Phumelela and Tellytrack joint press release
- Bob Brogan
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Phumelela and Tellytrack joint press release
10 years 10 months ago - 10 years 10 months ago
The press releases published by Hollywoodbets on 28 and 30 July 2014 refer.
Phumelela has met its Gauteng and Eastern Cape licence conditions.
Phumelela furnished its response to the complaint by the Gauteng off-course
Bookmakers Association to the Gauteng Gambling Board on 20 February 2014.
Phumelela and Tellytrack have answered and will continue to answer any and
all complaints as well as allegations of abuse of dominance and/or
excessive pricing in the appropriate forums.
The matters raised in the Hollywood press releases were addressed in the
Tellytrack and Phumelela joint press release, dated 18 March 2014, and
published in response to the KZN bookmakers’ press release published on 17
March 2014 (copy attached for convenience). These matters have no bearing
to the matter at hand.
The matter at hand is simply that Hollywoodbets has chosen not to subscribe
for the visual broadcasts offered by Phumelela and instead has chosen to
flagrantly breach Tellytrack’s copyrighted services.
Hollywoodbets conveniently do not explain why, despite further being
prohibited to do so in terms of their subscription agreements with
Multichoice, they continue to display the Tellytrack content on Channel 239
in their betting outlets.
GBI Racing, who own the exclusive rights to commercially exploit the
intellectual property of British horse racing outside of the U.K., has
ascertained that Hollywoodbets has been displaying British racing in their
betting shops without being licensed to do so. Hollywoodbets has been
required to cease doing so and GBI racing issued a press release in this
regard on 24 July 2014, (copy attached for convenience).
The display of live racing in Hollywood’s betting outlets without being
licensed to do so is simply unlawful. Tellytrack and its partners have
instituted civil as well as criminal proceedings against Hollywoodbets.
Phumelela has met its Gauteng and Eastern Cape licence conditions.
Phumelela furnished its response to the complaint by the Gauteng off-course
Bookmakers Association to the Gauteng Gambling Board on 20 February 2014.
Phumelela and Tellytrack have answered and will continue to answer any and
all complaints as well as allegations of abuse of dominance and/or
excessive pricing in the appropriate forums.
The matters raised in the Hollywood press releases were addressed in the
Tellytrack and Phumelela joint press release, dated 18 March 2014, and
published in response to the KZN bookmakers’ press release published on 17
March 2014 (copy attached for convenience). These matters have no bearing
to the matter at hand.
The matter at hand is simply that Hollywoodbets has chosen not to subscribe
for the visual broadcasts offered by Phumelela and instead has chosen to
flagrantly breach Tellytrack’s copyrighted services.
Hollywoodbets conveniently do not explain why, despite further being
prohibited to do so in terms of their subscription agreements with
Multichoice, they continue to display the Tellytrack content on Channel 239
in their betting outlets.
GBI Racing, who own the exclusive rights to commercially exploit the
intellectual property of British horse racing outside of the U.K., has
ascertained that Hollywoodbets has been displaying British racing in their
betting shops without being licensed to do so. Hollywoodbets has been
required to cease doing so and GBI racing issued a press release in this
regard on 24 July 2014, (copy attached for convenience).
The display of live racing in Hollywood’s betting outlets without being
licensed to do so is simply unlawful. Tellytrack and its partners have
instituted civil as well as criminal proceedings against Hollywoodbets.
Last edit: 10 years 10 months ago by Bob Brogan.
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- Chris van Buuren
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Re: Phumelela and Tellytrack joint press release
10 years 10 months ago
Right, wrong, up down, inside out, doesn't matter. This is just incredibly bad for racing and I for one am sad that it has now come down to this..............
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- rob faux
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Re: Phumelela and Tellytrack joint press release
10 years 10 months agoChris van Buuren wrote: Right, wrong, up down, inside out, doesn't matter. This is just incredibly bad for racing and I for one am sad that it has now come down to this..............
Have to agree Chris.............you would have thought that an agreement to go to arbitration would have been worth a try!
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- TNaicker
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Re: Phumelela and Tellytrack joint press release
10 years 10 months ago
That's what happens when there are too many fragile egos and lawyers are calling the shots...
