Following the announcement of casino gaming giant,
Harrah's Entertainment, that the company has raised its asking price to buy
ailing UK casino operator, London Clubs, it is becoming apparent that many
international casino groups think the United Kingdom could become one of the
most profitable gambling markets in the world.
The passing of the UK Gambling Act last year
certainly ushered in a new and refreshing change for the English betting
industry, which was hitherto bound by strict laws essentially permitting nothing
more than small to average sized betting parlors, casinos and pubs stocked with
fruit machines. The Gambling Act, however, will permit next generation casinos
of much larger proportion and gaming offerings than any of those in the past.
A noticeable phenomenon of the Gambling Act's
passing into law was an immediate increase of casino license applications from
gaming operators seeking to expand or enter the English betting industry as
regulatory laws are slowly relaxed and make way for the provisions of the
Gambling Act to be fully enacted. In fact, England's Gambling Commission
recently revealed that 111 gaming license applications were in the process of
being approved, if not having been approved already. This is an 80% increase in
the number of casinos that could potentially be in operation since the passage
of the Gambling Act.
Culture Secretary, Tessa Jowell, said the
Commission was bombarded with so many applications that an April cut-off date
was issued for the submission of license applications. As for Harrah's
Entertainment, they are one of just many reputable casino operators with their
sites on a European market that could some day surpass the stature of Las Vegas.