Finding The Silver Lining: PA Online Casinos Peak In March As Gaming Revenues Plummet

In the present heap of storm clouds, finding a silver lining isn’t easy. Especially for those in the gaming industry. In Pennsylvania, the positive news from the March gaming revenue report comes from online casinos, which set new records for revenue ($24.3 million) and handle.

The Pennsylvania Gaming Control Board reports that overall gaming revenue was down 51% month-over-month with land-based casinos shuttered since March 17. Sports betting handle in PA dropped 60%, bringing in $131.3 million in March.

The closing of all 12 of Pennsylvania’s brick-and-mortar casinos for coronavirus concerns has, however, spurred more interest in iGaming. Online casino revenue was up 24.5% over its previous high of $19.5 million in February. Slots and table games accounted for 19.7% of that increase, while a record online poker month made up the rest.

Perhaps more telling of the recent iGaming growth in PA is the drastic increase in handle month-over-month. March saw by far the most online slots and table games wagers to date with $871.6 million. That represents a 23.9% increase in handle over the $703,559,106 wagered in February. Slots did the heavy lifting, rising 51.5% in handle while amount bet at the tables increased 8.2%.

The recent surge in online casino action – and revenue – is a good sign for the relatively young market. However, it is a small victory within the current economic thrashing most operators are experiencing.

PA online casinos off and running

The biggest piece of silver lining is perhaps that Pennsylvania is home to online casinos. As all of the commercial casinos in the United States remain closed, only four states including Pennsylvania have any legalized form of iGaming.

PA may have been slow to get out of the gate with high tax rates and limited libraries of games, but online casinos are now hitting full stride.

While there’s still some room for growth in terms of competition, the PA market is just about saturated. There are now eight online casinos in the Commonwealth, with Caesars expected to join the fray soon.

Perhaps most significant for the market’s recent growth prior to March was the FanDuel Casino launch.

It provided a surge for overall online gaming handle and revenue, but especially for table games, which previously trailed much further behind online slots in terms of revenue. Total casino revenue in March broke down to $12.4 million from slots and $8.8 million from tables.

PA online casino growth

A full look at online casino revenue growth since its inception in July can be seen here.

Casino July 2019 Aug. 2019 Sept. 2019 Oct. 2019 Nov. 2019 Dec. 2019 Jan. 2020 Feb. 2020 March 2020
SugarHouse and BetRivers* (Rivers Philly) $422,796 $1,648,426 $1,068,683 $2,532,099 $3,171,762 $2,970,222 $3,549,970 $4,755,592 $6,757,345
Hollywood Casino (Penn National Race Course) $129,386 $684,452 $1,797,020 $1,800,648 $1,867,657 $1,692,797 $2,405,023 $2,315,459 $2,618,503
Parx Casino $260,214 $1,095,761 $1,269,655 $610,187 $1,495,846 $1,523,041 $1,644,854 $2,352,492 $2,728,129
PokerStars Casino (Mount Airy Casino) $1,023,637 $1,559,057 $1,322,829 $1,393,103 $2,830,694
Unibet (Mohegan Sun Pocono) $131,415 $406,445 $786,447 $723,229 $803,000
FanDuel Casino (Valley Forge) $2,081,252 $6,053,007 $4,969,253
BetAmerica Casino (Presque Isle Downs) $9,898 $67,575 $425,878
Total $812,306 $3,428,640 $4,135,358 $4,942,934 $7,690,317 $8,151,562 $11,800,273 $17,660,459 $21,132,802

*Note: BetRivers Casino revenue figures are included with PlaySugarHouse as they are sister sites under the Rivers Philly online casino license.

FanDuel Casino key to iGaming growth

FanDuel’s online casino launched in January and immediately claimed the top spot for table games play. Only live for eight days in January, $84.7 million was wagered at FanDuel’s interactive tables, earning $1.7 million in gross revenue.

In its first full month (February), slot play at FanDuel reached $40 million while table games handle jumped to $238 million. Revenue reached nearly $6.1 million. March kept pace in terms of wagers with slots bringing in $43.8 million in bets and tables down slightly at $206.8 million.

That translated to nearly $5 million in revenue, $4 million of which was from table games. FanDuel’s table games handle represented 42.5% of the total $485.7 million across all PA gambling sites for March.

