Posts Tagged ‘betting exchange’
Thursday, October 22nd, 2009
By Ray Paulick
Betfair, which revolutionized betting nearly a decade ago through the creation of exchanges pitting one person against another, has reached a breakthrough agreement with the Breeders’ Cup, providing Betfair’s two million-plus worldwide customers access to commingled pari-mutuel pools and allowing the company to offer live video streaming of the Nov. 6-7 world championships to its exchange betting players. The deal was announced in London Thursday by Breeders’ Cup president and CEO Greg Avioli and Betfair director of horseracing Stephen Burn.
The Breeders’ Cup will receive an undisclosed fee from Betfair as a result of the agreement, and the deal promises to bring international wagering on the event to a new level. Betfair, along with other exchange betting companies and overseas bookmakers, has previously offered wagering on Breeders’ Cup and other American races of interest (though supposedly not to residents of the U.S.), but the wagering or live video streaming has never been officially sanctioned by the host racetrack or association, and no revenue has ever flowed back to America.
This agreement also permits Betfair to use Breeders’ Cup logos and marks and to advertise and promote the championships to its customers.
Betfair already had a relationship with Breeders’ Cup through TVG, the American-based racing network and wagering company itbought for $50 million in January 2009, but that agreement did not permit live video streaming to Betfair’s customers, sanction exchange wagering or allow Betfair’s international customers access to commingled Breeders’ Cup pools.
Betfair recently signed a deal with many American tracks, permitting the company to offer commingled pari-mutuel wagering to its exchange betting customers and paying a fee to tracks from Betfair revenue on exchange betting.
“Our agreement with Betfair is an important milestone in our ongoing effort to grow the international simulcast wagering market for the Breeders’ Cup World Championships,” Avioli said in a statement. “As more and more international horses participate in our championships, interest levels and wagering handle from around the world continue to increase, allowing us to maintain the highest possible purse levels for the event.”
“Our partnership with the Breeders’ Cup is the beginning of what we intend to be a mutually beneficial partnership with U.S. racing,” said Betfair’s Burn.
According to a press release, international handle bet directly into the Breeders’ Cup pools on the 2008 Breeders’ Cup World Championships was $17.6 million, up 16% from 2007 and 34% from 2006 (the last year the event was held on one day). The Breeders’ Cup has targeted international wagering as an important revenue stream for future growth.
Betfair has revolutionized wagering through cutting-edge technology that enables players to choose their own odds and even make a bet after a race has started (those bets would not go into the commingled pari-mutuel pools). A press release said the company processes over six million transactions per day on a variety of sports and other events and games.
Typically, deals between horse racing associations and Betfair pay 10% to the racing industry from the company’s profits on horse racing bets. That’s a far cry from the percentage of betting horsemen and tracks get from the traditional pari-mutuel division of revenue, but Betfair offers the hope of dramatically increasing the amount of money wagered, thereby significantly lowering the effective takeout. It’s a balancing act, and only time will tell if a deal with betting exchanges like Betfair are a net win for the racing industry.
The Paulick Report took an in-depth at Betfair in January when the company acquired TVG. Click here for that article.
Tags: betfair, betting, betting exchange, Breeders' Cup, Greg Avioli, Horse Racing, Paulick Report, Ray Paulick, stephen burn, tvg Posted in Betting Exchanges, Bookmaking, Breeders' Cup, Wagering | 36 Comments »
Saturday, May 23rd, 2009
By Ray Paulick
Is Betfair developing a conscience? The world’s leading betting exchange, which recently dipped its toes into U.S. gambling waters with its purchase of the horse racing network and account wagering company TVG, has reportedly made a voluntary contribution to the Levy Board, the statutory group that disburses betting revenue from bookmakers, exchanges and the tote in the form of prize money for British racing.
The Guardian reported on Friday that Betfair recently made a voluntary payment of almost $2 million to the Levy Board in recognition of profits made by the exchange from clients outside of the UnIted Kingdom betting on British horse racing. The amount represents 10% of Betfair’s profits on such wagers.
Betfair has contractual obligations to the Levy Board on profits made from British punters, but this is apparently the first time the exchange made voluntary payments on gains from overseas clients betting on British racing. Betfair is based on Malta.
“We have sent a check,” Betfair spokesman Mark Davies told the Guardian, “as there is no statutory mechanism by which we can pay the levy in respect of our international business. We are doing this because we support British racing.”
