Bank Of America Approves ADW Transactions

The National Thoroughbred Racing Association (NTRA) today confirmed that Bank of America, the second-largest bank in the United States and one of the largest card-issuing banks in the country, has for the first time begun approving debit card deposit transactions with U.S. licensed and regulated advance deposit wagering companies (ADWs).

The decision by Bank of America, which began accepting debit card transactions in mid-August, is expected to have a positive impact on overall U.S. pari-mutuel handle.

“This is another positive step for Thoroughbred racing and one that would not have come about without the support of Bank of America and the advocacy on behalf of our industry by Rep. Andy Barr (R-KY) and his staff,” said NTRA President and Chief Executive Officer Alex Waldrop.

“I commend Bank of America for expanding access to wagering on Thoroughbred horse racing for the roughly 66 million Americans that the bank serves,” said Barr, who serves on the U.S. House of Representatives Financial Services Committee. “This is a win for Bank of America customers and the horse racing industry. Bank of America's decision will strengthen the horse racing industry in the Commonwealth and throughout the United States.”

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PointsBet Moves Into U.S. Horse Racing Market With Purchase Of Premier Turf Club ADW

PointsBet USA Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of PointsBet Holdings Ltd., has announced the premier global online gaming and racing operator has agreed in principle to acquire Premier Turf Club, LLC, an advance deposit wagering company licensed by the Oregon Racing Commission.  The agreement is set to initia­lly position PointsBet within the U.S. online horse racing market as the company continues its rapid expansion across the country.

“PointsBet is very pleased to join forces with Premier Turf Club,” noted PointsBet USA CEO Johnny Aitken. “The combination of Premier Turf Club's excellence in the space with PointsBet's mature market Australian racing expertise favorably positions us as we prepare to enter the U.S. horse racing market.  Today's noteworthy acquisition complements our in-house approach while growing our premier product suite, and we are excited to welcome Premier Turf Club to the PointsBet team.”

Premier Turf Club, known as “Racing's Best Kept Secret,” has been in business over 13 years and operates the website BetPTC.com.  The company is overseen by general manager Todd Bowker, a longtime industry executive who will become vice president of racing for PointsBet USA.  Bowker previously served as general manager of AmericaTab Ltd, where he led the start-up of the company and oversaw the operational management of what grew to become the fourth largest Advance Deposit Wagering company licensed in Oregon. Premier Turf Club's highly experienced staff will also be joining the PointsBet team.

“As Premier Turf Club was exploring options for how we might enter the sports betting market, we realized early on that we wanted to partner with a highly regarded and experienced operator,” said Bowker. “PointsBet's history in racing in Australia made them an ideal choice, and we are excited to join their team. We look forward to be able to offer sports wagering to our customers in jurisdictions where legal, and to expose PointsBet's customers to the excitement of betting on racing.”

Premier Turf Club's extensive industry expertise and relationships, customer-focused operations, and excellent reputation will be of immediate value to PointsBet as the company looks to continue its proven track record of entering new markets with premium products while accelerating client value and growth in the United States.

For the operators able to execute on the opportunity, horse racing has a unique role to play alongside sports betting entertainment and content in the United States.  The horse racing industry in the U.S. generates over $12 billion in handle annually, with only half wagered through ADW products legally available in 38 states.  PointsBet aims to be at the center of innovation and growth in U.S. horse racing, and the addition of ADW adds to PointsBet's growing proprietary wagering product set which already includes a fixed odds sportsbook, PointsBetting, and online casino.

About PointsBet
PointsBet is one of the fastest growing sportsbooks in the country and is rapidly expanding its U.S. footprint, currently bringing its best-in-class proprietary technology, modernized and premium brand mentality, expert trading practices, and proven growth marketing strategies to the burgeoning sports betting markets of Colorado, Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Michigan, and New Jersey. Originally founded in Australia, PointsBet is a cutting-edge online gaming operator that prides itself on having the quickest and most user-friendly app (iOS and Android) while also providing the best content and experience for sports bettors. PointsBet is the only U.S. sportsbook to offer PointsBetting – a unique and innovative way to bet – and has also introduced a slew of well-received, bettor-first initiatives. PointsBet offers the most markets on all four major U.S. sports (NFL, NBA, MLB, NHL) and PointsBetting in the world. For more information, visit www.PointsBet.com.

About Premier Turf Club
Premier Turf Club, LLC is a U.S. based pari-mutuel account wagering provider regulated in the state of Oregon by the Oregon Racing Commission. Staff includes horse owners, bettors and industry professionals that have been involved in advance deposit wagering and simulcasting since their inceptions. PTC has developed a business model that benefits the players, the horsemen and the race tracks, while offering an extensive racing menu where customers can wager on over 200 Thoroughbred, Harness and Greyhound race tracks.