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- rob faux
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Re: Phumelela and Tellytrack joint press release
10 years 10 months agoTNaicker wrote: That's what happens when there are too many fragile egos and lawyers are calling the shots...
There must be a huge gulf in the interpretation of the law, between the parties,for this to be carrying on like this!
Looking forward to see how it unfolds except, if sense prevails, it will be settled long before a court date.
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- TNaicker
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Re: Phumelela and Tellytrack joint press release
10 years 10 months ago
My view is that the intellectual capital of the operators is the tote that they run and the dividends (as illogical as they sometimes are) that emanate therefrom...if bookies are to use these to pay punters then they are using the rightful property of some-one else and should pay for that use...
Now, if the bookies were to stop the open bet, would that solve all the problems between the operator and the bookies ?? Methinks not as the operators seem to think that every cent not spent with the bookie would automatically be bet with the tote and so the pursuit of the elimination of their supposed competition will continue...this is because the operators cannot grow profits anymore without increasing the amounts bet on the tote and hence their take-out which feeds all the niceties / perks they have become accustomed to...not to mention the increased profits that feed the increased dividends and share price that they benefit from...\
If the amounts bet on the tote cannot be increased through elimination of their competition for punters' money then a means needs to be found to increase take-out so that margins are increased...hence the current focus on international racing (albeit without broadcasting
) and soccer bets where the take-out percentage is higher with no associated costs of "putting on the show" as with local racing...
The operators have followed a common strategy in pursuit of increased profits and share price...cut costs especially salary costs for all but the upper echelons of the business (their salaries are performance linked to profits and share price), sell off perceived marginal assets (racecourse usage consolidated to fewer venues with others sold off at huge profits that add to bottom line and then get distributed to shareholders), focus on high margin operations and try to eliminate competition / create a monopoly...
So, we are at the final stage of this strategy and expect the pressure on bookies to be racheted up...and with big, deep pockets, I can see the operators trying to wear out the bookies with endless litigation till funds dry up and the white flag will be raised...
Now, if the bookies were to stop the open bet, would that solve all the problems between the operator and the bookies ?? Methinks not as the operators seem to think that every cent not spent with the bookie would automatically be bet with the tote and so the pursuit of the elimination of their supposed competition will continue...this is because the operators cannot grow profits anymore without increasing the amounts bet on the tote and hence their take-out which feeds all the niceties / perks they have become accustomed to...not to mention the increased profits that feed the increased dividends and share price that they benefit from...\
If the amounts bet on the tote cannot be increased through elimination of their competition for punters' money then a means needs to be found to increase take-out so that margins are increased...hence the current focus on international racing (albeit without broadcasting

The operators have followed a common strategy in pursuit of increased profits and share price...cut costs especially salary costs for all but the upper echelons of the business (their salaries are performance linked to profits and share price), sell off perceived marginal assets (racecourse usage consolidated to fewer venues with others sold off at huge profits that add to bottom line and then get distributed to shareholders), focus on high margin operations and try to eliminate competition / create a monopoly...
So, we are at the final stage of this strategy and expect the pressure on bookies to be racheted up...and with big, deep pockets, I can see the operators trying to wear out the bookies with endless litigation till funds dry up and the white flag will be raised...

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- Harris
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Re: Phumelela and Tellytrack joint press release
10 years 10 months agoTNaicker wrote: My view is that the intellectual capital of the operators is the tote that they run and the dividends (as illogical as they sometimes are) that emanate therefrom...if bookies are to use these to pay punters then they are using the rightful property of some-one else and should pay for that use...
Now, if the bookies were to stop the open bet, would that solve all the problems between the operator and the bookies ?? Methinks not as the operators seem to think that every cent not spent with the bookie would automatically be bet with the tote and so the pursuit of the elimination of their supposed competition will continue...this is because the operators cannot grow profits anymore without increasing the amounts bet on the tote and hence their take-out which feeds all the niceties / perks they have become accustomed to...not to mention the increased profits that feed the increased dividends and share price that they benefit from...\
If the amounts bet on the tote cannot be increased through elimination of their competition for punters' money then a means needs to be found to increase take-out so that margins are increased...hence the current focus on international racing (albeit without broadcasting) and soccer bets where the take-out percentage is higher with no associated costs of "putting on the show" as with local racing...