The lower tax rate on table games of 16% as compared to 54% for online slots is part of the equation for FanDuel’s high revenue.

No signs of slowing down

Despite having the smallest game library in Pennsylvania, FanDuel established itself as the far-and-away leader of PA online casinos. In early April, they added bacarrat, Game King Video Poker and popular land-based slot titles to their library.

FanDuel’s Director of Publicity Kevin Hennessy commented on the iGaming products rise and additions:

“Our casino product is seamlessly integrated into our sportsbook app which adds value to the #1 Sportsbook in PA. We promised to add new games when we launched to offer a more robust casino product for our customers. We are glad to be ahead of schedule with our additions.”

Despite their late entry to the market, FanDuel Casino has proven to be spot-on with their timing. When asked if FanDuel casino had seen an increase week-over-week since live casino closures, Hennessy said “Yes.”

Online poker thriving in PA too, despite a single operator

The nascent online poker market in PA consists of one operator, and PokerStars PA has been capitalizing on that fact. Revenue has been strong and steady for online poker since its November debut.

March brought even more action. With live poker rooms closed and many people staying home, online poker experienced a surge. PokerStars’ record $3.1 million in revenue for March reflects that increase, and April is sure to bring an even bigger boost.

The site is currently running its biggest tournament series to date in the US, with $2 million in prize pools guaranteed from April 4 – April 20. The remaining PASCOOP schedule is available here.

The following is a breakdown of PokerStars PA revenue and taxes collected since launch.

Month Revenue (Rake & Tournament Fees) State Tax (14%) Local Share Assessment (2%)
November 2019 $1,965,494 $275,169 $39,310
December 2019 $2,473,137 $346,239 $49,463
January 2020 $2,157,266 $302,017 $43,145
February 2020 $1,830,356 $254,408 $36,344
March 2020 $3,133,019 $437,836 $62,548

Big picture for PA casino revenue

The economic effects of pandemic closures and cancellations unfortunately seem to be in their early stages. March numbers were significantly affected, and that is with closures for just half the month. With no hint yet of possible re-openings, casino operators have to brace for more damage.

Thousands of casino workers have been furloughed or laid off and daily losses for gaming operators can number in the millions, according to the Las Vegas Review Journal. PA-based Penn National has taken drastic measures to curb its cash losses, and others have made similar moves.

Halted cash flows also mean lost revenue for state and local entities. The city of Bethlehem estimates it is missing out on $800,000 every month that Wind Creek is closed, according to Lehighvalleylive.com. The effects ripple across the state to other cities and towns which are home to PA casinos.

As the storm continues to rage, states like Pennsylvania, New Jersey and Delaware can take solace in the small silver lining of online casinos which still brings in some gaming revenue during the nationwide casino shutdown.

In the grand scheme of things, it won’t be enough to offset the great losses gaming companies are taking. But it certainly helps.

The post Finding The Silver Lining: PA Online Casinos Peak In March As Gaming Revenues Plummet appeared first on Play Pennsylvania.

NJ Gambling News: New Jerseyans Win Big, Online Poker Keeps Raking It In

It was a great week for a couple of lucky New Jersey online casino customers. In other NJ gambling news, there are more opportunities for other NJ residents to do the same this week. One NJ online gambling site is offering a special contest for sports buffs. Also, for those who prefer gaming at brick-and-mortar […]

The post NJ Gambling News: New Jerseyans Win Big, Online Poker Keeps Raking It In appeared first on Play NJ.

US ONLINE POKER TOURNAMENT GUIDE: Weekend of April 17-19, 2020

The big action continues this weekend for US-based players. Numerous events with big guarantees await players looking for some big field and guarantees.

USPoker once again brings players a complete guide of weekend events with day-by-day tournament schedule.

  • Global Poker – Social media sweepstakes poker available throughout the US. Players can redeem Sweeps Coin winnings for real cash. The Home Series continues with a SC200,000 guarantee on Sunday.
  • WSOP.com – Available in Nevada and New Jersey through a shred liquidity pool. That also includes 888poker in Delaware. Look for more big events in the Spring Online Championships this weekend. The Sunday Special brings a $100,000 guarantee.
  • PokerStars – Available in New Jersey and Pennsylvania. SCOOP events continue in both states.
  • Partypoker – Available in New Jersey including the BetMGM and BorgataPoker skins. The $10K Daily runs all weekend.
  • 888poker – Available in New Jersey and Delaware. Offers shared liquidity with WSOP.com.