That begs the question of when Betfair will begin to share its wealth with U.S. racetrack and horsemen (or , more simply,“Where’s ours?” as Australian-based pedigree consultant Byron Rogers asked when alerting me to Betfair’s voluntary payment to the Levy Board.) Though the betting exchange says it does not accept any wagers from the United States, it does offer betting on American horse racing to its international clientele. Currently, to my knowledge, Betfair does not share any profits from those bets with American racetracks or horsemen’s organizations. Negotiations have taken place between Betfair and Breeders’ Cup officials, as well as with the Thoroughbred Owners of California, but no revenue sharing deals have yet been struck.
It seems only a matter of time before American racetrack and horsemen’s organization officials link overseas wagering on American racing via Betfair to domestic contracts involving TVG.
Those who want to learn more about the relatively brief and exceedingly successful history of Betfair, a company founded in 2000 by Andrew Black and Ed Wray, might be interested in Colin Cameron’s new book: “You Bet— The Betfair Story: How Two Men Changed the World of Gambling.” Click here for details.
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Tags: Andrew Black, betfair, betting exchange, Breeders' Cup, byron rogers, colin cameron, Ed Wray, Horse Racing, levy board, mark davies, Paulick Report, Ray Paulick, thoroughbred owners of california, You Bet the betfair Story Posted in Betting Exchanges, International Racing, Wagering | 6 Comments »
Wednesday, January 7th, 2009
By Ray Paulick
Are betting exchanges a possible solution to the problems facing the U.S. Thoroughbred industry, which in 2008 saw its annual pari-mutuel handle fall for the fourth time in six years, dropping over 7% to a 10-year low? The Thoroughbred Owners of California thinks they may be, having recently signed a letter of agreement with betting exchange giant Betfair to have the UK-based company promote California racing abroad while TOC helps BetFair obtain statutory and regulatory approval to operate a betting exchange in California.
Betfair, which has been trying for several years to gain access to the U.S. market, is also believed to be a leading candidate to buy TVG, whose parent company, Macrovision, announced its intention to sell TVG last year. Though there are no confirmed suitors, others rumored to be potential buyers of the racing network and Advance Deposit Wagering platform include Churchill Downs Inc.; Marc Nathanson, a cable TV industry billionaire and father of TVG president David Nathanson; and an industry consortium that could include Keeneland, the New York Racing Association, former Hollywood Park chairman R.D. Hubbard, and Los Alamitos racetrack owner Edward Allred.
Betfair, a privately held company, was founded in June of 2000, using a technologically advanced platform permitting individuals to go online and bet against one another on a wide range of events, including horse racing, sports, politics and even reality television shows. By taking commissions of 2%-5% from winning bets, the company offers extremely low takeout and has built enormous volume: it claims to have over one million customers from 140 countries, with 100,000 or more active players in a given week. (UPDATE: Betfair said in October 2008 that it signed up its two millionth customer; see comments section, below) Its wagering platform handles over five million bets per day. In 2007, Betfair had 42 million English pounds in earnings before interest, depreciation, taxes and amortization on revenue of 240 million pounds. According to its annual report (which can be seen here), Betfair has 110 million pounds cash on hand.
CONCERNS ABOUT BETFAIR
The problem many see with Betfair is that the company pays a small percentage for the rights to races on which it handles wagers. In England, for example, it pays a bit over 10% of gross profits on racing wagers. In some cases, however, it pays no fees at all, as is currently the case with racing from the U.S. Betfair currently accepts bets on American racing, but only from customers outside of the U.S., and it does not have rights to any video signals. Betfair is acutely aware of concerns from racing interests in the U.S. who believe betting exchanges would cannibalize pari-mutuel betting and decrease revenue to tracks and purses. It addresses some of those fears in this pamphlet, which was designed to appease the racing industry in the United Kingdom.
Another concern raised about Betfair centers on wagers it accepts that a specific horse will lose, prompting worries about race-fixing. But Betfair has cooperated in several investigations involving horse racing and sports betting, giving authorities access to detailed betting information as part of its memorandum of understanding.
Drew Couto, the president of TOC, said the letter of agreement with BetFair was signed last month. He believes wagering will continue to suffer unless the industry distances itself from Albert Einstein’s definition of insanity: doing the same thing time after time and expecting a different result. “That really describes our industry’s approach to this sport and business over the last decade,” Couto said.