The operators have followed a common strategy in pursuit of increased profits and share price...cut costs especially salary costs for all but the upper echelons of the business (their salaries are performance linked to profits and share price), sell off perceived marginal assets (racecourse usage consolidated to fewer venues with others sold off at huge profits that add to bottom line and then get distributed to shareholders), focus on high margin operations and try to eliminate competition / create a monopoly...
So, we are at the final stage of this strategy and expect the pressure on bookies to be racheted up...and with big, deep pockets, I can see the operators trying to wear out the bookies with endless litigation till funds dry up and the white flag will be raised...
Will take more than endless litigation to dry up Hollywood's funds but I get your point.
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- Bob Brogan
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Re: Phumelela and Tellytrack joint press release
10 years 10 months ago
The 2 press releases mentioned above
TELLYTRACK & PHUMELELA JOINT PRESS RELEASE
18 MARCH 2014
This press release is published in answer to the press release published by the Kwazulu-Natal Bookmakers’ Society (“KZNBS”) on Monday, 17 March 2014.
It is noted that complaints have been lodged by certain bookmakers and their association/s with gambling boards, applications have been made to the High Court/s for interdict/s and complaints are allegedly in the process of being lodged with the competition authorities against Tellytrack, Phumelela, Gold Circle and Kenilworth Racing (among others). Tellytrack does not have its own website and therefore benefits from Phumelela publishing relevant news related articles in respect of itself, its subsidiaries and partnerships on the Phumelela website ( www.phumelela.com ). The relevant complaints and applications, together with responses thereto have been posted on the Phumelela website and are accessible by any interested party. It is therefore not considered necessary to deal in detail in this press release with the matters which have been complained of or applied for, and which have been answered. It is further noted that certain matters remain sub judice and our legal advisers have advised that these matters should not be canvassed publicly prior to the legal proceedings having run their course.
Mindful of the aforegoing, we hereby wish to offer the following comments on the KZNBS press release:
1. The present dispute between certain bookmakers, their associations and Tellytrack centres around Tellytrack’s proposed new license fee for bookmakers to permit them to display and commercially exploit live racing content in their Licensed Betting Outlets (‘LBO’s”). However, the dispute is deeply rooted in bookmakers’ outright refusal over many years to address the imbalance between funds generated for the funding of the sport from punters’ bets placed with the Tote versus with bookmakers. We place on record that a bet placed in any province with a bookmaker, if the bookmaker wins, generates nothing towards the funding of the sport. Bets placed with a bookmaker in Limpopo, Mpumalanga, and North West provinces similarly generate nothing towards the sport even if the punter wins. Bets placed with bookmakers in the other provinces, if the punter wins, indirectly contributes 3% of punters’ winnings (not turnover) toward the funding of the sport. By contrast, no less than 16% of a bet placed with the Tote in all provinces has been contributed to the funding of the sport. Furthermore, bets on horse racing placed with bookmakers amount to more than 50% of total bets placed on horse racing, yet the funding indirectly derived from these bets, together with bookmakers’ payments for Tellytrack, contributed less than 20% of the cost of staging the races concerned;
2. Phumelela does not directly or indirectly control Kenilworth Racing. Kenilworth Racing is wholly owned by the Thoroughbred Trust, a not-for-profit organisation that has its main objective the promotion of the sport of thoroughbred racing in South Africa. The majority of Trustees of the Trust are appointed by the Racing
Association, which represents its members (all of whom are owners of thoroughbred horses). Two thirds of the board members of Kenilworth Racing can be appointed by the Trust and one third by the Western Cape chapter of the Racing Association. Phumelela manages the day-to-day operations of Kenilworth Racing under the guidance and control of the board of Kenilworth Racing;
