume that proceedings will be initiated accordingly,” said the regulator.

Malta’s controversial gaming law

Bill 55 seeks to protect gambling operators from liability resulting from their MGA-licensed grey market activities.

As such, the law orders courts to refuse to recognise or enforce any foreign judgements against these gambling businesses, when the activity is covered under their licence.

Bill 55 comes in the wake of a series of German and Austrian cases which have questioned the legality of gambling operators’ activities in this region. Precedents in both countries have found operators can be sued by a player for all historic losses.

While many operators have paid up after losing in court, 888-owned Mr Green and William Hill, as well as Flutter-owned PokerStars, have fought the decisions.

As a result, some lawyers instead opted to sue the operators in Malta, where many of these businesses are based.

Dispute over European law

The operators would argue their gambling activity is covered under the European free movement of services across Europe. The legal basis of this is the Treaty for the Functioning of the European Union, one of the EU’s two primary treaties.

Meanwhile, European governments and regulators point to a 2017 decision by the European Commission to close infringement procedures and complaints in the gambling sector.

This, they argue, is the legal ruling that states they have the right to prevent Malta-based businesses from taking bets in their jurisdictions.  

Sportradar scores betting data deal with US Soccer

Under the deal, Sportradar becomes US Soccer’s official betting data partner. Sportradar will have exclusive rights to collect, licence and distribute the federation’s official betting and media data.

The agreement enables Sportradar to provide the data to its global network of more than 900 regulated betting operators.

Sportradar also takes exclusive distribution rights for the live AV streaming of US Soccer competitions for betting purposes. This will only be available outside of the US. 

The deal covers more than 111 matches per year across US men’s and women’s national team competitions.

Sportradar and US Soccer will also collaborate on the development of bespoke data-driven solutions. This is with the aim of deepening existing fan relationships, attracting and engaging new supporters and increasing opportunities for monetisation.

US Soccer to make use of Sportradar’s integrity services

In addition, US Soccer will engage Sportradar’s Integrity Services for bet monitoring. This includes Sportradar’s Universal Fraud Detection System, Intelligence & Investigation Services, Integrity Audit and Education & Prevention.

“The profile of soccer globally across both the men’s and women’s game is the highest it has ever been,” Sportradar’s executive vice-president for strategic partnerships and content, Eric Conrad, said.

“At this important moment for the sport, this partnership reflects the shared commitment we have with US Soccer to bring the sport to a larger audience both domestically and on an international level.

“We know that when fans place bets on a game, their interest in the sport intensifies. I am confident that our scale, technology and leadership in the market will position us to effectively monetise these rights with a strong focus on future value creation.”

US Soccer’s vice-president of business ventures, Ross Moses, added: “The partnership with Sportradar is massive for US Soccer. It’s well recognised that the next four years are an unprecedented opportunity for American soccer.

“Partnering with an industry leader like Sportradar sets an amazing foundation for US Soccer to protect the integrity of the sport while engaging a competitive and fast-evolving marketplace.”

William Hill ad complaint dismissed

The ad was identified using the ASA’s Active Ad Monitoring system. This system uses AI to identify ads that may infringe on ASA rules.

The complaint concerned a tweet posted on 10 February this year, which was promoted by William Hill. It included a clip of ex-footballer Robbie Savage talking about the relegation chances for Leeds United.

Throughout the video, William Hill’s logo and the BeGambleAware logo were shown intermittently. The end of the video showed text stating “It’s who you play with. William Hill”.

In its defence, William Hill said the ad had been targeted at the age group of 25-49 year olds that followed the Leeds United and Sky Sports Twitter accounts.

Regular reviews of ad personalities

The operator also said that it carries out a “thorough analysis” of personalities featured in its advertising. It added that reviews are carried out regularly.

William Hill argued that Savage does not appeal to under-18s, as he has been retired for a number of years. He also last played for a high-level club 15 years ago. They noted that his last appearance for a national team was in 2004.

Analysis on Savage’s social media demographics found that 0.1% of his Twitter followers were under the age of 18.

William Hill said that Savage is “now known for punditry” as opposed to being a football player, adding that they believe he falls within the low-risk category for appealing to children. This categorisation is outlined in the ‘Gambling and lotteries advertising: protecting under-18s’ section of the Joint CAP and BCAP Advertising Guidance.

