iGB E-zines iGB e-zine New Jersey | Page 12

Part 1: Data review Chart 10: Monthly YoY casino revenue increase since June 2018 Chart 11: New Jersey poker revenues January 2017 – January 2019 2.4 60 2.3 55 2.2 2.1 45 2.0 40 1.9 35 50 1.8 1.7 30 1.6 25 1.5 20 1.4 1.3 15 Aug-18 Sep-18 Oct-18 Nov-18 Dec-18 Jan-19 Casino YoY increase Source: NJDGE This rate of acceleration might even continue when we consider that DraftKings is yet to launch its own full product set for its mobile casino app and is currently only running blackjack. The casino data also points to another important feature of the US scene – the degree to which casino properties might be willing to run their sports betting operations as a loss leader for their online gaming operations. The competitive picture As with sports betting, the data from the Division of Gaming Enforcement unfortunately doesn’t afford us a breakdown by skin but rather gives us a master operator breakdown (see Table 3). As can be seen, the brands operating under the Golden Nugget master licence are by some distance 12 1.2 n- Fe Jul-18 Source: NJDGE the market leaders and within that Golden Nugget’s own-brand casino is believed to be market leader overall, with just under a 20% market share. Poker woes The fly in the ointment in New Jersey, as it is elsewhere in the regulated world, is the poor performance of poker. Notwithstanding any potential further damage to poker’s prospects caused by the reinterpretation of the Wire Act and the effect that might have on the whole idea of liquidity sharing between states, it can be seen that poker revenues continue to disappoint in New Jersey. Those with long enough memories will remember that the deal struck between the then owners of PartyPoker and MGM Borgata for poker provision in the regulated New Jersey market was a big deal. Even bigger was the decision to allow PokerStars and its new owners a return to the US post Black Friday, with a deal to provide poker via Resorts. Both deals have certainly been rewarded with dominant market shares in poker, and in this limited sense they can be considered a success. But the revenue picture for poker is far less compelling as far as each will be concerned. The only good news is the apparent uptick achieved in December and January, a move which is likely partly seasonal but also might be evidence of a small amount of cross-sell from sports betting. Otherwise, the picture is gloomy, with the vertical failing to breach the $2m-a-month revenue mark since April 2017. Whether the recent uptick can push the market much further than that is debatable. New Jersey: data and lessons from the first five years of the US’ leading digital market