3. If it is correct that, when Tellytrack was started an agreement was reached with bookmakers to merely recover costs to broadcast South African race meetings (which is not admitted), no such agreement was ever agreed to in respect of international races displayed on Tellytrack. Furthermore, neither Tellytrack nor any of its partners committed to supply the channel nor any part thereof to bookmakers on a break even basis in perpetuity;
4. Tellytrack has not DEMANDED anything from bookmakers. Tellytrack has INVITED any and all bookmakers, who wish to display and commercially exploit its content in their LBO’s, to conclude a contract with Tellytrack;
5. All bookmakers who do not see commercial value in concluding a license agreement with Tellytrack are legally entitled to continue to take bets on horse racing without displaying the picture in their LBO’s. The pricing of Tellytrack therefore has nothing to do with who takes (more) risk and who does not. It simply boils down to who is prepared to pay the license fee for the luxury of exploiting the picture in an LBO and who does not;
6. The KZNBS press release, conveniently, omits to disclose that Phumelela has offered to make visual broadcasts of its race meetings available to bookmakers at cost. This cost, if considered by bookmakers to be too high in respect of races taking place at Turffontein and Fairview, has been offered to be submitted to the Gauteng and Eastern Cape Gambling boards respectively for final determination. If the costs attributed to making the races available at the Vaal and Kimberley are considered too expensive, Phumelela has indicated that it is prepared to permit a reasonable number of additional bookmaker contracted film crews to come on-course and film the races for display in their LBO’s;
7. The 3% fee proposed by Tellytrack is the international norm, rather than the exception, when licensing betting operators to display and commercially exploit live racing in an LBO. Phumelela, Gold Circle and Kenilworth Racing pay 3% for the right to bet on one another’s racing. They also pay 3% to the suppliers of the international content;
8. Tellytrack’s proposed license fee of 3% was communicated on or about 1 August 2013 and was initially scheduled to be effective 1 October 2013. To afford bookmakers additional time to explore their alternatives and to make alternative proposals (which would still enable Tellytrack to earn a fair economic return) extension at the old pricing was granted monthly till the end of January. The KZNBS terminated their agreement with Tellytrack with effect from October 2013, the Western Cape Bookmakers’ Association (“WCBA”) with effect from the end of December 2013 and the Gauteng Off-Course Bookmakers Association (“Goba”) from the end of January 2014. Despite the termination of these agreements by the bookmaker associations themselves, their members have continued to display and commercially exploit Tellytrack in their LBO’s;
9. In the UK, certain bookmakers are paying 4% of turnover (and more) for USA racing;
10. In the year to 31 March 2013, publicly available information shows that UK bookmakers did GBP4,9 billion OTC turnover on horse racing and OTC gross margin of GBP697 million (14,15%). Our reliable information indicates that the total fees paid by UK bookmakers for the LBO rights in the UK amounts to between GBP 170 million and GBP204 million. Although these amounts comprise fixed monthly payments per shop, the total annual sum translates into a cost to bookmakers of between 3,45% and 4,14% of OTC turnover on horse racing and between 24,37% and 29,27% of their OTC gross margin on horse racing. This is hardly out of line with the fee proposed by Tellytrack;
11. At the R5 500 per month fee which applied until September and assuming that there are 350 LBO’s in South Africa all subscribing for Tellytrack, the bookmakers in the year ended 31 March 2013 would have paid approximately 0,39% of their horse racing turnover and 3,48% of their horse racing gross margin for Tellytrack. Using these assumptions and further estimating that 75% of bookmakers’ horse racing turnover is OTC, bookmakers would have paid 0,52% of OTC turnover and 4,64% of OTC gross margin on horse racing for Tellytrack. The Tellytrack fee as a % of Gauteng’s 93 bookmakers’ gross margin on horse racing would have amounted to 0,96% and in respect of the estimated OTC gross margin 1,28%;
12. The UK LBO rights fees are completely separate and must be distinguished from the UK bookmaker levies, which in turn are similar to the local provincial levies collected from punters’ winnings in certain provinces and paid over to the gambling boards.
