Online sports betting and Internet gambling have come to Michigan and they’re a smash hit. In the first 10 days of sports betting, handle was $115 million, with revenues of $13 million. FanDuel led market share with 32% of handle, well ahead of DraftKings‘ 24.5%, followed closely by Penn National Gaming‘s 24%, then BetMGM‘s 20%, per Credit Suisse analyst Ben Chaiken. He described the i-gaming haul—$29.5 million—as “well above expectations,” led by MGM Resorts International with 38% of market share, trailed by FanDuel’s 23% and DraftKings’ 24%. Whereas Chaiken had anticipated a monthly gross of $28 million, he’s upped that to $90 million, quite a dramatic change to say the least. To put that in perspective, it would be at least $10 million higher than Pennsylvania, which has 3 million more inhabitants. Talk about the proverbial “pent-up demand”! The downside was that sports books spent so much to acquire players that they ended up losing $5 million.
“The circumstances for Michigan’s online launch could not have been better ahead of two of the biggest sports betting holidays of the year,” reported PlayUSA analyst Dustin Gouker. “Ultimately, it’s a small sample size, and the results of which are less important than sportsbooks launching and engaging sports bettors and setting the groundwork to flourish for years. By that metric, Michigan’s launch was a success.” It not only obliterates Tennessee‘s online-only debut but, with 10 OSB books, was the largest-scale launch in U.S. history. Gross receipts for tribal operators were mostly small potatoes, except for DraftKings/Bay Mills Indian Community‘s $3.5 million. Other big winners were BetMGM ($5 million) and Barstool Sportsbook/Greektown Casino ($3 million). Although FanDuel led in handle, luck was with the punters, leaving the casino with well under a million dollars won.
Continue reading Michigan gaming explodes; Massachusetts droops



Why so sanguine? OSB and Internet gambling were “objectively impressive” with BetMGM forecast to capture 15% of American OSB share and 20% of i-gaming action. (He wasn’t so chill about the Strip, lowering his cash-flow projections.) The good online news inspired Greff to boost his MGM price target from $32/share to $37. MGM leadership thinks business will not return to 2019 levels for a couple of years, projecting that it will be 90% of prior-year levels by late 2022. Greff is a bit more optimistic than that. Strip occupancy fell from 89% to 38%, thanks of course to nonexistent convention business, table-game wagering was 41% less (though the house won more often) and “properties are still being negatively impacted by capacity constraints, lack of demand/airlift, etc.”
