27.09.2007, Lesen Sie hier den Bericht über «EU State Monopolies Have To Go».
Benefits of a more open-border Union are substantial for gambling industry
State gambling monopolies among European Union member nations came under the media microscope this week in an interesting article published by the Bloombergs business news organisation.
The article underlines the determination of the European Commission - headed by former Irish finance minister Charlie McCreevy (58) - to open up markets in the 27 nation EU, if necessary resorting to European Court of Justice actions to enforce compliance with the Union's requirement for the free movement of trade and services. Thus far, the Commission has taken action against 10 of the 27 member nations in an initiative to clear away traditional state monopolies.
Most recently, McCreevy's staff warned France and Sweden to welcome foreign sports betting companies or face lawsuits as soon as this year, and news reports indicate that France has responded by meeting EU officials to negotiate on the issue.
Bloombergs quotes McCreevy as commenting: "We're supposed to have an open market."
The rewards for ending state-run monopolies on sports betting and lotteries could be considerable, increasing the European market 23 percent to about $117 billion, the UK- based Global Betting & Gaming Consultants, calculate in a report.
London-based William Hill plc could boost earnings before interest and taxes by GBP 35.7 million ($72 million), Numis Securities wrote earlier this month, by breaking into as many as five additional countries, including Germany and Greece, where the Commission is trying to strike down restrictions.
The campaign is a "potential benefit' to the shares, Gavin Kelleher of Merrion Stockbrokers in Dublin told Bloombergs. "We are definitely seeing positive first steps.'
The Commission has also warned Denmark, Finland, Hungary, the Netherlands, Austria and Italy to address the issue or face legal proceedings. McCreevy's staff sue at the European Court of Justice, the EU's highest court, which can overturn national laws and fine countries.
While the EU has no directive specific to gambling, McCreevy and the Commission argue that the bloc's treaty generally prohibits discrimination against businesses in other EU nations.
The Luxembourg-based court has supported efforts to open gaming markets. Countries can't bar foreign companies to protect tax revenue, the EU's highest court ruled in a 2003 decision against Italy. Italy lost again on September 13, for awarding bookmaking licenses without a competitive auction (see previous Online-Casinos.com/InfoPowa report).
Bloombergs opines that freeing up more national markets could aid shares of major EU public companies such as Ladbrokes plc, which is expanding through the Internet after more than a century running betting shops; and Paddy Power plc, the largest bookmaker in Ireland.
Ladbrokes has applied for licenses in Sweden and Denmark, as well as Norway, which follows the bloc's internal market rules. The company is suing in national courts to strike down barriers posing "a huge restraint on our ability to compete' with state monopolies, John O'Reilly, head of Ladbrokes's remote gaming unit told Bloombergs. "The commissioner's officials have been very supportive,' he added.
On the other side of the issue, monopolistic states argue the need to regulate gambling to control addiction and money laundering.
"We are open to discussion but so far we haven't seen other means, and convincing means, of reaching those public interest objectives, and at the same time opening the market,' said Stanislas Pottier, special adviser to French Finance Minister Christine Lagarde. "It is a sector we think cannot be regulated as any other sector.'
The Swedish government opened a review of its gaming laws last June, a week before the commission's latest warning.
"We are looking into this matter in the proper manner,' said Joergen Lunenark, a press assistant at the Swedish finance ministry. "We still think that we are following the rules.'
Sweden's four casinos and sports-betting monopoly took in 4.8 billion kroner ($730 million) in 2006, more than a quarter of the 18 billion-kroner national budget surplus.
"People in the business, they know what the law is and they want to have it enforced,' McCreevy said. ``Policy makers see it from different angles, and maybe they're reluctant to change.' ===========
E.U. Urged To Get Heavy U.S. Compensation
European companies compensation dwarfs that of Antigua, which fought the US to a standstill on Internet gambling
The difficulties in which the United States finds itself over the unilateral withdrawal of its online gambling obligations in terms of World Trade Organisation treaties continues to grab headlines around the world, focusing attention on the dispute in which the small island government of Antigua and Barbuda fought the US to a standstill after more than 3 years of dispute proceedings.
By taking the unprecedented step of retroactively withdrawing its gambling obligations to support a discriminatory policy toward online gambling, the United States is required to consider compensation claims from other WTO members impacted by its actions - and over 7 countries including the EU bloc of 27 nations have given notice of intention to claim.