13. Phumelela competes actively for market share in its chosen markets. Like bookmakers, it has a profit motive for which it does not apologise. Phumelela submits that there is no merit whatsoever in bookmakers’ argument that only bookmakers are entitled to earn profits out of the sport. Phumelela further denies any and all allegations of predation, exclusion, abuse of dominance, excessive pricing and any other alleged anti-competitive behaviour and is ready to answer all these allegations in the appropriate forum if and to the extent required;
14. Tellytrack’s relationship with Betting World is at arm’s length. Betting World pays the same license fee for Tellytrack as other bookmakers. Phumelela indirectly bears 100% of all costs borne by Betting World, whilst it indirectly only enjoys 60% of any revenues earned by Tellytrack;
15. The Multichoice notice, which terminates the Tellytrack agreement with effect from 27 March 2014, cited as its reason that “the channel is not performing to its satisfaction”. The allegation that Multichoice did so with some other motive is unsubstantiated;
16. In conclusion we must point out that, since our letter of 1 August 2013 to date, the highest offer that Tellytrack has to date received (as an alternative to the proposed 3%) for the rights to display and commercially exploit the live racing content of the 440 race meetings per annum staged in South Africa, does not exceed R7 000 per month per LBO. We find that such a fee is totally irreconcilable with the argument that Tellytrack is an “essential facility” and actually confirms our position that Tellytrack is a very valuable, but not essential facility. Despite our numerous invitations, we have received no substantiation whatsoever corroborating why our proposed fee might be considered excessive.
Tellytrack and its partners remain committed to doing their utmost to make South African (and such other international racing as it is permitted to) live racing available freely to as many home consumers as possible.
Tellytrack and its partners are however adamant that they deserve a fair economic return from those persons who seek to display and commercially exploit their intellectual property in LBO’s. We remain prepared to consider any alternative proposals that might have a reasonable prospect of achieving this.
GBI Racing Press Release
24 July 2014
GBI Notice on Unauthorised Broadcasting
It has come to our attention that certain bookmakers, including Marshalls World of Sport, Keith Ho BetXchange, Sepels Best Bets and certain branches of Hollywoodbets.net, have been displaying live British thoroughbred horse racing in their betting shops without being authorised to do so.
The display of British racing outside of the UK is licensed exclusively to GBI Racing by Racing UK and Attheraces. GBI Racing in turn has authorised Tellytrack to sub-license betting operators to display British racing in betting shops in South Africa.
The display of British racing in betting shops in South Africa without a valid sub-license to do so constitutes a breach of our rights (including copyright). A breach of copyright has civil as well as criminal consequences.
Bookmakers who are displaying British racing without a valid sub-license are hereby called upon to immediately cease infringing our rights by displaying British racing.
GBI Racing, Racing UK and Attheraces shall take all steps as are available to them in order to protect their rights without further notice.
gbiracing.com
Contacts
Press/Media: media@gbiracing.com
Seb Vance: +44 (0)20 7592 0465 | seb.vance@gbiracing.com
James Singer: +44 (0)20 7420 3200 | james.singer@gbiracing.com
TELLYTRACK & PHUMELELA JOINT PRESS RELEASE
18 MARCH 2014
This press release is published in answer to the press release published by the Kwazulu-Natal Bookmakers’ Society (“KZNBS”) on Monday, 17 March 2014.
It is noted that complaints have been lodged by certain bookmakers and their association/s with gambling boards, applications have been made to the High Court/s for interdict/s and complaints are allegedly in the process of being lodged with the competition authorities against Tellytrack, Phumelela, Gold Circle and Kenilworth Racing (among others). Tellytrack does not have its own website and therefore benefits from Phumelela publishing relevant news related articles in respect of itself, its subsidiaries and partnerships on the Phumelela website ( www.phumelela.com ). The relevant complaints and applications, together with responses thereto have been posted on the Phumelela website and are accessible by any interested party. It is therefore not considered necessary to deal in detail in this press release with the matters which have been complained of or applied for, and which have been answered. It is further noted that certain matters remain sub judice and our legal advisers have advised that these matters should not be canvassed publicly prior to the legal proceedings having run their course.
