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local
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Stanley Leisure to return to UK
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following abolition of betting tax
Less than
a year since Stanley Leisure set up its Internet betting arm in
tax-friendly Malta, the company has announced that it will be
repatriating its Malta operations back to the UK by the end of
the year.
The Group,
one of the UKs leading bookmakers, had invested GBP2.75
million in its Malta installation, which offered British punters
tax free betting facilities.
However,
the Group has announced that this operation is to be dismantled
after the UK announced a major change in betting tax rules, which
is expected to make tax-free offshore operations less attractive
to gamblers.
The move
has prompted Stanley to move its Internet operations back to Liverpool.
The Group reported a drop in profitability that was largely due
to its fledgling Internet businesses, including the launch of
its sports betting site in Malta, which it had opened to circumvent
Britain's punitive gambling tax.
Leonard Steinberg,
Stanley Leisure chairman, commented at the release of the Groups
financial results for last year, "Last year we were working
towards opening our sports betting Internet site in Malta, to
take advantage of the offshore taxation benefits. With the advent
of the new betting taxation regime we shall be closing down our
offshore operation and repatriating the business to the UK this
autumn.
"The
unique tax advantage which offshore Internet and telephonic channels
offered against land-based shops in the UK is now gone. As a consequence,
the migration that was anticipated by some from betting shops
to online channels is now neutralised. Our internet betting operation
should now be viewed as a complementary channel, contributing
to the performance of the Betting Division as a whole."
Mr Steinberg
added that the elimination of the UKs betting tax regime
was most important single event to occur in the past year.
Stanleys
Malta facility had lost GBP1.4 million sterling according to its
first half-year accounts. The Malta-based business currently operates
from a premises in Birkirkara, and employs between 20 and 30 staff.
Stanley Leisure
was the first of several similar companies to be granted a local
licence, with many more reportedly in the pipeline.
Under the
new British taxation regime, the betting duty paid by customers
on each bet will be eliminated and will be replaced by a Gross
Profits Tax of 15 per cent, paid by the bookmaker. It is expected
that the nine per cent deduction which has been paid historically
by the customer will be re-invested and lead to a significant
turnover improvement.
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