US Weekend Poker Events April 10-12, 2020

Day Site Event Buy-in Guarantee
Friday, April 17 Global Poker Home Series 19 – NLHE Turbo SC218 SC45,000
Friday, April 17 – Sunday, April 19 Global Poker Deep Eleven Guaranteed SC11 SC6,000
Friday, April 17 – Sunday, April 19 Global Poker Deep Six Dive 6-Max, Deep SC55 SC8,500
Friday, April 17 – Sunday, April 19 Global Poker The Brawl Rebuy SC5.50 SC15,000
Friday, April 17 – Sunday, April 19 Global Poker Triple Threat [2R1A] SC33 SC20,000
Friday, April 17 – Sunday, April 19 Global Poker Deep Freeze SC55 SC10,000
Friday, April 17 – Sunday, April 19 Global Poker The Cubed [1R1A] SC11 SC5,000
Friday, April 17 – Sunday, April 19 Global Poker NightCap [Hyper-Turbo] SC21.40 SC3,000
Friday, April 17 – Sunday, April 19 Global Poker Night Shift Guaranteed [Big Ante, Turbo] SC22 SC2,000
Friday, April 17 – Sunday, April 19 Global Poker Night Owl [6-Max, Hyper-Turbo] SC21.40 SC2,000
Friday, April 17 – Sunday, April 19 Global Poker Night Out [Hyper-Turbo] SC21.40 SC1,500
Friday, April 17 PokerStars NJ NJSCOOP 17H: NLHE [Nightly Stars SE] $100 $12,000
Friday, April 17 PokerStars NJ NJSCOOP 17L: NLHE [Nightly Stars SE] $10 $3,000
Friday, April 17 PokerStars NJ NJSCOOP 18H: NLHE [Deep Hyper-Turbo] $200 $10,000
Friday, April 17 PokerStars NJ NJSCOOP 18L: NLHE [Deep Hyper-Turbo] $20 $5,000
Friday, April 17 PokerStars PA PASCOOP 39H: Stud Hi/Lo [6-Max, Turbo, Fast Friday SE] $50 $10,000
Friday, April 17 PokerStars PA PASCOOP 39L: Stud Hi/Lo [6-Max, Turbo, Fast Friday SE] $5 $2,500
Friday, April 17 PokerStars PA PASCOOP 40H: NLHE [8-Max, Hyper-Turbo, Progressive KO] $100 $15,000
Friday, April 17 PokerStars PA PASCOOP 40l: NLHE [8-Max, Hyper-Turbo, Progressive KO] $10 $3,500
Friday, April 17 WSOP.com (NJ and NV)
888poker (Delaware)
Spring OC 37: NLHE [R&A] $30 $20,000
Friday, April 17 WSOP.com (NJ and NV)
888poker (Delaware)
Spring OC 38: NLHE Monster Stack [1x Re-entry], CAPPED $215 $30,000
Friday, April 17 WSOP.com (NJ and NV)
888poker (Delaware)
Spring OC 39: NLH [Re-entry] $100 $20,000
Friday, April 17 – Sunday, April 19 WSOP.com (NJ and NV)
888poker (Delaware)
8-max Deepstack NLHE Daily $215 $10,000
Friday, April 17 – Sunday, April 19 WSOP.com (NJ and NV)
888poker (Delaware)
Turbo Deepstack NLHE Daily $30 $10,000
Friday, April 17 – Sunday, April 19 Partypoker/BorgataPoker/BetMGM NLHE $10K Daily $109 $10,000
Saturday, April 18 Global Poker Home Series 20: NLHE [6-Max, Deep] SC218 SC50,000
Saturday, April 18 PokerStars NJ NJSCOOP 19H: NLHE [Deepstack, 6-Max] $100 $12,000
Saturday, April 18 PokerStars NJ NJSCOOP 19L: NLHE [Deepstack, 6-Max] $10 $4,000
Saturday, April 18 PokerStars NJ NJSCOOP 20H: PLO8 $200 $7,500
Saturday, April 18 PokerStars NJ NJSCOOP 20L: PLO8 $20 $3,000
Saturday, April 18 PokerStars NJ NJSCOOP 21H: NLHE [3-Max, Turbo, Zoom, Progressive KO] $100 $7,500
Saturday, April 18 PokerStars NJ NJSCOOP 21L: NLHE [3-Max, Turbo, Zoom, Progressive KO] $10 $3,000