Mindful of the aforegoing, we hereby wish to offer the following comments on the KZNBS press release:
1. The present dispute between certain bookmakers, their associations and Tellytrack centres around Tellytrack’s proposed new license fee for bookmakers to permit them to display and commercially exploit live racing content in their Licensed Betting Outlets (‘LBO’s”). However, the dispute is deeply rooted in bookmakers’ outright refusal over many years to address the imbalance between funds generated for the funding of the sport from punters’ bets placed with the Tote versus with bookmakers. We place on record that a bet placed in any province with a bookmaker, if the bookmaker wins, generates nothing towards the funding of the sport. Bets placed with a bookmaker in Limpopo, Mpumalanga, and North West provinces similarly generate nothing towards the sport even if the punter wins. Bets placed with bookmakers in the other provinces, if the punter wins, indirectly contributes 3% of punters’ winnings (not turnover) toward the funding of the sport. By contrast, no less than 16% of a bet placed with the Tote in all provinces has been contributed to the funding of the sport. Furthermore, bets on horse racing placed with bookmakers amount to more than 50% of total bets placed on horse racing, yet the funding indirectly derived from these bets, together with bookmakers’ payments for Tellytrack, contributed less than 20% of the cost of staging the races concerned;
2. Phumelela does not directly or indirectly control Kenilworth Racing. Kenilworth Racing is wholly owned by the Thoroughbred Trust, a not-for-profit organisation that has its main objective the promotion of the sport of thoroughbred racing in South Africa. The majority of Trustees of the Trust are appointed by the Racing
Association, which represents its members (all of whom are owners of thoroughbred horses). Two thirds of the board members of Kenilworth Racing can be appointed by the Trust and one third by the Western Cape chapter of the Racing Association. Phumelela manages the day-to-day operations of Kenilworth Racing under the guidance and control of the board of Kenilworth Racing;
3. If it is correct that, when Tellytrack was started an agreement was reached with bookmakers to merely recover costs to broadcast South African race meetings (which is not admitted), no such agreement was ever agreed to in respect of international races displayed on Tellytrack. Furthermore, neither Tellytrack nor any of its partners committed to supply the channel nor any part thereof to bookmakers on a break even basis in perpetuity;
4. Tellytrack has not DEMANDED anything from bookmakers. Tellytrack has INVITED any and all bookmakers, who wish to display and commercially exploit its content in their LBO’s, to conclude a contract with Tellytrack;
5. All bookmakers who do not see commercial value in concluding a license agreement with Tellytrack are legally entitled to continue to take bets on horse racing without displaying the picture in their LBO’s. The pricing of Tellytrack therefore has nothing to do with who takes (more) risk and who does not. It simply boils down to who is prepared to pay the license fee for the luxury of exploiting the picture in an LBO and who does not;
6. The KZNBS press release, conveniently, omits to disclose that Phumelela has offered to make visual broadcasts of its race meetings available to bookmakers at cost. This cost, if considered by bookmakers to be too high in respect of races taking place at Turffontein and Fairview, has been offered to be submitted to the Gauteng and Eastern Cape Gambling boards respectively for final determination. If the costs attributed to making the races available at the Vaal and Kimberley are considered too expensive, Phumelela has indicated that it is prepared to permit a reasonable number of additional bookmaker contracted film crews to come on-course and film the races for display in their LBO’s;
7. The 3% fee proposed by Tellytrack is the international norm, rather than the exception, when licensing betting operators to display and commercially exploit live racing in an LBO. Phumelela, Gold Circle and Kenilworth Racing pay 3% for the right to bet on one another’s racing. They also pay 3% to the suppliers of the international content;
8. Tellytrack’s proposed license fee of 3% was communicated on or about 1 August 2013 and was initially scheduled to be effective 1 October 2013. To afford bookmakers additional time to explore their alternatives and to make alternative proposals (which would still enable Tellytrack to earn a fair economic return) extension at the old pricing was granted monthly till the end of January. The KZNBS terminated their agreement with Tellytrack with effect from October 2013, the Western Cape Bookmakers’ Association (“WCBA”) with effect from the end of December 2013 and the Gauteng Off-Course Bookmakers Association (“Goba”) from the end of January 2014. Despite the termination of these agreements by the bookmaker associations themselves, their members have continued to display and commercially exploit Tellytrack in their LBO’s;
9. In the UK, certain bookmakers are paying 4% of turnover (and more) for USA racing;
10. In the year to 31 March 2013, publicly available information shows that UK bookmakers did GBP4,9 billion OTC turnover on horse racing and OTC gross margin of GBP697 million (14,15%). Our reliable information indicates that the total fees paid by UK bookmakers for the LBO rights in the UK amounts to between GBP 170 million and GBP204 million. Although these amounts comprise fixed monthly payments per shop, the total annual sum translates into a cost to bookmakers of between 3,45% and 4,14% of OTC turnover on horse racing and between 24,37% and 29,27% of their OTC gross margin on horse racing. This is hardly out of line with the fee proposed by Tellytrack;
11. At the R5 500 per month fee which applied until September and assuming that there are 350 LBO’s in South Africa all subscribing for Tellytrack, the bookmakers in the year ended 31 March 2013 would have paid approximately 0,39% of their horse racing turnover and 3,48% of their horse racing gross margin for Tellytrack. Using these assumptions and further estimating that 75% of bookmakers’ horse racing turnover is OTC, bookmakers would have paid 0,52% of OTC turnover and 4,64% of OTC gross margin on horse racing for Tellytrack. The Tellytrack fee as a % of Gauteng’s 93 bookmakers’ gross margin on horse racing would have amounted to 0,96% and in respect of the estimated OTC gross margin 1,28%;
12. The UK LBO rights fees are completely separate and must be distinguished from the UK bookmaker levies, which in turn are similar to the local provincial levies collected from punters’ winnings in certain provinces and paid over to the gambling boards.