“Going forward,” he added, “we have to face two very important realities. “First, we have allowed the sport to basically disappear. It’s no longer a sport, but simply a justification to gamble and wager, and as a wagering proposition we know it’s not the most attractive. We have to go back and make it a sport. We have to give the sport some structure to have it make sense for the fans, make some very serious fundamental changes to focus on the sporting aspect of racing. We have left it largely to the tracks to be the stewards of the sport, and they only care about the financial side.
“Second,” Couto said, “we have to adopt new ways our fans can participate. New wagers, betting exchanges. We have to embrace these new ways of playing as ancillary to the way we currently operate, so it’s new and fresh. That includes tournament-style wagering that was approved by the RCI (Association of Racing Commissioners International) last summer. If we don’t begin to do things differently and find new ways to operate, we are bound to be the definitive example of what Einstein said.”
CAN RACING DEVELOP ITS OWN BETTING EXCHANGE?
Chris Scherf, executive vice president of the Thoroughbred Racing Associations of North America, a racetrack trade organization, for years has advocated that North American tracks consider developing their own betting exchange. He sees the trend in downward handle as a serious crisis.
“We’ve got to look into pricing (the takeout charge on pari-mutuel bets), the product that’s being provided and the convenience factor for wagering,” Scherf said. “We need to make the same kind of concerted effort on handle that is currently being made to improve the safety and welfare issues. Track by track, you can get swamped in a million problems, but this has to be at the top of the pile. We are losing bettors. What do we have to do to change that aspect of the business, the part that provides us revenue? Of course, the entire debacle of cutting off signals in the last year (due to contractual disagreements between tracks and horsemen over ADW splits) was extremely detrimental to any kind of sustained gambling business.
“The problem,” Scherf said, “is we’ve got tracks and horsemen both saying they need more money in this economy. But the first thing we need is an engaged gambling public, and they should be at the top of the list.”
Scherf said he is “somewhere in between fear and welcoming” Betfair into the industry. “We had no master plan for how ADW would fit in and now we are trying to retrofit it, which is causing a lot of angst and problems. We need to spend more time developing a strategy (for exchange betting), though it’s difficult to do that when you have a wide disparity throughout the industry in resources and markets.”
Lonny Powell, an industry consultant based in Lexington, Ky., who previously served in executive positions with racetracks (including head of Santa Anita Park), the ADW company Youbet.com and as president of the Association of Racing Commissioners International, said BetFair has done a good job of “mainstreaming themselves” in recent years by sharing more of its profits with the racing industry in Europe.
“It’s here to stay,” Powell said of Betfair and exchange betting. “When I was in the ADW world, I wished they would just go away, but I don’t feel that way anymore. We’re like an ice cream store that only sells vanilla, but you can go over to Baskin Robbins and get 33 flavors. We need variety.”
Powell, who said he is optimistic the industry will find a solution to its present challenges, believes racing interests should look at developing their own betting exchange. “If the industry could somehow take this wagering crisis a little more seriously and rather than find ways to kill something, find ways to make it work, we can grow the gambling dollar,” he said. “A Betfair type of platform can be operated by U.S. racing interests. The economic model that Betfair offers is flawed, but we all agree our current model is flawed, too. I’ve got to believe a Betfair type of platform would work. Our product is stale, and our wagering levels are stale.”
INTEGRITY ISSUES REMAIN A CONCERN
The reason for declines in handle go beyond a limited product line, said Mike Maloney, a professional gambler in Kentucky who has become an outspoken advocate for horseplayers at industry conferences and who served as an ad hoc member of a Kentucky Horse Racing Commission Task Force. “We are at a very significant crossroads in racing,” Maloney said, “probably the biggest one in my lifetime. The financial crisis is magnifying our problems, but the problems have to be dealt with before racing can recover. The economy may improve, but racing’s problems will still be there.
“Our customer base is aging, and they’ve lost a lot of their faith in the integrity of racing,” he said. “As they age, they aren’t being replaced. The second problem is the takeout is too high. We can’t attract new players and are having a hard time holding on to existing ones. It’s exacerbated because the takeout keeps going up. With competition from other gambling opportunities, you can’t get away with that any more. It’s roughly 5% in other forms of gambling – sports, table games, trading options – but it’s 20% for us. New York just raised takeouts; trifectas are 26% now, and I just refuse to play it. Kentucky wants to raise takeout. What other business in this economic climate would consider racing prices?
“Third,” Maloney said, “racing integrity problems are real, and they are not exaggerated. If anything, they probably are underplayed. Trainers who use drugs to cheat; unsecured wagering pools with outdated technology; unregulated participants allowed access into those pools. People are just beginning to learn about some of the problems in these areas. In the last couple of years the light is being shined on them. These are serious problems that need to be dealt with. Big players realize they can’t trust the pools they are playing money into.”
