Las Vegas Review-Journal

N.J. sportsbook­s post record September handle

- By Richard N. Velotta

New Jersey’s sportsbook­s posted record handle in September, boosting monthly gaming revenue by

6.5 percent, the state’s Division of Gaming Enforcemen­t reported.

New Jersey books took in

$748.6 million in wagers, including $678.7 million through online apps.

The total beat the state’s own record of $668 million bets in August. The previous record handle was recorded in Nevada, $614 million in November 2019.

From the handle, New Jersey books kept $45.1 million after paying off winning wagers.

Most of the bets placed in September, $91.1 million, were parlay wagers, bets in which a player must correctly predict two or more correct outcomes.

While much of the handle was attributed to the return of NFL and college football games, a New Yorkbased gaming analyst said the high total handle occurred because an unpreceden­ted number of sports were converging at the same time.

Carlo Santarelli of Deutsche Bank projected the potential of $20 billion in annual sports wagering if every state adopted some form of sports betting. Santarelli also noted the 6 percent hold experience­d in New Jersey was less than normal, which he attributed to competing sportsbook­s taking less commission when

accepting wagers.

“Beyond the leap of full legalizati­on and every state behaving like New Jersey in terms of per-capita spend, one must also recognize that September contained the NFL, the National Hockey League playoffs, the National Basketball Associatio­n playoffs, NCAA football, Major League Baseball, the U.S. Open tennis and the U.S. Open golf,” Santarelli said in a note to investors. “Said differentl­y, it was, hopefully, a oncein-a-lifetime confluence of sports, and even when annualized, we would argue there is still little to no evidence of a $20 billion total annual market being remotely possible.”

New Jersey’s record sports betting numbers offset a 15.1 percent decline in casino win. In September, casinos were allowed to reopen restaurant­s and resume food and beverage service on casino floors, shuttered since March by health and safety rules establishe­d during the coronaviru­s pandemic.

The Division of Gaming Enforcemen­t reported total gaming revenue of $323.3 million, a 6.5 percent increase from September 2019. Analysts attributed the boost to pent-up demand.

But revenue for 2020 to date is still well below 2019 numbers. For the nine months of the year, total gaming revenue stands at $1.941 billion, 24.8 percent less than in 2019.

“These results were promising in the midst of continuing travel advisories that decrease visits from out of state, as well as restrictio­ns on capacity, amenities and entertainm­ent that have made 2020 not reasonably comparable to last year,” James Plousis, chairman of the New Jersey Casino Control Commission, told The Associated Press.

MGM Resorts Internatio­nal’s Borgata property had the greatest amount of casino revenue in the market, $64 million, which was 2.8 percent less than in September 2019.

Ocean Casino had the best percentage increase over the previous year, 21.9 percent to $29.6 million for the month.

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