13. Phumelela competes actively for market share in its chosen markets. Like bookmakers, it has a profit motive for which it does not apologise. Phumelela submits that there is no merit whatsoever in bookmakers’ argument that only bookmakers are entitled to earn profits out of the sport. Phumelela further denies any and all allegations of predation, exclusion, abuse of dominance, excessive pricing and any other alleged anti-competitive behaviour and is ready to answer all these allegations in the appropriate forum if and to the extent required;
14. Tellytrack’s relationship with Betting World is at arm’s length. Betting World pays the same license fee for Tellytrack as other bookmakers. Phumelela indirectly bears 100% of all costs borne by Betting World, whilst it indirectly only enjoys 60% of any revenues earned by Tellytrack;
15. The Multichoice notice, which terminates the Tellytrack agreement with effect from 27 March 2014, cited as its reason that “the channel is not performing to its satisfaction”. The allegation that Multichoice did so with some other motive is unsubstantiated;
16. In conclusion we must point out that, since our letter of 1 August 2013 to date, the highest offer that Tellytrack has to date received (as an alternative to the proposed 3%) for the rights to display and commercially exploit the live racing content of the 440 race meetings per annum staged in South Africa, does not exceed R7 000 per month per LBO. We find that such a fee is totally irreconcilable with the argument that Tellytrack is an “essential facility” and actually confirms our position that Tellytrack is a very valuable, but not essential facility. Despite our numerous invitations, we have received no substantiation whatsoever corroborating why our proposed fee might be considered excessive.
Tellytrack and its partners remain committed to doing their utmost to make South African (and such other international racing as it is permitted to) live racing available freely to as many home consumers as possible.
Tellytrack and its partners are however adamant that they deserve a fair economic return from those persons who seek to display and commercially exploit their intellectual property in LBO’s. We remain prepared to consider any alternative proposals that might have a reasonable prospect of achieving this.
GBI Racing Press Release
24 July 2014
GBI Notice on Unauthorised Broadcasting
It has come to our attention that certain bookmakers, including Marshalls World of Sport, Keith Ho BetXchange, Sepels Best Bets and certain branches of Hollywoodbets.net, have been displaying live British thoroughbred horse racing in their betting shops without being authorised to do so.
The display of British racing outside of the UK is licensed exclusively to GBI Racing by Racing UK and Attheraces. GBI Racing in turn has authorised Tellytrack to sub-license betting operators to display British racing in betting shops in South Africa.
The display of British racing in betting shops in South Africa without a valid sub-license to do so constitutes a breach of our rights (including copyright). A breach of copyright has civil as well as criminal consequences.
Bookmakers who are displaying British racing without a valid sub-license are hereby called upon to immediately cease infringing our rights by displaying British racing.
GBI Racing, Racing UK and Attheraces shall take all steps as are available to them in order to protect their rights without further notice.
gbiracing.com
Contacts
Press/Media: media@gbiracing.com
Seb Vance: +44 (0)20 7592 0465 | seb.vance@gbiracing.com
James Singer: +44 (0)20 7420 3200 | james.singer@gbiracing.com
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- Bob Brogan
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Re: Phumelela and Tellytrack joint press release
10 years 10 months ago
TELLYTRACK & PHUMELELA JOINT PRESS RELEASE
O5 August 2014
At the end of March, when Tellytrack's new agreement with Multichoice commenced, customers who had subscribed for Multichoice's "Pubs and Clubs package" (which included Bookmakers) were duly notified by Multichoice and found that Channel 239 ("Tellytrack") had been disabled. Bookmakers who are now displaying Channel 239 have therefore deliberately signed a NEW subscription contract (such as a "Home", "Hotel, Hospital or Prison" package) with Multichoice.