Complaint not upheld by ASA

The ASA dismissed the complaint, stating that Savage does not meet the “strong appeal” aspect necessary to uphold it.

The standards body agreed that Savage was now more recognisable as a pundit, as his football career ended some time ago.

The ASA detailed that Savage’s media appearances, on shows such as BT Sports Score and BBC Radio 5, are not targeted to under-18s and therefore have a low number of younger audience members. Savage’s appearance in a 2021 BBC Three documentary as director of football at Macclesfield FC was also analysed. The ASA concluded that the documentary’s tone was aimed towards adults.

The ASA also noted that Savage did not have public profiles on Snapchat, TikTok or Twitch. In addition, his total under-18 Twitter following amounted to 1,600 users.

After considering this, the ASA concluded that Savage did not have a strong appeal to under-18s and the advertisement did not breach any ASA rules or guidelines.

Earlier this month, the ASA found that an ad from Bet365 did breach its advertising guidelines, concluding that the footballer in the ad appealed to under-18s.

The ASA also struck down a Ladbrokes tweet this month for the same reason. This was the third time a Ladbrokes ad had been targeted for appealing to under-18s in a matter of weeks.

Yolo Group’s Joe McCallum on growing crypto gambling

More than three decades at William Hill may seem an unusual training ground for Yolo Group, a business looking to bring cryptocurrency gambling into the mainstream. But as managing director of Yolo Entertainment, with responsibility for the Sportsbet.io and Bitcasino brands, Joe McCallum can argue he’s a pioneer of a new category of gambling. 

And crypto gambling is a rapidly growing category. When McCallum joined Sportsbet.io in 2017, initially thinking he’d be there for three months, it posted net gaming revenue (NGR) of €22,000 in month one. By 2022, NGR had jumped to around €181m. In the more profitable igaming vertical, Bitcasino’s contribution will be significantly higher. 

From William Hill to Yolo Group: Not that big a leap

Following a brief stint in the police force, McCallum worked his way up William Hill’s hierarchy. He had spells as a shop manager and district manager before rolling out retail technology programmes across the retail estate. He eventually progressed to online, leading the development of the company’s website. 

Customer engagement formed a major part of his time at William Hill and he is a big believer in the role of betting shops as community hubs. Moving to head office, working with staff who had no interaction with customers, was strange to him. 

Yolo Entertainment MD Joe McCallum started his gaming career working for William Hill in Glasgow

“If you’re employing somebody that comes from a service industry, they’ve interacted with customers so they’ve actually seen a player in terms of how they react,” McCallum explains. “That’s very important. We always talk about putting customers at the centre of our universe, but you need to engage with the products you’re selling.”

At Yolo Group, arguably the most visible crypto gambling operation worldwide, that focus on customer experience is crucial. “We’re in a TikTok world now,” he says, pointing out he’s not building betting and casino sites for other 62-year-olds. “I need to think about building a site for people aged between 25 and 35, with the added complexity of the crypto world.”

Yolo therefore encourages employees to use the site and to use crypto. “In the canteen [at Yolo headquarters] you pay in crypto and we had a World Cup incentive scheme last year where everybody got paid in crypto. 

“It’s just trying to bring it into everyday life.”

Crypto gambling and the crypto-curious

Bringing cryptocurrencies into everyday life drives adoption, but the scale of that task can’t be underestimated. 

McCallum points out his son was “amazed” he could use funds from a crypto wallet to buy a drink at the Grand National, so the awareness gap is there even among younger generations. 

Engaging the crypto-curious will be key to Yolo’s growth

“That shows the challenge we have: how do you create that ability for new customers to learn? 

“Obviously there’s going to be an audience that already uses crypto, but there’s also going to be these others coming in that can’t do it yet.” 

It’s why there’s a push to increase usage among Yolo staff; if they understand it, they know how to bring new users along with them. 

The big challenge is to take people from fiat currency to crypto betting. That’s ambitious, McCallum admits. “But it’s a target market we’re focusing on, the crypto-curious, the people who have heard of it but don’t really know what it is.”

How Yolo Group used partnerships to power education efforts

Its Premier League partnerships play a key role in driving Yolo Group’s education efforts. Sportsbet.io features on Championship club Southampton’s shirts and the brand has previously partnered Arsenal and Watford. 