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Wagering Insecurity: Are We Meeting The Basic Expectation Of Integrity In Racing?

This is Part 1 of the Thoroughbred Idea Foundation's (TIF) series “Wagering Insecurity.”

Faced with remarkable competitive pressure from the rise of legal sports betting, horse racing is at a crossroads.

Confidence amongst horseplayers and horse owners is essential to the future sustainability of the sport. Efforts to improve the greater North American Thoroughbred industry will fall flat if its stakeholders fail to secure a foundation of integrity. Achieving this is growing increasingly difficult after the sport has neglected its core base – horseplayers – for decades.

“Wagering Insecurity” details some of that neglect, and the need to embrace serious reform. Fortunately, there are examples across the racing world to follow.

Integrity is essential in horse racing to give all participants confidence.

Customer confidence is important for any business, but especially so when people are investing their money.

Across the forthcoming installments of the “Wagering Insecurity” series, several unsettling perspectives are offered. TIF spoke with nearly 50 long-time current and former industry executives, regulators and officials from around the racing world, some for direct attribution and others on background, who shared their unease with the status quo.  A common thread:  the blame is shared.

The poor state of wagering systems security and integrity measures is not the fault of any one individual, group, regulator or corporation, it is how horse racing in North America has evolved.

Wholesale improvements are needed. If we lift our standards, confidence will build, participation will grow and racing's future will be more secure.

EXPECTATIONS

Participants across racing should have some basic expectations met.

Simply put, the competitions within racing should be fair and honest. Horses should be free from any illegal performance enhancement. Jockeys should expect horses are sound, track surfaces are safe and stewards enforce rules consistently. Bettors should expect that jockeys give horses their best chance to win, betting information is accurate and that wagering systems are secure and do not advantage some customers over others.

Are we meeting these expectations?

This series delves into the integrity of North American horse racing, specifically as it relates to the $11 billion wagered through the pari-mutuel system, and the uncounted billions wagered outside the purview of North American racing regulators.

Horse racing is competing for customers, working to retain existing ones while trying to attract and develop new ones, like any business. Proper standards of integrity are necessary.

Are racing's customers, the bettors, properly protected at present?

TIF believes the answer to that question is “no.” The security of racing's wagering systems is not up to contemporary standards. The oversight of racing from stewards and regulators is not sufficient at present for customers to have confidence in the legitimacy of results.

Both perspectives are addressed throughout the series.

When American racing fails its bettors and stakeholders, it loses customers. In a world where sports betting is available to almost half of the American population and typically just involves downloading a mobile app, cheaper and better policed gambling opportunities are easily found.

Do participants in racing have confidence in the outcomes on the track and through wagering? Right now? No. Could they? Yes, or at least far more so than exists now.

Confidence is good for business.

WHO IS BETTING WHAT

Racing's business statistics are deliberately opaque. There is no central office that tracks racing's betting business and performance, a perpetual disservice to the sport's stakeholders. Basic metrics on wagering would be helpful for many stakeholders in the sport but getting them is practically impossible.

This lack of clarity has become increasingly problematic because the business changed fundamentally in the 1990s and the division of revenues from wagering did not keep pace. Handle shifted from on-track to off-track as full-card simulcasting and internet-enabled advanced deposit wagering (ADW) took hold. On-track betting revenues are often the most lucrative for purses under current agreements between bet-takers, tracks and horsemen. It has declined while the ADW business has grown in significance, with the pandemic-related closures turbocharging that growth, accounting for an estimated $7 billion of U.S. Thoroughbred racing handle last year.

Now, who is betting what, and through which channels?

When Equibase reported total wagering on U.S. racing in the pandemic-impacted 2020 was $10.92 billion, down less than 1% from the previous year despite nearly ten months of racing without live attendance, that felt like a decent showing.

But total handle figures at a nationwide level, or even at the individual track level, do not offer much insight to the health of the business. They tell us very little. It is the composition of that handle which is a more meaningful measure, but such details are almost never available to anyone except the host track where the race occurs.

Citing total handle figures as a measure of performance should be viewed skeptically, particularly by horsemen.

Where does handle come from? How many individual customers are wagering? How many new customers have been created, and how many are still betting? How many customers are betting substantial amounts over $10 million, $50 million, or over $100 million annually? What is the effective takeout for customers of different ADWs? How much are purses earning from different customer segments?

Without centralized reporting of these figures made available to all parties in the sport, it is almost impossible to know.

Here is what we do know.

