Fears that US legislation intended to prevent Americans from betting on the Internet with any firms based outside the States would hit Gibraltar’s growing cyberspace gaming industry have proved unfounded.
In fact, in the more than two years since the U.S. Congress adopted the legislation, Gibraltar’s gaming industry has surged ahead – contributing significantly to the growth of Internet gambling on this side of the Atlantic which, earlier this year, saw Europe overtake the US in volumes of both punters and revenue.
And though there were some local job losses when Internet gaming dipped world wide at the start of the recession, much of the slack appears to have been taken up by the appearance of new companies registered in Gibraltar. Twenty-one Internet gaming licences have been issued by the Gibraltar Regulator since Victor Chandler trail-blazed on-line gaming on the Rock a decade ago; and the gaming industry remains one of the biggest private employers on the Rock.
Online gambling in “offshore” centres, expanded more than 10-fold between 2003 and 2010 to about 6.5 billion euros. Analysts predict that growth will slow to 13 percent through 2012 as more countries permit gambling and revenue from regulated onshore gaming is expected to climb 37 percent, to 5.11 billion euros.
The French Senate recently approved regulations that for the first time will grant on-line gambling licenses to foreign companies; Denmark is expected to follow suit; and Italy is opening its market in stages. A German ban is currently being challenged in the European court.
The European Commission, which has pushed national governments to legalize online gambling under market-access rules, will help determine the shape of regulations, said Sigrid Ligne, the secretary-general of the Brussels-based European Gaming and Betting Association.
Gibraltar’s advanced regulatory regime added to the facilities offered here in terms of legal and taxation frameworks, technology, telecommunications, accommodation (minutes away from the golf courses and the better quality resorts of the Costa del Sol) and airport and a substantial and trained international labour pool continues to make this jurisdiction an attractive one for new applicants.
*Europe’s online gambling industry is the world’s largest. Among publicly listed companies, Bwin has the largest European market share by revenue with 8 percent, followed by Gibraltar- based PartyGaming with 6.3 percent and London-based William Hill with 4.5 percent, according to data from Barclays Capital. Earlier this month PartyGaming’s reported revenue of $446.2 million for last year compared with William Hill’s $305 million in on-line betting revenue. The most recent figures from Bwin’s show sales worth $488.5 million in 2008.