“There’s an interesting fact about the Premier League,” he says. “There was a poll asking how savvy fans were in terms of crypto and Southampton topped that. It demonstrates our partnership is getting the message across.”

Sportsbet.io’s agreement with Southampton is a partnership rather than a sponsorship, McCallum says

As part of its Watford deal, Yolo put the Bitcoin logo on the club’s shirt sleeves. “People were asking what it was, it was provoking a reaction,” McCallum recalls. “Even on the pitch other teams were asking what it was, so the players were educating one another on crypto.”

He’s very careful to describe these agreements as partnerships, not sponsorships. “You’re dealing with the club’s heritage so you have an element of responsibility in terms of what you can and can’t do.”

The Southampton partnership, for example, initially met resistance from the club’s fanbase. After year one, a fan engagement survey found 17% in favour of the Yolo alliance. That rose to 68% in year two. 

McCallum believes the secret to growing this acceptance comes down to a focus on creating engaging content in partnership with the club, rather than just pushing the betting. Over the years they have organised Bitcoin treasure hunts and produced a video series about mental health and responsible gambling featuring the players. They even ensured pitchside LED advertising was in the team colours. 

It all comes back to that core focus of growing the crypto community, both through Yolo and beyond. “You can actually see some momentum, with Blackstone investing in crypto and advocating for it, when they were not touching it three years ago,” McCallum points out.

Building trust in the crypto community

Fan engagement suggests Yolo has already built an audience that it is now looking to expand. But to reach this stage there was an even more pressing need to build trust with the crypto community. 

“There’s a point where you need to look at who the customer is, what they’re looking for and how you get them to trust you,” McCallum explains. “The first place we looked was the Bitcoin Forum. When I first came on board we were rated as a ‘scammer’ across the board.”

Changing that rating was vital, he says. “For me, that’s the challenge – how you make a customer become an advocate for the brand.” 

The work to understand that end user told McCallum what customers wanted from Sportsbet.io and Bitcasino. It’s a fast site, with fast payment resolution, and offers good customer support when things go wrong. 

“We’ve always said when we ask customers how they’re feeling, we take that feedback, take action then go back to the customer and show what we’ve done,” he says. “When there’s a technical issue, we’ll acknowledge it, run a CRM campaign and admit that we didn’t meet the standard, then provide some form of compensation. 

“The idea around that is acknowledging what you get wrong; I think the public, especially in this day and age, respect that from customer service,” McCallum adds. Its rating on the Bitcoin Forum now? The highest possible. 

Dodgy schemes and ripoffs 

Revenue for 2022 shows that while there’s an audience for crypto gambling, it hasn’t reached mainstream acceptance just yet. Even when McCallum joined, crypto was associated with dodgy schemes and ripoffs. 

Yolo Group, as a global business, is looking to change the record on crypto. There’s greater visibility of player activity, McCallum points out. “As soon as you’re on the blockchain, I can see what you do,” he says. “I don’t know your name but I know where your account is, I know where you spend it and I know how much you’ve got in it.”

And greater visibility of customer activity means the company sets higher standards for responsible gambling, McCallum argues. In his eyes, it goes beyond regulatory responsibility and becomes a corporate responsibility matter. 

It’s down to businesses such as Yolo Group to prove Cryptocurrencies are legitimate and sustainable tokens, mccallum argues

“You’ve got to remember, you’re looking to attract people to come and work for you and, let’s face it, gambling and crypto is the double whammy in terms of stuff many people don’t want to touch,” he says. 

“So how do we engage people to come and work for us? We behave responsibly. And we’re taking the lead by helping with responsible gambling policy.”

It’s a push that starts with Yolo then extends across the crypto gambling sector. Other competitors look to replicate or emulate the safer gambling standards and people see sites such as Bitcasino and Sportsbet.io as legitimate operators. 

“The idea is we’re all growing together and if one of us gets a bad name, we all get a bad name.”

Building to cryptos Uber moment 

Yolo Group’s scale certainly helps drive that legitimacy. It spans B2B providers such as aggregator Hub88, live dealer specialist Bombay and an array of investments through its venture capital arm Yolo Investments. 

