ADVERTISEMENT

Verizon Mulls Entry to Sports Gambling as Legalization Nears

Verizon Is Said to Weigh Sports Gambling as Legalization Nears

(Bloomberg) -- Verizon Communications Inc. is considering entering the multibillion-dollar market for sports betting, which could become legal in the U.S. before the year is out, according to people familiar with the matter.

The New York-based phone giant, which last year bought Yahoo and its popular sports fantasy business, has been meeting with experts and consultants to assess the potential for a sports-focused online gambling venture if the laws in the U.S. change, said the people, who asked not to be identified discussing private information. The U.S. Supreme Court is expected to issue a decision early this year in a case that challenges the current federal prohibition on sports gambling.

“There are some changes coming that we pay attention to. We stay close to that to see how it would affect our asset and how we may chose to respond,” Verizon Chief Financial Officer Matt Ellis said in an interview Tuesday. “I’ve not looked at anything in detail. If someone has an idea around it, I’ll look at it like any other. But we are not getting ahead of ourselves there.”

The company may ultimately decide to stay away from gambling. After an earlier exploration, Verizon concluded that entering the business, dominated by casinos, would be a formidable competitive challenge, one of the people said.

But Verizon is trying to transform itself into a more diversified media business with deals like its $4.5 billion acquisition of Yahoo, and gambling is a tempting potential growth market. The company has the nation’s largest mobile network, with more than 100 million subscribers, and Yahoo has 1.3 billion users. Yahoo’s fantasy sports unit has tens of millions of fans who spend 30 billion minutes a year managing imaginary teams and picking players, often paying fees to participate in guaranteed prize pools.

Instead of trying to build a gambling business internally, Verizon could look at acquiring online sports-betting companies to speed up the process. That’s a strategy it has used in the past to get into a new line of business, such as its acquisition of Intel Corp.’s OnCue video service in 2014.

Verizon also has streaming rights to some National Football League and National Basketball Association games, which opens the door to live betting alongside broadcasts, a popular offering in markets like the U.K. Last week, when Verizon announced an expanded streaming deal with the NBA, Chief Executive Officer Lowell McAdam and NBA Commissioner Adam Silver discussed a $25 million joint investment to develop features like quarter-by-quarter fantasy betting. Both Verizon and the NBA see such contests as a way to boost fans’ interest and engagement in live games, even otherwise boring ones.

A fully regulated U.S. gambling market would be worth as much as $15.8 billion in revenue, according to a study by Eilers & Krejcik Gaming. That could include 44 million customers wagering $245 billion annually -- about three times bigger than the firm’s estimate of the current black market for sports betting in the U.S.

Among the estimated black-market American bettors, more than 90 percent place bets online, versus 33 percent in person.

After the Yahoo deal, Verizon created a media division called Oath, which is run by Tim Armstrong. Oath contains Yahoo Fantasy, which for decades has been the most popular online service for season-long fantasy contests. In 2015, Yahoo began offering for-money daily fantasy contests, which many consider a legal proxy for outright betting. It is now a distant third in the daily fantasy sports world, which is dominated by DraftKings Inc. and FanDuel Inc. Those two larger rivals are also likely to consider becoming sports books if the laws change, Bloomberg reported last week.

--With assistance from Ira Boudway

To contact the reporters on this story: Eben Novy-Williams in New York at enovywilliam@bloomberg.net, Scott Moritz in New York at smoritz6@bloomberg.net.

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Crayton Harrison at tharrison5@bloomberg.net, Janet Paskin at jpaskin@bloomberg.net.

©2018 Bloomberg L.P.