Offshore Betting

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From The Guardian -

Racing received a significant boost today to its campaign to force bookmakers based overseas to pay the HorseraceBetting Levy following a government promise to "ensure operators taking bets on British races should pay their fair share".
Unveiling proposals that would require all overseas bookmakers to be licensed by the Gambling Commission if they want to operate in the UK, as revealed by the Guardian last month, the sports minister, Gerry Sutcliffe, promised to ensure that the requirement to pay the Levy applied to them.
"In terms of the Horserace Betting Levy, I remain firmly of the view that all operators taking bets on British races should pay their fair share. There is more to do but I am committed to making sure this happens," he said.
For more than a decade the horse racing industry has warned that a mass defection offshore by bookmakers, thereby avoiding the levy on bets in Britain which goes straight to the sport, could cripple racing's income and it claims it is now coming to pass.
The decision last year by both William Hill and Ladbrokes to move their online arms offshore has cost racing an estimated £4.2m, and the overall take from the levy on bookmakers' gross profits was £93m in 2008-09, down 20% on the previous year.
The BHA chief executive, Nic Coward, welcomed the move as a positive start to the new year for racing.
"Together we must ensure that the way in which the sport in this country is funded is right for the modern age. Of course it's right that all operators pay, wherever they are," he said.
"Offshore operators have been getting away with it for too long and racing has taken a considerable hit to its Levy income. It has also had the ever present threat of more moves offshore with potentially severe consequences. Government clearly did not intend this to happen and are now addressing it."
Under the immediate licensing proposals, which are being consulted on, all operators active in the British market would have to comply with the Gambling Act and be required to report suspicious betting activity to the commission and sport governing bodies.
They will also have to comply with British licence requirements, including the protection of children, and demonstrate how they will contribute to the research, education and treatment of problem gambling in Britain.
"The new system outlined today will also ensure that all businesses offering online gambling to our consumers adhere to our rules – not someone else's," added Sutcliffe.
While the Remote Gambling Association has said it is amenable to discussions about bringing its members under the aegis of the Gambling Commmission, it is likely it will bitterly resist any move to apply the Levy.
A spokesman for Victor Chandler, one of the first bookmakers to operate offshore, said it already contributed to horse racing in the form of marketing and sponsorship.
"Because of our contributions to Racing UK and At The Races, and our commitment to the Horse Welfare Trust, we already feel we put an appropriate amount of money into racing."
Sports governing bodies, which have been lobbying for a new licensing system to combat the threat of match fixing and as a first step towards arguing for a levy on all sports bets as in France, also welcomed yesterday's Commons statement.
The 12-week consultation period, unlikely to be launched for three to four weeks, and the need for new legislation, are likely to push the issue beyond the coming general election. But racing insiders are confident that the changes have cross-party support and will be picked up by whichever party wins.
 
All mainstream parties are pitching the same line as the Government, Gamls Stan. Whether support for this position extends beyond a General Election remains to be seen.
 
I do hope so, the Offshore operators have done nothing but damage the industry in my opinion.

VC's argument appears to be that they advertise in the UK?!
 
William Hill move their telephone betting offshore, from their website:

William Hill PLC (LSE: WMH) (William Hill or the Group) announces that William Hill Online is to establish a new Telephone betting operation based in Gibraltar. At the same time, the Group’s Telephone betting subsidiary, William Hill Credit Limited (WHCL), will close its operation in the UK.

William Hill Online, together with an outsourced service provider, Vertex, a leading global BPO and Customer Management Outsourcer, will continue to service all William Hill Telephone customers. It is proposed that Vertex will take over the Sheffield-based call centre currently run by WHCL and that William Hill Online will also manage customers from Gibraltar. Customers will benefit from an improved service, including being able to use their Telephone betting account for online transactions. WHCL’s second call centre in Leeds will close, with all staff being offered alternative positions. The Group has, today, entered into a 90-day period of consultation with those employees affected by the closure. William Hill continues to have a substantial presence in the UK and Ireland, including more than 2,300 licensed betting offices and around 16,000 employees. It paid £265m in UK taxes and levies in 2009.

The Group expects to implement these changes during the fourth quarter of 2010 with associated cost savings of approximately £4-7m per annum expected to commence from the start of 2011. The cost of implementation in 2010 is expected to be approximately £7m, of which approximately £5m will be incurred as an exceptional item.

Although William Hill Online is a joint venture between William Hill PLC and Playtech Limited, future Telephone business profits/losses will be retained by William Hill, with the exception of an annual Telephone betting support fee of £0.5m payable to Playtech.

William Hill’s existing Telephone betting business made a loss of £1.8m in 2009 and a small operating loss is anticipated to be made in the first half of 2010.

Ralph Topping, Chief Executive of William Hill, commented:

“This significant change to our Telephone business is a response to the challenge of competing with betting exchanges and offshore telebetting operators, all of whom have benefitted from significant cost and tax advantages over UK bookmakers. This has made it impossible for our existing business to compete profitably from the UK.”

-ends-

Enquiries:
William Hill PLC
Ralph Topping, Chief Executive
Neil Cooper, Group Finance Director
Lyndsay Wright, Director of IR
Tel: +44 (0) 20 8918 3614

Brunswick:
Simon Sporborg / Justine McIlroy
Tel: +44 (0) 20 7404 5959

Notes:

About William Hill
William Hill is a leading betting and gaming company. It is one of the UK’s largest bookmakers, with around 2,300 shops in the UK and Ireland that provide betting opportunities on a wide range of sporting and non-sporting events and, in the UK, offer gaming machines. William Hill Online provides internet-based sports-betting, casino, poker and bingo, and is one of the leading European online betting and gaming businesses operated by a listed company.

About William Hill Credit Limited
Approximately 400 people are based at call centres in Sheffield and Leeds. WCHL pays 15% gaming duty on its gross profit and a further 10% on profits from UK horseracing, as well as VAT and corporation tax. Offshore operators typically pay no or very low taxes and no horseracing levy. In 2009, William Hill’s Telephone betting business recorded a loss of £1.8m and a 25% decline in net revenue.

About William Hill Online
William Hill Online is a leading international online betting and gaming business. It employs approximately 400 people based primarily in Gibraltar, Israel and Bulgaria. It offers a full range of online betting and gaming services at williamhill.com, including sports-betting, poker, bingo and casino products. William Hill Online is a joint venture owned by William Hill PLC (71%) and Playtech Limited (29%).
 
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