In doing so, they would have had to misrepresent to Multichoice the purpose for which such package would be used. These bookmakers have therefore not merely "continued to broadcast". Their acts are deliberate and misleading vis-à-vis Multichoice and a flagrant breach of Tellytrack's copyright. Tellytrack holds no racing license and is under no obligation to make its content available to bookmakers.
Phumelela's Turffontein racing license requires it to make visual broadcasts of races taking place at Turffontein available to Gauteng bookmakers. Phumelela's Fairview racing license requires it to make broadcasts of Fairview races to Eastern Cape bookmakers. Phumelela does not have any license condition which requires it to make Tellytrack available to any, let alone to all bookmakers. Phumelela has met and continues to meet all of its license conditions.
By analogy, if it were lawful for someone to steal the car from a seller if the buyer did not like the price, it would be lawful for bookmakers such as Hollywood to display Channel 239 in their betting shops. It is clearly not lawful to do so and Tellytrack and its partners will take all steps as are available to them, both in civil as well as in criminal process, to protect their rights and recover their damages.
O5 August 2014
At the end of March, when Tellytrack's new agreement with Multichoice commenced, customers who had subscribed for Multichoice's "Pubs and Clubs package" (which included Bookmakers) were duly notified by Multichoice and found that Channel 239 ("Tellytrack") had been disabled. Bookmakers who are now displaying Channel 239 have therefore deliberately signed a NEW subscription contract (such as a "Home", "Hotel, Hospital or Prison" package) with Multichoice.
In doing so, they would have had to misrepresent to Multichoice the purpose for which such package would be used. These bookmakers have therefore not merely "continued to broadcast". Their acts are deliberate and misleading vis-à-vis Multichoice and a flagrant breach of Tellytrack's copyright. Tellytrack holds no racing license and is under no obligation to make its content available to bookmakers.
Phumelela's Turffontein racing license requires it to make visual broadcasts of races taking place at Turffontein available to Gauteng bookmakers. Phumelela's Fairview racing license requires it to make broadcasts of Fairview races to Eastern Cape bookmakers. Phumelela does not have any license condition which requires it to make Tellytrack available to any, let alone to all bookmakers. Phumelela has met and continues to meet all of its license conditions.
By analogy, if it were lawful for someone to steal the car from a seller if the buyer did not like the price, it would be lawful for bookmakers such as Hollywood to display Channel 239 in their betting shops. It is clearly not lawful to do so and Tellytrack and its partners will take all steps as are available to them, both in civil as well as in criminal process, to protect their rights and recover their damages.
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- mr hawaii
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Re: Phumelela and Tellytrack joint press release
10 years 10 months ago
So my question to the Brains Trust - You knew full well who the subscribers were that were using your Pubs and Clubs package (according to your own release) so why did you and your advisers decide that the Home punter should be punished ? Why did you not keep the open format with International and Local mixed for Home users? How could you possibly believe that turnover would remain stable when Home users were denied the Uk racing? How do you explain the loss in turnover to the Board or do they think that was Genius in action? Amazing - I hear in Fairyland that the Totes were flooded until 6:30 pm every night with home punters getting their fix of UK Racing and rushing to put on Tote Bets to kill the Bookmakers on Phumelela's behalf!!
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- Bob Brogan
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Re: Phumelela and Tellytrack joint press release
10 years 10 months ago
I think Thursday is a big day all CEO of the gambling boards are having a meeting and the bookies and phum are reoresented
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- rob faux
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Re: Phumelela and Tellytrack joint press release
10 years 10 months ago
I love the comment " Tellytrack are not license holders so are not obligated to provide a picture" ......., no, but Phumelela are, so do they intend to run a new and seperate service to comply with THEIR obligations.
Would be surprised if they fool anybody with that argument!
Would be surprised if they fool anybody with that argument!
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