Posts Tagged ‘jay pritzker’

WAS CHURCHILL ACQUISITION A SMART MOVE? YOUBET

Thursday, November 19th, 2009

By Ray Paulick
A number of people I respect most in the Thoroughbred industry consider Churchill Downs Inc. CEO Bob Evans to be the smartest man in the racing business. Last week’s $126.8 million stock and cash acquisition of youbet.com, which also includes the totalizator company United Tote, only strengthens that assessment.

With the deal, which won’t close until sometime in the first half of 2010, CDI will own roughly half of the Advance Deposit Wagering market share. According to a presentation made by youbet.com at an investment bank conference last month (click here to read the presentation), youbet.com and TVG are the market leaders, with about 29% market share each, followed by the Churchill Downs-owned TwinSpires at 21% and Magna Entertainment’s XpressBet at 14%.

The current North American ADW market is roughly 14% of the $14 billion expected to be wagered on horse racing this year. It has been growing steadily, but not nearly as quickly as online transactions in other businesses such as event ticketing, travel, or music. It is widely viewed as the only current growth sector in racing. The growth of online wagering is in Evans’ sweet spot.

ADW wagers are also more profitable for a company like CDI than other types of bets, including those made on-track, especially when they are made at one of the tracks the company owns (Churchill Downs, Arlington Park, Calder, Fair Grounds).

So the acquisition of youbet.com looks very much like a win for CDI shareholders, because of the anticipated jump in both revenue and earnings, stemming from the bigger share of the ADW market and the reduced costs of personnel, marketing, technology, etc that Evans discussed in a conference call following the deal. It also gives the company a stronger technology platform than it has with TwinSpires. CDI’s purchase of AmericaTab from Bloodstock Research Information Services jump-started the company’s ADW business, which it was slow in developing. “I’ve been pretty impressed by the technology capabilities of the youbet organization,” Evans said in the Nov. 13 conference call.

The United Tote part of the deal makes sense, too. United Tote currently has contracts with Churchill Downs, Keeneland and the New York Racing Association tracks, but not with CDI-owned Arlington, Calder, Fair Grounds, 19 off-track betting parlors and TwinSpires—all of which use AmTote. Look for United Tote to pick up those contracts either as existing deals expire or buyout clauses are used.

There is the potential for pushback from some of United Tote’s current customers who might fear that Churchill Downs is becoming too powerful, but the upside to the ownership of United Tote far outweighs any downside.  Also, as Evans said, United Tote might be able to improve tote system stability, performance and wagering integrity. If that occurs, it’s good news for the entire industry and especially for horse players, who have serious concerns about the integrity and dependability of the current wagering systems.

Of course, there could be some losers in this deal. As CDI gains more market share with its ADW company, it will wield even more clout than it currently carries in contract negotiations with horsemen around the country through TrackNet Media, which negotiates its simulcast contracts with wagering outlets. That could reduce purse revenues from ADW wagers even more than the already-too-low levels that currently exist.

The other obvious losers will be some employees at either TwinSpires or youbet.com, but that’s pretty standard in corporate mergers and acquisitions. There will be plenty of corporate carnage, either at the youbet.com offices in Woodland Hills, Calif., at CDI’s Louisville, Ky., headquarters or its Silicon Valley “digital think tank.”

One of the unanswered questions of Churchill’s acquisition is whether youbet.com will continue to operate in “gray” states where Advance Deposit Wagering is neither expressly legal or illegal and if TwinSpires will move into those states. In the past, youbet.com recruited customers in states where other ADW companies, including TVG and TwinSpires, did not conduct business.

One final note about the deal. Youbet.com executive chairman Michael Brodsky will join the CDI board of directors, a move that some insiders greeted with a yawn. Neither Brodsky or youbet.com’s largest shareholder, Hyatt Hotel mogul Jay Pritzker, were viewed as visionaries in the online gaming world. They both held onto longshot hopes that youbet.com would somehow, with approval from Congress, be able to move into the sports betting or online casino gaming business.

When that didn’t happen, their energies shifted toward selling the company, something they managed to accomplish.

But it looks to me like CDI and Bob Evans got the better end of the deal.