Reports from the Oregon Racing Commission, which serves as a hub for the largest registered ADWs, show that handle for the three largest ADWs in 2020 – TVG, TwinSpires and Xpressbet – was more than $6.2 billion. That includes all breeds and greyhound betting through those ADWs, not just U.S. Thoroughbred betting, though Thoroughbred racing does generate the vast majority of total action.

NYRABets, a fourth major ADW which hubs some of its betting through Oregon, reported handle of $225 million, but that isn't the entire picture as much of its handle comes from New York residents, which is not included in Oregon figures. The New York in-state numbers have not been made public.

What about the rest?

THE GROUPS

Some came from on-track money from January through early March when tracks were open. A small amount came from tracks with live attendance after March. Some came from smaller ADWs hubbed in North Dakota, where betting handle by ADW is not made public. Some came from Canadian customers.

But much of it came from groups like Elite Turf Club, entities which TIF has called “high-volume betting shops” (HVBS) in our previous white paper but are more formally known within the industry as secondary pari-mutuel organizations (SPMOs). These groups are the biggest customers by handle, receive substantial rebates and have direct access to pari-mutuel pools.

In his 2016 book “The Perfect Bet,” author Adam Kucharski calls it “scientific betting.”

“The techniques are now so effective – and the wins so consistent – that teams…don't celebrate when their predictions come good.”

These groups participate at an institutional level. They bet big because that is what the math dictates. It is cold, calculated investing. Kucharski continues:

“It's not cheap to set up a scientific betting syndicate. To gather the necessary technology and expertise, not to mention hone the prediction method and place the bets – costs most teams at least $1 million. Because betting strategies are expensive to run, teams in the United States often seek out racetracks that offer favorable gambling conditions.”

According to court filings from 2017, The Stronach Group (now 1/ST) owns Elite Turf Club.

Based on a variety of projections which TIF has updated to account for 2020 figures, we estimate total betting from the HVBS/SPMOs was likely between 33% and 40% of total U.S Thoroughbred handle, in the vicinity of $4 billion out of the total $10.92 billion. The reality could be higher or lower. In 2003, they represented approximately only 8% of total wagering.

These groups might not be growing, but rather they are representing a larger percentage of wagering as mainstream horseplayers abandon racing, or shift more of their action to legal sports betting options.

The majority of play from the HVBS/SPMOs is not counted in the ADW figures. Customers like those at Elite, and it is only a few customers, place their bets directly into the pools, bypassing an ADW intermediary. There are also smaller computerized robotic wagering groups which DO process bets through ADWs, entities betting tens of millions annually. Their total handle is unknown to the wider industry because it is commingled with ADW betting.

Bettors may not understand how the big HVBS/SPMO groups operate and exactly what they are betting, but they can readily observe their impact on the game.

What horseplayer hasn't watched as a horse that is last into the gate at 23-1, breaks on top and is never headed, winning at a much-reduced 11-1? Horses routinely enter the gate at 5-1, only to win at 5-2. Or in the last flash of a mandatory payout when a bet of half a million dollars shows up in the pool?

These are discouraging experiences for the people who cash a bet in those races and draws headshakes from many others. For more than two decades, these incidents have plagued North American racing's customers without any meaningful attention or action from track operators. Perhaps their most noteworthy response has been removing the odds from the screen in the final seconds of loading through the first quarter-mile of a race so the drops are less visible. In many cases, the big syndicates wagering hundreds of millions annually through HVBS/SPMOs are the cause of such price crunches, degrading the experience for everyone else.

The inability of regular horseplayers to have any idea what price they are getting damages the product every day. Sports betting customers know exactly what their return will be if their bet wins. What was once a harmful feature of pari-mutuel wagering is now a huge competitive disadvantage.

Sports betting is growing at an explosive rate with attractive betting offerings and widespread distribution. Operators are spending vast sums using bonuses and promotions to acquire customers and are embracing modern betting technology.  That is not bad news for racing companies in the racing wagering space, like TVG and TwinSpires, whose parent companies run sports betting businesses, but it is bad for those who depend on purses for their livelihoods.

For the last 25 years, as betting shifted online, purses in many North American jurisdictions have been bolstered by subsidies from additional gaming, be it slot machines, video lottery terminals (VLT), historical horse racing (HHR) machines or others. That era in American racing is far closer to sunset than sunrise as casino wagering moves online where revenues are undivided. Decoupling racing from slot and casino revenues will likely increase. While all stakeholders in racing should undoubtedly pursue every funding source possible, the single greatest, sustainable source of revenue for racing on the continent remains actual wagering on racing.

There are avenues for improvement, but any efforts to attract new wagering on racing will fall flat if the North American racing industry fails to embrace integrity across the sport – within its wagering systems, betting platforms and the running of the races themselves.

