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Spectrum Gaming Releases Top Trends for 2023 Global Gaming Industry

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Posted on: October 4, 2022, 04:00h. 

Last updated on: October 4, 2022, 04:46h.

Spectrum Gaming Group has released its top trends to watch for in the global gaming industry next year.

Spectrum Gaming Group casino trends Las Vegas Asia
A roulette table inside The Cosmopolitan on the Las Vegas Strip is pictured in 2010. Spectrum Gaming Group has published its annual list of the top 10 issues facing the global gaming industry in 2023. (Image: Flickr)

Spectrum, a Pennsylvania-based gaming consultancy that specializes in the economics, regulation, and policy of regulated gambling markets worldwide, annually releases its top 10 trends to watch.

Spectrum’s top 10 trends for 2023 are (by alphabetical order): Asia, China/Macau, globalization, horse racing, offshore iGaming, legal iGaming, Latin America, lottery, sports betting, and unregulated gambling.

As we have been doing annually since 2015, Spectrum Gaming Group released its list of the top trends in gaming for 2023 — the most significant issues that regulators, operators, and suppliers need to consider as they make plans for the upcoming year,” Spectrum explained of its list.

The gaming advisory says the 10 issues were determined by experts throughout the Spectrum Group of Companies, as well as by Complianza, Spectrum’s Sweden-based strategic partner. The Spectrum Gaming Group includes the affiliates Spectrum Gaming Capital, Spectrum Asia, Spectrum Gaming Sports Group, Spectrum Gaming Hospitality Group, Spectrum Gaming Lottery Group, NFC Global, and Spectumetrix.

Asia in Focus

Three of Spectrum Gaming’s top 10 issues facing global gaming in 2023 have to deal with matters in Asia.

MGM has partnered with Osaka for its dreams of building a casino complex destination on Yumeshima Island at a cost of around $9 billion. Casinos Austria is moving forward with a $3.2 billion plan to open a casino property in Sasebo City at the Huis Ten Bosch Dutch theme park.

Many eyes also remain fixed on Macau, the world’s richest casino market before the pandemic hit. Three US-based gaming giants are invested in the Chinese casino hub — MGM, Las Vegas Sands, and Wynn Resorts. Gaming revenue there remains nearly nonexistent in Macau’s terms. That’s as the region continues to adhere to the Chinese Communist Party’s “zero-COVID” pandemic response program. That declaration suspends daily life in the event of newly detected coronavirus infections.

While China likely will reopen its borders in early 2023, it remains unclear how many VIP and mass Chinese players will return to Asian markets initially, given the economic downturn and China’s crackdown on overseas gambling and tightening of money outflows from the country,” Spectrum said of its China/Macau talking point for 2023.

As for other global markets, Spectrum forecasts that Argentina, Brazil, Mexico, and Peru will become “a force in sports betting and digital gaming,” as those nations develop laws and regulatory policies to govern such gambling.

iGaming Set for Expansion

In the US, many gaming industry analysts and observers believe iGaming is ripe for expansion into new jurisdictions.

In the wake of sports betting being legalized in more than 30 states — that’s since the US Supreme Court’s landmark May 2018 ruling that handed states back the rights to determine their own laws on sports gambling — and many opting to permit online sports wagering, Spectrum forecasts iGaming to take center stage in 2023.

Legal iGaming — typically defined as online casino gambling with digital slots and interactive table games — remains limited to only five states.

Efforts to legalize iGaming in the United States will increase, as both retail casinos and independent providers see iGaming as a profitable vertical that is gaining adherents in statehouses,” Spectrum said.

Spectrum also believes the expansion of sports betting isn’t finished. The consultancy anticipates California settling its long-debated sports gambling feud between the state’s gaming tribes and commercial cardrooms. Spectrum also expects Florida’s legal dilemma with its expansion of the Seminole Tribe’s Class III gaming compact to be ironed out to bring the Sunshine State into the sports betting mix.

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