Saturday, April 18 PokerStars PA PASCOOP 41H: NLHE [6-Max, Deepstack] $100 $40,000
Saturday, April 18 PokerStars PA PASCOOP 41L: NLHE [6-Max, Deepstack] $10 $8,000
Saturday, April 18 PokerStars PA PASCOOP 42H: NLHE [8-Max, Progressive KO] $150 $30,000
Saturday, April 18 PokerStars PA PASCOOP 42L: NLHE [8-Max, Progressive KO] $15 $7,500
Saturday, April 18 PokerStars PA PASCOOP 43H: NLHE [Turbo, Zoom] $75 $25,000
Saturday, April 18 PokerStars PA PASCOOP 43L: NLHE [Turbo, Zoom] $7.50 $6,000
Saturday, April 18 WSOP.com (NJ and NV)
888poker (Delaware)
Spring OC 40: NLHE Deepstack [R&A] $10 $10,000
Saturday, April 18 WSOP.com (NJ and NV)
888poker (Delaware)
Spring OC 41: NLHE [Re-entry] $100 $25,000
Saturday, April 18 WSOP.com (NJ and NV)
888poker (Delaware)
Spring OC 42: NLHE [Re-entry, Super Turbo] $75 $12,500
Saturday, April 18 Partypoker/BorgataPoker/BetMGM NLHE $10K Daily $109 $10,000
Sunday, April 19 Global Poker Home Series 21: Sunday Scrimmage Guaranteed [Deep] SC218 SC200,000
Sunday, April 19 PokerStars NJ NJSCOOP 22H: NLHE [Marathon] $100 $10,000
Sunday, April 19 PokerStars NJ NJSCOOP 22L: NLHE [Marathon] $10 $3,500
Sunday, April 19 PokerStars NJ NJSCOOP 23H: NLHE [Progressive KO] $150 $20,000
Sunday, April 19 PokerStars NJ NJSCOOP 23L: NLHE [Progressive KO] $15 $5,000
Sunday, April 19 PokerStars NJ NJSCOOP 24H: NLHE [Sunday Special SE] $350 $50,000
Sunday, April 19 PokerStars NJ NJSCOOP 24L: NLHE $35 $15,000
Sunday, April 19 PokerStars NJ NJSCOOP 25H: PL 5-Card Omaha [8-Max] $100 $6,500
Sunday, April 19 PokerStars NJ NJSCOOP 25L: PL 5-Card Omaha [8-Max] $10 $2,000
Sunday, April 19 PokerStars NJ NJSCOOP 26H: NLHE [6-Max, Turbo] $300 $25,000
Sunday, April 19 PokerStars NJ NJSCOOP 26L: NLHE [6-Max, Turbo] $30 $7,500
Sunday, April 19 PokerStars PA PASSCOOP 44H: NLHE [Progressive KO, DeepStack] $100 $30,000
Sunday, April 19 PokerStars PA PASSCOOP 44L: NLHE [Progressive KO, DeepStack] $10 $6,000
Sunday, April 19 PokerStars PA PASSCOOP 45H: NLHE [Main Event] $300 $200,000
Sunday, April 19 PokerStars PA PASSCOOP 45L: NLHE [Main Event] $50 $50,000
Sunday, April 19 PokerStars PA PASSCOOP 46H: NLHE $100 $25,000
Sunday, April 19 PokerStars PA PASSCOOP 46L: NLHE $10 $6,000
Sunday, April 19 PokerStars PA PASSCOOP 47H: NLHE [Hyper-Turbo] $75 $15,000
Sunday, April 19 PokerStars PA PASSCOOP 47L: NLHE [Hyper-Turbo] $7.50 $5,000
Sunday, April 19 WSOP.com (NJ and NV)
888poker (Delaware)
Spring OC 43: NLHE [R&A] $30 $30,000
Sunday, April 19 WSOP.com (NJ and NV)
888poker (Delaware)
Spring OC 44: NLHE Sunday Special Edition [Re-entry] $215 $100,000
Sunday, April 19 WSOP.com (NJ and NV)
888poker (Delaware)
Spring OC 45: NLHE Sunday 50 [R&A] $55 $50,000
Sunday, April 19 WSOP.com (NJ and NV)
888poker (Delaware)
Spring OC 46: NLH HR [Re-entry] $1,000 $30,000
Sunday, April 19 Partypoker/BorgataPoker/BetMGM NLHE $10K Daily $109 $10,000

The post US ONLINE POKER TOURNAMENT GUIDE: Weekend of April 17-19, 2020 appeared first on .