Finally, Maloney said, the corporate mentality of many racetracks has hurt the game. “There is a disconnect with customers with some of these racetrack holding companies. They don’t really understand their business, and there’s too much short-term bottom line thinking; cutting costs, worrying about the next quarterly report, and too little thought about long-term improvement of the product.”
Maloney, who called betting exchanges a “two-edged sword” because of how they would cannibalize pari-mutuel betting, said the industry has had a wake-up call after being “rocked by betting and drug scandals and threatened” by the federal government. “This crossroad we’re at, what we do from here, will determine the fate of racing.”
(Do you have an opinion on how the industry reverses the trend in declining handle? We’re interested in your comments below and in your thoughts about betting exchanges, the subject of the Daily Paulick Poll, which can be found on the left-hand column of the Paulick Report home page.)
Copyright © 2009, The Paulick Report
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Tags: advance deposit wagering, ADW, association of racing commissioners international, betfair, betting exchange, chris scherf, churchill downs, david nathanson, drew couto, edward allred, gambling, Hollywood Park, horse race gambling, Horse Racing, horseplayer, integrity in racing, Keeneland, lonny powell, los alamitos, marc nathanson, mike maloney, New York Racing Association, nyra, pari-mutuel wagering, Paulick Report, powell strategy & solutions, professional gambler, R.D. Hubbard, Ray Paulick, RCI, santa anita, Thoroughbred industry, thoroughbred owners of california, thoroughbred racing associations, toc, tra, tvg, youbet Posted in Account Wagering, Betting Exchanges, Industry Organizations, Industry Reform, Regulatory Issues, Wagering | 37 Comments »
Friday, January 2nd, 2009
Gina Rarick and I grew up as neighbors of sorts – she on a Wisconsin dairy farm and I amidst the cornfields on the Prairie State side of the Illinois-Wisconsin border. We both gravitated toward journalism and the Thoroughbred industry, though her life’s work carried her across the Atlantic Ocean to Paris, France, while mine only brought me a few hundred miles down the interstate to within a half-hour’s drive of Paris, Kentucky.
Rarick (pictured, left) began her career in journalism nearly a quarter-century ago at the Milwaukee Journal and she wound up as the turf writer for the International Herald Tribune in Paris, France, covering major race meetings around the world. She never completely lost her rural roots, taking riding lessons while working in Chicago and later in Paris. She got serious about horses in France, getting her jockey’s license and riding into the winner’s circle in her first race in 2001 at the age of 38.
One year later, Rarick took out her trainer’s license, juggling a small stable with her journalism career, finally giving up the latter in 2008 to work full time as a trainer in Maisons-Laffitte. She hasn’t total abandoned writing, however, maintaining a frequently updated blog at her web site, www.gallopfrance.com. You can contact Gina at grarick@gallopfrance.com.
Rarick has been reading about American racing’s problems and offers her international perspective in the following commentary, arguing that the Thoroughbred industry in the U.S. needs a strong central governing body. Let us know your reaction to Rarick’s assertion in the comments section at the end of this article or by taking the Daily Paulick Poll, found on the left-hand column of the Paulick Report home page. – Ray Paulick
By Gina Rarick
There has been endless debate over the past year about how to save racing in the United States, and the focus has turned lately to how to pay for it all and who gets what size piece of an ever-dwindling pie.
For my money, cleaning up the sport and turning the focus back to the well-being of the equine athlete is the first and only way to go forward, but for those who insist on dwelling on the business model, I’d like to offer a little international perspective that may be of use.
In France, where I train, the betting handle has nearly doubled over the past decade. It rose to 9 billion euros in 2007, the most recent year for which figures are available, from 5.5 billion euros in 1997. In the United States, the handle fell to 10 billion euros in 2007 from 13.7 billion in 1997. The figures are from the International Federation of Horseracing Authorities, which converts all figures to euros for ease of comparison. The takeout in France fell to 26% in 2007 from 30% in 1997, while in the United States the takeout has been steady at about 21%. Both countries return about 8% to the sport.
In Great Britain, things are far more complicated because of the bookmakers. The overall betting handle rose to 15 billion euros in 2006, the latest numbers available, from 7.5 billion in 1997. But most of that betting was done with betting exchanges or bookmakers, who return just 1% to the sport, compared with the already-paltry 4% from the pari-mutuel Tote system. Overall takeout fell to 16% in 2006 from 22% in 1997.