McCallum’s customer-facing brands, for example, act as “a friendly customer” for the B2B suppliers, rolling out content and products. Doing so generates revenue and helps showcase the services to third party clients. The message is simple: what works in crypto can succeed in fiat gambling. 

Yolo Group’s ambassadors range from World Cup winners and afropop stars to cricket legends

Take Brazil, a market where Yolo has invested as much as €80m. “That’s not an insignificant amount,” McCallum says. “We wouldn’t have done that if we didn’t see a strategic benefit.”

Similar to its partnership with Southampton, it works with local clubs Sao Paolo and Flamengo in the country, while former Brazil international footballer Denilson is a global ambassador for Sportsbet.io. There’s also fiat regulation coming, in a market he admits “doesn’t totally work for crypto”. 

“We have an internal debate about what constitutes a market, whether it’s a geography or a coin,” McCallum says. “There’s parties asking whether you focus on the community relative to the coin, or if you target a region to make it work [for crypto].”

It all comes back to building to that “Uber moment” where crypto becomes part of day-to-day life. “You think you’d never get into a stranger’s car; that’s alien across any culture. But once you do that, it becomes this mass adoption of the practice.”

That tipping point, going by the scale of Yolo Group as a business, can’t be far off. But McCallum is embracing the challenge. He’s moved a long way from betting shops in Glasgow, but he’s still focused on finding new ways to bring people into the community. 

Igaming accounted for 88% of Guernsey AML reports in 2022

Reports surrounding online gambling activity accounted for 76% of the total suspicious activity reports filed in 2022. The total number of reports submitted in reference to online gambling was 28% lower than in 2021.

Overall, the FIU received 2,656 suspicious activity reports in 2022. This was down by 26.2% from 2021.

The FIU processes suspicious activity reports filed by businesses in Guernsey. This is in respect to the country’s laws, including its 2022 Terrorism and Crime law.

Risk of money laundering “remains low”

While online gambling was by far the largest reporting sector for the FIU in 2022, reviews had concluded the money laundering risk “remains low”. The FIU noted that, in the majority of cases, operators also submitted the reports to authorities in the UK.

The FIU said just one licensee raised 89% of all suspicious activity reports from the online gambling sector, the same percentage as in 2021.

Another trend that carried over from 2021 was the two main reasons for reporting – detrimental open source information coming to light and non-compliance with due diligence requests.

The FIU identified that a majority of the online gambling suspicious reports were made in May, June and July. This averaged at over 200 reports per month.

The number of these reports submitted in May was 346. This was the highest amount ever submitted in a single month in regards to the online gambling industry.

Uptick in forgery activities

While the FIU classified the money laundering risk in gambling as low, it said that reports for fraud, false accounting or forgery had increased.

Of all the fraud, false accounting or forgery suspicious reports received – which added up to 441 – 299 of these stemmed from online gambling activity.

The FIU said it connected 275 of these to an organised crime group committing fraud. It referred this case to UK law enforcement.

Michigan online gambling revenue tops $176m in July

Gross receipts were comfortably ahead of $148.2m in July 2022 and also 4.0% more than $169.3m in June this year. The total also halted three consecutive months of decline in Michigan.

Online casino gaming gross receipts reached $153.6m in July, up 21.3% on last year and 1.7% ahead of June’s total. 

Gross sports betting receipts were 4.2% higher year-on-year at $22.5m and 23.0% more than in June. This was despite handle falling 10.8% from $225.0m in July 2022 to $200.8m, with spend also 11.9% lower than in June.

July adjusted gross receipts up 17.8%

In terms of adjusted gross receipts, which account for promotional spending, Michigan also reported growth.

Combined igaming and sports betting adjusted gross receipts amounted to $154.6m. This was 17.8% ahead of last year and 5.8% higher than June’s total.

Adjusted igaming gross receipts hit $138.2m, up 18.0% year-on-year and 1.0% from June. Looking to sports betting, adjusted gross receipts amounted to $16.4m, up 77.5% from last year and 16.8% more than June.

Operators paid $29.8m in total taxes, including $28.7m in online casino tax and $1.1m in sports betting tax.

Detroit’s three commercial casinos also paid $7.6m in online taxes to the City of Detroit. In addition, tribal operators made $3.5m in payments to governing bodies.

