PartyGaming shows its hand

Martin Weigold, group finance director of PartyGaming, discusses the gaming company's interim results and the changes to the tax regime in Gibraltar, where the company is based

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You’ve announced interim results. What’s behind growth?

I think there were two factors that drove the growth in both Poker and Casino. I think in Casino, where we saw substantial growth, that was clearly driven by the launch of Blackjack in October of last year. And then it was subsequently influenced by the launch of PartyCasino in February of 2006.

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For Poker, I think the main drivers were continued growth in new sign-ups, as well as the platform split, where we saw a number of high-yielding players return to the platform.

We’re seeing numbers related to the performance of PartyGammon for the first time, and you described June as a promising start. But in reality, aren’t the revenues rather slow compared with the launches of other games?

I don’t think it’s possible to compare everything to the success of Blackjack. I very much think that that was a one-off, an exceptional performance for any business, let alone for an online gaming business.

And we are very pleased with what we’ve seen to date. We are generating revenues of around $1m per month. We haven’t really put a great deal of marketing support behind it just yet.

Clearly, before we start cross-selling it into our other divisions, we want to know what impact it will have on the spend in those other divisions. But it’s early days, and we’re certainly encouraged by the start.

In reporting terms, how long will a game be seen as an Emerging Game and when will it qualify to be accounted for separately?

That will simply be driven by how big the game is. As soon as it becomes material in its own right, then I think we’ll break out Backgammon as a separate segment. The only exception is for sports betting. We’ve taken the view that we’re going to break that out at the outset, because it is likely to be a material segment going forward.

Are you intending to hold on to all your money for further acquisitions or is there a possibility of a share buy-back?

There is a possibility of a share buy-back. It’s something that we look at all the time and obviously we benchmark the returns that we could get by doing a share buy-back against the acquisitions that we’re looking at. So, yes, there is always that possibility, but right now there’s nothing planned.

If our plans change, then obviously we’ll make an announcement to the market at the appropriate time.

Following the recent decision in the European court, what are the implications on the Gibraltar tax regime?

We are very pleased, because it has effectively removed one of the risks associated with the replacement tax regime that will come into effect at the end of 2010. It has essentially taken away the risk that Gibraltar would have to adopt the same rate of corporation tax as the UK, which is currently 30%.

So we’re very encouraged, and we expect a low-cost tax regime that’s non-discriminatory to take its place when the tax-exempt scheme is phased out.

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