The Reuters news service this week took up the tale, reporting that European online gaming companies which have been shut out of U.S. markets have urged the European Union to demand as much as $100 billion in compensation, although the best solution is still believed to be a Washington move that would reverse discriminatory legislation attacking the online gambling industry. Major US firms in industries vulnerable to copyright exceptions have also expressed alarm at the potential dangers to US business of the WTO row.
In an initial move, the United States offered concessions in other areas of trade to offset the online gambling restrictions, but these have been universally met with disapproval and are unlikely to be accepted (see previous Online-Casinos.com/InfoPowa reports).
"The U.S. (compensation) offer to date is insufficient and we continue to negotiate in order to improve it," said Peter Power, a spokesman for EU Trade Commissioner Peter Mandelson.
Lawyers for European online gaming firms - which are among the biggest in the world - say the EU should press for as much as $100 billion in compensation, given the plunge in the market value of listed firms when Washington shut off the world's biggest market last year and the value of business lost since then.
Antigua wants compensation of $3.4 billion - a figure the United States says is far too high - and the EU should demand at least 20 or 30 times that amount given the size of its online gaming industry, said one legal expert.
And an EU industry representative said the United States should allow European countries back into the market.
"They have got themselves into a terrible mess and yet there is an easy way out for them," Clive Hawkswood, head of the Remote Gambling Association, told a news conference in Brussels this week. He said regulation would ease what the United States says are its concerns about money-laundering and consumer protection.
The latest deadline for the United States to agree on compensation is October 22, and it is known that other countries are lining up with claims.
Lawyers interviewed by Reuters said the dispute could drag on for years while U.S. casino operators and Internet companies such as Yahoo! and Google are free to do business in Europe.
Casinos.ch ist die Gaming & Entertainment-Plattform der Schweiz und mit über 20 Informationsportalen und rund 100 Internetnamen (Domains) das grosse News- und Pressenetzwerk der Casino- und Glücksspielszene in Europa.
Aktuelle News, Interviews, Fotos und spannende Stories - direkt und live aus den Schweizer Casinos, der Spielbankenszene Deutschlands, über das monegassische Casino von Monte Carlo, weitere Casinos aus ganz Europa und der ganzen Welt finden Sie auf www.casinos.ch. Und last but not least natürlich auch aus der Sin City 'Las Vegas'.
Die Informationen sind unterteilt in die Bereiche Casino-Informationen, aktuelle News, Events, Jackpot und Tournament-Informationen, Fotogalerien, Live-Berichte und Interviews sowie ein täglich wechselndes Glückshoroskop.
Top-Brands: - www.casinos.ch CH-Casino-Plattform - www.swisspoker.ch Poker-News - www.casinopersonal.ch offene Stellen - www.nightlife.ch Ausgangs-Informationen
Weitere Nachrichten der Gaming-Branche |
Direkte Bahnverbindung Schweiz-London: Absichtserklärung unterzeichnet
Departement für UVEK, 09.05.2025Sucht Schweiz: Nein zu gefährlichen Kürzungen im Suchtbereich
Sucht Schweiz, 09.05.2025Ankunft der Excellence Crown - grosse Tauf-Gala in Basel
Reisebüro Mittelthurgau Fluss- und Kreuzfahrten AG, 09.05.2025
21:12 Uhr
15-Jährige Opfer von Tötungsdelikt – Täterschaft verhaftet »
20:42 Uhr
Blocher-Schwiegersohn: Roberto Martullo will Künzli in der hippen ... »
19:02 Uhr
Alle Bundesräte seit 1987 zu Gast – jetzt feiert Tele D Jubiläum »
A. Vogel Bio Herbamare 3x10g
CHF 4.35
Coop
A. Vogel Bio Kelpamare
CHF 4.85
Coop
A.Vogel Bio Herbamare Kräutersalz
CHF 4.75
Coop
A.Vogel Bio Herbamare Kräutersalz
CHF 3.40
Coop
A.Vogel Bio Herbamare Kräutersalz
CHF 14.90
Coop
A.Vogel Bio Herbamare Kräutersalz Spicy
CHF 6.45
Coop
Aktueller Jackpot: CHF 2'118'272