PA Gaming Review: Futures, Online Poker And Belarusian Soccer Help Fill Betting Void

If the virus shutdown has shown us anything we can all agree on, it’s that Pennsylvania people are adaptable.

For instance, online poker seats are filling up nightly, boosting prize pools. Table tennis matches, Belarusian soccer, and a limited number of horse races are still filling the sports betting void.

And then futures wagering in the Keystone State reminds us there will be a better tomorrow for bettors, even if it still doesn’t include the presidential election.

Poker is playing above its head in PA

Catering to an increasing player pool, the first-ever Pennsylvania Spring Championship of Online Poker (PASCOOP) is underway via PokerStars PA. Players are out in significant numbers, creating large fields with prize pools exceeding guarantees.

PokerStars PA has seen increases in traffic since casinos and other establishments shut down in mid-March.

Even before the tournament series began, most evenings were seeing 3,000-4,000 or more seats filled across the site. That’s double the number seen previously. The first weekend of PASCOOP saw that number jump to around 6,000.

PASCOOP features 100 tournaments and runs through Monday, April 20 with the scheduled guarantees totaling $2 million.

The PASCOOP Main Event happens Sunday, April 19, the “High” version of which features a $300 buy-in and a $200,000 guarantee. The “Low” will have a $50 buy-in and $100,000 guarantee.

The full PASCOOP schedule is online.

You can wager on table tennis, just don’t call it ping pong

Since March 22, table tennis – ping pong is a trademarked name of one manufacturer – has been the top sport bet each day at PlaySugarHouse and BetRivers.

That’s of course because the NHLNBA, and MLB seasons are in limbo, leaving Pennsylvania sportsbooks looking for what remains in the pantry of PA’s nine online sportsbooks.

There’s Chinese Taipei basketball and Liga Pro short hockey. There’s also soccer from Belarus and Nicaragua, a country that continues playing a roster of sports despite the global pandemic.

There is even some horse racing from PABets via TVG and FanDuel Racebook. Race offerings are, however, limited.

Look to the future for some bright spots

A failure to communicate briefly made it appear West Virginia was going to offer legal 2020 presidential election betting, but it was quickly retracted.

That means the remaining excitement beyond table tennis and such are the futures markets for sports.

And there are a ton of those offered, too many to list here, but list them we did in a detailed PlayPennsylvania story.

The post PA Gaming Review: Futures, Online Poker And Belarusian Soccer Help Fill Betting Void appeared first on Play Pennsylvania.

How Will the COVID-19 Pandemic Affect the World Series of Poker? A Live Poker Analysis

With so many Americans in self-quarantine, live poker looks to be paused for some time. The World Series of Poker is set to start May 27 and many players may be wondering what will happen to the biggest event in poker.

Casinos and poker tournaments are certainly considered “non-essential” in the new world of business shutdowns. All Nevada casinos are under state closure orders until April 30. With that in mind, changes to the WSOP are looking more like a possibility. 

Any extension to property closures may put that even further in jeopardy. WSOP officials told USPoker on Monday that the event’s future is under consideration. An announcement is expected within a week.

So what are some likely scenarios and what options do organizers have? Here’s a look at some possible scenarios and what some players think should happen.

Playing the full WSOP

Americans going back to work soon would help with this scenario, provided the virus is kept in check. The April 30 closure date wouldn’t leave much time to return workers to the Rio and organize the series.

Diminished turnout would be expected considering recent events and the country’s economic situation. Beyond newly unemployed recreational players, many might not be ready to get in a plane to go gamble in Las Vegas.

Some of the WSOP public relations team, key to the series’ media and marketing efforts, have also been furloughed. A quick turnaround to play a full slate of events is probably not in the cards.