Detroit casino revenue remains level

Last week, it was also revealed that Detroit’s casinos posted $107.2m in revenue in July, level with last year and slightly up month-on-month.

July’s total was on par with the $107.2m that was posted in the same month last year. The figure was 6.5% higher than $101.5m in June of this year.

Of this amount, some $106.7m came from slots and table games, up by 0.7% year-on-year. Sports betting generated $485,763 in qualified adjusted gross receipts, (QAGR), a drop of 62.0%, while handle reached $8.0m.

ACMA issues blocking orders against more illegal offshore sites

Both Crown Pokies and Play AUD were found by ACMA to be operating in breach of the Interactive Gambling Act 2001.

As such, ACMA requested that Australian internet service providers (ISPs) block access to the two websites.

ACMA started requesting website blocking in November 2019, with over 823 illegal gambling and affiliate sites having been blocked as a result. 

Over 210 illegal services have also withdrawn from Australia since ACMA began enforcing illegal offshore gambling rules in 2017.

Consistent blocking requests from ACMA

The latest round of blocking requests comes after ACMA last month flagged another five sites for illegal operations. Reef Reels, Royal Reels, Ricky Casino, Slots Gallery and Slotastic were all ruled to be operating illegally.

In June, blocking orders were made against an additional 12 sites, while three sites were also identified in May.

“Australians who use illegal gambling services are not protected by Australian laws,” ACMA said. “This means our laws can’t help if something goes wrong, like if the service provider withholds winnings.”

GiG to power Mooir’s new online casino brand

Under the multi-year agreement, GiG will supply its player account management (PAM) to Mooir’s new online casino.

Mooir will roll out the brand under its Isle of Man operator licence. While the operator did not name the offering, the business’ website lists an upcoming brand, W6, with an expected 2024 rollout.

GiG currently provides casino platforms and sportsbook to more than 60 brands around the world.

“We are delighted to have chosen GiG as the core PAM solution to power our new casino brand,” Mooir CEO Stephen Trimble said. “GiG’s pedigree in regulated markets, flexibility of software and innovative features align closely with our values and aspirations. 

GiG chief commercial officer Marcel Elfersy added: “Enabling our customers to deliver new localised experiences is a core strength of our B2B offering. 

“We’re looking forward to this new relationship with the team at Mooir. We know we can drive growth via the continued improvement and iteration of our technology and on the strength of the partnerships we build.”

Record Q2 for GiG

The deal comes on the back of a record second quarter for GiG. During Q2, revenue hit an all-time high of €34.9m (£29.9m/$37.7m).

The quarter marked the first reporting period since GiG announced it will split its business. GiG revealed plans to split Platform and Sportsbook from GiG Media after launching a strategic review. Each segment will run independently as publicly listed companies.

A few months later, Richard Brown announced he would step down as CEO by the end of 2023. Earlier this month, former SBTech CEO Richard Carter was appointed to lead the Platform and Sportsbook division, ahead of it being spun out. The split is expected to complete during the first half of 2024.

Last month it was revealed the Juroszek family had become the largest GiG shareholder after purchasing an 11.08% stake in the business. This followed the family selling a 70% stake in Polish gambling operator STS to the Entain CEE joint venture.

Dazn Bet granted German sports betting licence

Dazn Bet is owned by sports media streaming service Dazn. It was first formed in April 2022, as part of a partnership with Pragmatic Gaming. It was added to the sports betting section of Germany’s white list.

The operator joins the likes of Jackpot50, 888 and Tipico on the list.

Dazn Bet, which is registered in Malta, will operate under the Daznbet.de domain.

The white list came about with the establishment of Germany’s gambling regulator, Gemeinsamen Glücksspielbehörde der Länder (GGL). The GGL was brought forth by Germany’s Fourth State Treaty on Gambling (GlüNeuRStv), which came into force in July 2021.

Germany’s gambling regulator

The GGL was established in July 2022. It officially took over all tasks from its predecessor, the Saxony-Anhalt State Administration Office, in January 2023.

Its responsibilities range from issuing licences to combatting illegal gambling in Germany. The latter has been a high priority for the regulator.

In its annual report, released in June, it revealed that 203 unlicensed operators had been operating in the country as of December 2022, offering gambling via 843 German language sites.