Bet365 to Become Empire Resorts’ Second-Biggest Shareholder Through Sports Betting Deal

Bet365 to Become Empire Resorts’ Second-Biggest Shareholder Through Sports Betting Deal.

Costfoto / NurPhoto / Getty Images

Key Takeaways

UK sports betting giant Bet365 has teamed up with Resorts World Catskills owner Empire Resorts in a deal that will see it provide the Upstate New York casino with digital and physical bookmaking operations that s provided New York regulates sports betting, as it is expected to shortly.

Bet365Sports betting could be just around the corner for Resorts World Catskills and New York’s three other commercial casinos. Meanwhile, its new major shareholder, Bet365, has been lobbying in the state since June, presumably extolling the benefits of online sports betting. (Image: Empire Resorts)

Bet365 will also acquire up to $50 million of Empire’s common stock, which will see it become the company’s second-biggest shareholder. The primary shareholder in the enterprise is Kien Huat Realty, the parent company of Malaysian casino giant Genting.

Bet365 and Empire will split the proceeds of the sports betting operations 50-50, according to an official statement, released Wednesday.

Regulation Could Come Soon

Sports betting is already nominally legal in New York. Voters authorized it by public referendum in 2013 at the same time that they approved four full-scale, commercial casino licenses, of which Resorts World Catskills is a product.

Because of this, there is broad consensus that the New York State Gaming Commission has the power to draw up a temporary framework of sports betting regulation for the four casinos without the need for additional legislation.

It s been speculated that the state’s Democratic governor Andrew Cuomo a supporter of the upstate casinos had requested a delay on the regulatory framework until after this month’s gubernatorial election because he was eager to avoid controversy during his bid to win a new term. With his reelection secured, the new rules could come to New York sooner rather than later.

Nevertheless, Senator John Bonacic is expected to lead a legislative push next year that will seek to implement permanent regulations and make sports betting available to the state’s racetracks and other gaming operators. Bonacic , though, that he does not anticipate New York regulating online sports betting.

Nevertheless, he believes the market will be worth $500 million per year around double that of Las Vegas’ if all of New York’s operators take it up.

Bet365 Lobbying Legislature

With more than 23 million customers globally, Bet365 is one of the largest online gambling operators in the world and has the potential to inject some serious marketing spend into the New York sports betting sector when it finally arrives.

The company has been lobbying for sports betting in New York since June, and as a customer-facing and (so far) online-only brand it will no doubt be pushing for full-scale online sports betting, à la New Jersey.

Bet365 has a to offer online sports betting in Garden State, but the venture is yet to launch.

Article Sources
Las Vegas Officer Shoots, Critically Wounds Accused Kidnapper in Las Vegas editorial policy.
  1. California Tribes Threaten to Sue State Over Banked Games Despite Regulator Assurances

Compare Accounts
×
Mohegan Pennsylvania Baccarat Cheater Sought for Secretly Recording Cards
Provider
Name
Description
Favorite Rafael Nadal Easily Defeats Kevin Anderson to Win Third US Open, 16th Grand Slam Event  NY Regulator Monitoring Resorts World, Wynn Legal Situations  DraftKings, FanDuel Win Indiana Supreme Court Ruling on Using Names and Stats of College Athletes  Typhoon Hato Reveals Shortcomings in Government Attention to Macau Infrastructure  More Brits Are Gambling Than Ever Before, Especially On Their Smartphones, Says UKGC  Everi Buying Select Video King Assets for $59M  Florida Lottery Player Wins $2M After Spending Savings on Daughter’s Cancer Care  Las Vegas-SoCal High-Speed Rail Secures $3B in New Funding  Las Vegas Sportsbooks Can’t Come to Terms on March Madness Favorite  Steve Wynn Opens Up About Not Supporting President Trump During Campaign