Canceling the series

This may be a possibility if casino shutdowns move into late June or early July. It would mark the first time in the series’ 50-year history a year has passed without playing.

Plans originally called for the 51st annual WSOP to run at the Rio from May 27 to July 15. A record total of 101 tournaments was scheduled for this summer.

Staffing may even be a challenge right now as Caesars Entertainment began layoffs in mid-March. Even a month ago, cancellation seemed unthinkable but the longer casinos stay closed, the more likely this becomes.

WSOP goes online  only

With 14 online bracelet events already scheduled, the WSOP could even move the entire series online. Currently, WSOP.com is available in the legal US online markets of Nevada, New Jersey, and Delaware (through partner 888poker). 

That limits the number of players, but at least offers some opportunities to keep the summer events alive. This isn’t ideal for player and prize pools or the spirit of live poker, but at least offers a possibility.

Shortening the WSOP schedule

With events running through July, there might be a possibility to shed some events and still run the WSOP. A scaled-down 2020 series could be an option.

The series introduced nine high roller events for 2020. Perhaps those could be shed as the series focuses on more “bread and butter” tournaments that appeal to as many players as possible.

More obscure events with smaller fields might also get the axe in this scenario. The smaller buy-in events would attract the most players. A select  group of $10,000 championship events might also remain.

A mid- to late-June start might be possible if conditions in the US change soon. A month-long WSOP would at least get the poker world moving again. The number of players willing to play would be a big question however.

Postponing until later in the year

As the US economy reopens, WSOP organizers might determine just scraping together a shortened schedule wouldn’t be feasible at the moment.

The series hasn’t always been played in the summer after all. Before 2005, players competed on an April-May schedule. A move to August or September might still offer a chance to battle for bracelets just at a different time of year.

Hopefully the Coronavirus would be in the rearview mirror at that point. An expanded online schedule could also complement a reduced live schedule.

This certainly might throw a wrench into the schedules of some other series and properties. There just seems to be no easy option, however, and it’s doubtful schedulers will be thinking of that issue.

Main Event only this year

If the pandemic quarantine runs deep into June, running only the $10,000 Main Event might be an option. That wouldn’t be ideal, but at least keeps the spirit of the series alive.

This could also at least please broadcast partner ESPN and keep poker in the media for fans. Again, this could also be complemented with the series’ planned 14 online events on WSOP.com.

That online schedule could even be expanded with more events including versions of the more popular live events.

Players weigh in with their views

Players vary on what they believe should happen this summer, but most admit there should be some changes. Four-time WPT champion Darren Elias spoke with USPoker about the series.

“I think it’s pretty clear at this point they aren’t going to run any part of the schedule live in Las Vegas this summer,” he says. “While I’d prefer postponement to cancellation, we are in unknown territory with this pandemic and don’t really have a firm end date.”

He believes that makes postponement difficult. Players would have to feel comfortable enough traveling and being in close quarters with others for long hours. That could take a while. 

Moving at least some of the WSOP online is a better option, Elias says, allowing players to take part from home.

“This would drastically limit the player pool because of geographic restrictions on where you can play from, but would be better than nothing,” he says. “Moving it online also seems like the only thing besides cancellation that the WSOP would be able to commit to anytime soon.

“Even with the restrictions, if they released a solid schedule online I think it would draw well with so many people stuck at home.”

There has been plenty of discussion on the topic while awaiting an official notice from WSOP organizers. Some have speculated on player fields and how big 2021 would be if the event is cancelled.

 

No doubt many poker players are looking forward to an announcement. 

WPT and other tournament series also affected

The WSOP obviously isn’t the only tournament series affected by the Coronavirus pandemic. The industry is currently at a standstill.

The WPT has also now postponed all events through the end of May including the Tournament of Champions. Final tables from events from the Gardens, Seminole Hard Rock, and LA Poker Classic also remain to be played and filmed in Las Vegas. That has left 18 players waiting to play for an event championship. 

Beyond those, smaller tournament series like the Run Good Poker Series and WPTDeepStacks have also been canceled or postponed.

Online poker has picked up for the shortage of live events. But as days turn into weeks and months, more players will be itching for the real poker felt. The poker world is in uncharted waters and just how things will unfold remains a mystery.

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