Lies, damn lies and statistics. What does it all mean? First off, bookmakers and any sort of fragmented market are mortal for the sport.
Racing in Britain is in horrible shape, with breeders producing far more horses than the sport can support, counting on a lucrative export market that is drying up. The average purse in Britain last year was 15,000 euros (and that’s the total purse, not the win prize). But that tops the average 12,000 euro purse in the United States. In France, where the pari-mutuel PMU system has a monopoly on betting, the average purse was 21,000 euros.
One of the big arguments that bettors make is that lowering the takeout will increase the betting handle. But the takeout in the United States has remained constant for the past decade, while the handle has fallen.
True, the takeout in France and England has dropped, and the handle has risen. And it’s also true that big players are cognizant of this sort of thing. I’m a trainer, not a gambler (or at least not a serious one), but it’s my impression that most casual bettors, and certainly new, small players, pay absolutely no attention to the takeout. They’re here for the spectacle and the horses. When the pretty gray filly shatters her ankles and is euthanized on the track, they’re disgusted and they’re not coming back.
And as much as we like to think the whales run the sport, it’s the small players that provide the lifeblood. In France, the average bet last year was 11 euros; 40% of the players were women, and one in four were under 35 years of age. The PMU operation in France has a stunning marketing campaign, and the daily “Quinte Plus” handicap, where the object is to pick the first five past the post in order, has a huge national following. Many people who play don’t know beans about horses – they pick random numbers. That bet alone – offered on one race a day – was responsible for 23% of the handle last year.
The other misconception seems to be that the sport needs to draw fans to the track. Again, as a trainer, I would love to see more people in the stands other than the 10 guys and a cat that show up on any given day here in France. But the numbers in the United States and France show us that most people prefer to bet at home or at off-track facilities. In the United States in 2006, only 11% of the betting was done at the track, compared with 39% in Britain, where people have to show up to get the best odds from the on-course bookies.
In France in 2006, only 2% of the bets were made at the track. I’m not kidding. The only people who show up here are the ones who have to actually saddle the horse or ride it. But advances in technology and ever-better television coverage (at least in France) make it too enticing to curl up on the couch and bet by remote control. Accepting this, rather than trying to change it, seems the only logical way to proceed.
The powers that be in racing – both in France and abroad – seem to be focusing on the top end of the game rather than the bottom, which feeds the top. Your average race-goer (or racing couch potato) doesn’t know the difference between Curlin and a 10,000 euro claimer. These guys want to see full fields to make the betting interesting. Sure, it’s nice to have a good story with a horse running in Group or Grade 1 races to use as a marketing tool. But those stories are few and far between these days, and concentrating on building up only those top races, at the expense of the bottom end, will further eat into the handle.
No one wants to encourage breeding unsuitable horses, but maintaining a good program through all levels will keep people betting. I have rarely seen a card anywhere in America that features seven races with at least 10 runners each. In France, there have been hundreds of horses eliminated from spots during the Deauville winter season this year because of a glut of entries. Rarely is there a race that doesn’t have a full field of 16.
I’m not saying we have a racing Utopia over here. Every jurisdiction has its problems, and ours is the cold north wind blowing from Brussels that is pushing France to open the betting monopoly. If this happens, our purses are likely to go the way of the rest of the Continent, and the sport will begin to die, just as it is in Germany, Belgium and, unfortunately, Great Britain. As it is, runners from all those countries are regular visitors here, trying to earn some money the old-fashioned way – by crossing the line first.
I can’t see how American racing can save itself without some sort of nationwide governing body. I know this idea is anathema to many and downright offensive to some, but I can’t see how the sport can survive with a different set of medication rules and different betting systems for every state. Only with a unified front — and a total ban on race-day medication — can the United States truly participate in the sport on an international level and build confidence at home.
Copyright © 2009, The Paulick Report
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Tags: betting exchange, betting takeout, british bookmakers, drugs in racing, francegallop.com, gina rarick, Horse Racing, international federation of horseracing authorities, international herald tribune, international horse racing, maisons-laffitte, milwaukee journal, off-track betting, pari-mutuel wagering, Paulick Report, pmo, quinte plus, racing medication, Ray Paulick, Simulcasting, turf writing Posted in Horse Racing, Industry Reform, International Racing, Medication, Racing Media, Thoroughbred Business | 29 Comments »
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