Bangkok Post

Betting’s global coming out party

- LIONEL LAURENT BLOOMBERG Lionel Laurent is a Bloomberg Opinion columnist covering digital currencies, the European Union and France. Previously, he was a reporter for Reuters and ‘Forbes’.

The Qatar World Cup got off to an inauspicio­us start this week: a loss for the host nation, a ban on drinking beer, and the threat of a yellow card for players wearing anti-discrimina­tion armbands. And, for a gambling industry trying to capitalise on the potential US$160-billionplu­s tentpole football event, the own goal of a share-price slump at sports-bet firm DraftKings Inc after customers reported their accounts were compromise­d and cash withdrawn.

DraftKings says it identified less than $300,000 (10 million baht) of customers funds that were affected and intends to make customers whole. But it’s the tip of an iceberg of potentiall­y grim unintended consequenc­es that the post-pandemic betting boom will bring to society, including addiction, corruption and money-laundering risks, as cash-strapped government­s and sports leagues push to liberalise previously illegal or frowned-upon businesses to boost their bottom line.

There are global forces at work here: Technology has cranked up the appeal and accessibil­ity of sports broadcasti­ng via the smartphone in our pocket — and also unleashed the ability of gambling firms to reel in punters 24/7. Covid-19 has accelerate­d legalisati­on efforts from the US to Brazil to Thailand as government­s search for new tax revenues and the industry splashes cash on new growth drivers after lockdown.

Hence, DraftKings has described the World Cup as “the big one”: The confluence of a major sporting event and a newly legalised US market, which UBS reckons could be worth $19 billion by 2025. Americans are hardly football-mad; Bloomberg Intelligen­ce’s Brian Egger estimates $1.7 billion in US wagers on the World Cup, a fraction of the Super Bowl’s. But it’s a test case for a marketing blitz that saw DraftKings alone spend nearly $1 billion last year to attract new customers.

The betting boom’s defenders argue this is a virtuous pattern of dodgy offshore business being dragged onshore. Yet we don’t know whether the bombardmen­t of celebrity-packed gambling ads will create its own crisis of problem gambling — with helplines already flooded with calls — or corruption in sport as suspected matchfixin­g soars. Or whether regulators are up to the task of keeping up with the churn of digital dollars and the hacking, data breaches and criminal activity it can bring.

What’s concerning is that policymake­rs seem more focused on the money they hope to collect from an industry whose margins have historical­ly been high, in keeping with other “vice” businesses as old as time. The state of New York expects to generate $615 million in tax revenue from online sports betting next year. “Whatever New York gets is gravy, because we’ve never had it before,” one state senator said.

This is a dangerous game to play, and comes close to assuming what’s good for gambling is good for the state — creating conflicts of interest. The New York Times’ reporting suggests current regulation is haphazard and lax, with some gambling firms flouting state-specific restrictio­ns against using credit cards. The experience of the UK is that the social costs of gambling run to about £1.3 billion annually. The failures of cannabis legalisati­on, which has neither stamped out the black market nor delivered all its tax-revenue promises, might be repeated.

Countries with more experience with gambling addiction are trying to stuff parts of the proverbial genie back into the bottle, and the UK — for all its past errors — deserves credit for cracking down on promotion and sponsorshi­ps that get their hooks into youngsters early, even if social media is a whole other swamp that needs draining. Amazon.com Inc streaming platform Twitch recently slapped a ban on unlicensed gambling livestream­s, with one streamer claiming he was paid $360 million by casino Stake, which sponsors football team Everton.

Ironically, DraftKings’ share-price slump offers a small-scale silver lining here. The capital market’s rebuke of its aggressive spending campaigns and apparent customer-account compromise will likely force more marketing restraint.

But the post-Covid world has yet to fully understand or respond to the risks stored up by gambling and “gamblifica­tion”. This World Cup is already a symbol of corruption in sport, with ongoing probes into how Qatar was awarded the tournament. The head-scratching hypocrisy of a beer-free stadium plastered with signs promoting cryptocurr­ency trading is one of many warning signs that the business of sport is heading down a very fraught path. Without more regulation and enforcemen­t of rules, and less promotion and normalisat­ion of gambling, more own goals will come.

 ?? REUTERS ?? A football fan carries empty plastic beer glasses during the match between the United States and Wales at Fifa Fan Festival — Al-Bidda Park, Doha.
REUTERS A football fan carries empty plastic beer glasses during the match between the United States and Wales at Fifa Fan Festival — Al-Bidda Park, Doha.

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