Copyright © 2009, The Paulick Report

Savvy businesses recognize value. Advertise in the Paulick Report.

Sign up for our
Email Flashes to get the latest news, analysis and commentary from Ray Paulick

ILLINOIS HORSEMEN: BEWARE

Thursday, March 19th, 2009
By Ray Paulick
Purses for Thoroughbred horsemen in Illinois hit a 10-year low in 2008, and things may only get worse if the Illinois legislature enables Churchill Downs Inc., the owner of the state’s biggest track, Arlington Park, to get the Advance Deposit Wagering language it is seeking.

Illinois horsemen have had to put up with a ridiculous law since 1995 that allows racetracks to “recapture” money from purse accounts the law says tracks have lost on live handle since the authorization of full-card simulcasting. Since 1995, over $170 million has been taken from purses earmarked for Thoroughbred and harness horsemen and handed over to the racetracks. (For more details on the recapture provision of the Illinois racing law, see page 10 of the Illinois Racing Board’s annual report for 2008, which can be viewed here.)

This law needs to be repealed, and representatives of the harness and Thoroughbred horsemen’s organizations are working in the state capital in Springfield to do so. Racetracks seem to have more clout, however, and it will be no easy task.

Lobbyists for racetracks and ADW companies are also pushing for approval of Advance Deposit Wagering in Illinois, a state that permits casino wagering, off-track betting and has offered a lottery for many years. Those lobbyists represent Arlington Park, which is owned by the same Churchill Downs Inc. that operates TwinSpires.com. The largest shareholder in CDI is Richard Duchossois, the Chicago industrialist who owned Arlington Park before merging it into CDI. Another company pushing for ADW approval is Youbet.com, one of whose principals is Chicago billionaire Jay Pritzker, heir to the Hyatt Hotel chain. A member of the Youbet.com board of directors is former Illinois Gov. Jim Edgar (one of those rare Illinois politicians who has avoided public scandal or indictment). Edgar knows his way around Springfield.

ADW would be a good thing for Illinois, provided that the horsemen are taken care of. The fear is, however, that Churchill Downs and its lobbyists are crafting a bill that will be more to their benefit than it is to the horsemen.

An example: the bill (SB1298, which has passed out of committee and is on the floor of the Senate waiting approval), includes an amendment that permits Advance Deposit Wagering terminals to be placed at Illinois tracks. The language of the bill (see page nine, line nine of SB1298) suggests an “organization licensee” (in other words, a racetrack like Arlington with its own ADW) may operate Advance Deposit Wagering without horsemen’s permission. If a track doesn’t own an ADW, it may contract with a third-party company, with horsemen’s permission, to operate Advance Deposit Wagering. In other words, it appears tracks that operate their own ADW can do so without contracting with horsemen.

What does this mean? It could mean that Churchill Downs Inc. will do everything it can to move handle from traditional on-track or OTB facilities in Illinois to its ADW platform, TwinSpires, where it would almost certainly retain a greater percentage of the revenue. We’ve already seen how it works in Kentucky, where a wager placed by a Kentucky resident through TwinSpires on a Churchill Downs race produces far less revenue toward purses and more for TwinSpires and its parent company, than would a wager made on-track or at an intertrack wagering facility in Kentucky on a Churchill Downs race. The percentages are even worse for bets made on out-of-state races by Kentucky residents through TwinSpires, versus at a simulcast facility. (See the graphs on pages 16 and 17 of a presentation on purses I made to the Kentucky Thoroughbred Farm Managers Club earlier this year for an explanation of how the revenue is divided.)

Illinois horsemen have to be careful not to let the racetrack and ADW companies dictate the language of this bill, or they are going to see purses fall even farther – if that’s possible.

Of course, bad news for horsemen could be very good news for Churchill Downs. Perhaps that’s why Duchossois continues to load up on CDI stock. I reported last September that Duchossois was gobbling up shares in CDI, and he’s been on two buying spree since. He spent more than $1.3 million to buy over 42,000 shares in November and in recent days spent another $285,000 on over 12,000 shares.

Copyright © 2009, The Paulick Report

Visit the Paulick Report for all the latest news throughout the racing world

Sign up for our Email flashes to get the latest news, analysis and commentary from Ray Paulick