In our next installment, one leading expert makes it clear – doping in racing is intertwined with gambling. So why is gambling almost never referenced or investigated in North America in such cases?

Coming Thursday, April 15 – Part 2 – Intertwined

Review the Executive Summary to “Wagering Insecurity”

Want to share your insights with TIF? Contact us here. 

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Between The Hedges: Diving In To Minus Pools

A minus pool in horse racing is the direct result of an established minimum payout threshold and a corresponding significant amount of money wagered in a pool on a heavy favorite.

Assuming the favorite runs as expected, the end result is a shortfall between what is left of the net pool to be distributed to the winning tickets and the guaranteed minimum.

The majority of the time minus pools occur in the show pools. But there are occasions where show pools are removed and the place pool is affected. The importance of minus pools is that they negatively impact the bottom line of the racetrack or account deposit wagering platform [ADW] that facilitates the wager. Simulcast contracts hold the guest locations responsible for covering any minus pool that is created by them wagering on the host track content.

In the 1943 Belmont Stakes, a win minus pool of $15,912, the equivalent of approximately $240,000 adjusted for inflation, took place when Count Fleet completed his sweep of the Triple Crown.

The 1969 running of the Belmont Stakes produced the first minus show pool in the history of the race when Arts and Letters won and created a minus show pool of $5,782.98 and ten years later another minus pool occurred in the Belmont Stakes when Spectacular Bid finished third at odds of $.30-1 to win, resulting in an on-track minus show pool of $19,500.81.

In recent years, field-size decline, coupled with net pool pricing, have contributed to an increase in minus pools. The availability of pool information and the ability to wager anywhere via ADW also plays a role.

The 2020 edition of the Personal Ensign at Saratoga Race Course, a nine-furlong test for older fillies and mares, provided a good example of how a minus pool is created. For the purpose of this example, the below illustration uses the gross pool and does not contemplate different takeout rates or currency conversion variances related to international guest locations.

A field of five, following the scratch of Bossy Bride [No. 5], went into the gate, including multiple Grade 1-winner Midnight Bisou. Prior to the race, the show pool was removed in anticipation of a large minus pool. A total of $419,154 was bet into the place pool. This was the corresponding percentage of the total:

No. 1 Abounding Joy – $13,055 (3%)
No. 2 Motion Emotion – $21,223 (5%)
No. 3 Midnight Bisou – $301,995 (72%)
No. 4 Vexatious – $25,758 (6%)
No. 6 Point of Honor – $57,122 (14%)

The official order was 4-3-6-2-1, as Vexatious held off Midnight Bisou by a neck for a 9-1 upset win. It was a further 6 1/4-lengths back to Point of Honor in third.

The total amount of the place pool wagered on the top two finishers was $327,753 or 78 percent.

To calculate the place payouts, the first step is to subtract the total amount wagered on the winning tickets from the total pool, then remove the takeout from the difference. The total pool was $419,154 less the total on the top-two finishers of $327,753, with the new figure $91,401. After removing the 16 percent takeout, the difference was $76,777.

Under net pool pricing with two place payouts, the next step is to divide the $76,777 in two, leaving each of the top-two finishers with $38,389. In addition to the split of the $38,389, the amount wagered on the top-two finishers should be added to this amount, less the takeout. This leaves the amount on Vexatious to be distributed to the winning tickets at $60,025 and $292,064 on Midnight Bisou. Dividing these amounts by number of winning tickets, the raw $1 pay out was $2.33 to Vexatious and $0.97 for Midnight Bisou, or $4.60 and $1.93, respectively, when adjusted for the $2 payout after breakage.

The minimum payout for a wager in the state of New York is $2.10 on a $2 wager. For every $2 that was wagered on Midnight Bisou to place, a minus pool of 17 cents was created. Factoring in where the bet was placed, host fees, and potentially source market fees, it is reasonable to assume that some of the bet takers actually lost money on every place wager on Midnight Bisou.

The impact of the minimum payout threshold is even more pronounced in the state of West Virginia – the only one of its type – where the minimum is $2.20 for a $2 wager. In an effort to avoid losing money on these pools, ADWs will remove the show pool from their wagering menu on specific races.

The racetrack's situation is slightly different in that they must first adhere to guidance or statutes from their regulators. The racetracks must then balance the risk versus reward of the minus pools they are responsible for and the potential host fees on the pool in question.

In New York, NYRA can remove the show pool from stakes races but we must offer the show pool for any overnight race that start five or more separate entries. As the industry evolves, so too will NYRA's approach to managing minus pools in the best interest of all our stakeholders.

Send your questions for Between The Hedges to betweenthehedges@nyrainc.com.

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