Amaya Q1 Global Online Poker Revenue Falls, Lags Behind Internet Casino Income

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Amaya Inc. released its Q1 2016 earnings report, and there is good news and bad news for the company that owns the world’s largest poker site.

Amaya Inc Q1 revenue down PokerStars and Full Tilt
Amaya Inc., owner of PokerStars and Full Tilt, reported an 11 percent decrease in online poker revenue during Q1 2016 compared to Q1 2015.  (Image: ca.pokernews.com)

While overall revenue increased by six percent compared to Q1 2015, the majority of that came from Internet casino gaming, rather than the online poker sector. And that was despite an impressive start for PokerStarsNJ, the company’s first reentry into the US market since Black Friday in April 2011.

In Q1 2015, the company brought in $16.4 million in non-poker revenue. During Q1 this year, more than $60.1 million was generated, an increase of 267 percent.

On the poker side, the news was globally more depressing. As the parent company to PokerStars and the Full Tilt brand, Amaya raked in $216.4 million for their poker sites during the first quarter of the year. While that may seem impressive, it’s not when compared to the same time period last year.

The company brought in a combined total worldwide for poker of $242.8 million in Q1 2015, making this year’s numbers an 11 percent decrease year-to-year. Overall, the online casino giant accumulated $288.7 million in revenue the first part of 2016. Poker accounted for 75 percent of that money.

Where’s the Rest of the Money?

Amaya’s poker brands make up more than 70 percent of the entire online poker market in the world. PokerStars is the company’s biggest cash cow, and no other poker site compares to it in terms of cash intake.

Competitor 888poker has made a strong push in the past year to challenge Stars for the top spot in online poker rankings, and is now in second place. But the site still finds itself light years behind PokerStars. 888poker’s cash game traffic pales in comparison to its toughest competitor.

Poker represents only a small portion of the entire online gambling market, of course. So Amaya has diversified around the world in recent years, and focused on more than just poker.

With the decrease in recreational players in the past decade, site operators have been catering to all types of gamblers, not just poker players. Games such as blackjack, slots, and roulette are extremely popular online.

According to Amaya’s Q1 report, the reason for the decline in poker revenue had to do with customers depositing less money, Full Tilt becoming less popular (and recently being put to sleep), and online gamblers being more interested in other casino games.

Remained Steady in April

Although the overall Q1 poker revenues declined from 2015’s figures, the same can’t be said about the month of April. Amaya generated $73.6 million last month, which is merely $100,000 less than the same month last year.

Overall, revenues in April 2016 increased by 11 percent compared to the same month a year ago. Amaya has faced some heavy criticism in recent months due to former CEO David Baazov’s alleged insider trading charges in Quebec by the province’s financial regulator, but the business hasn’t taken a public relations hit financially from his reported misdeeds.



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