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GAMBLING

Svenska Spel CEO cashes in his chips

Svenska Spel CEO Jesper Kärrbrink has decided to step down following consultations with the company’s board.

Svenska Spel CEO cashes in his chips

“It has become clear lately that my ideas about how Svenska Spel should be run don’t agree with the image held by the owners. Therefore I have, in consultation with the board, come to an agreement that the best course of action in this situation is for the board to find a replacement for me,” he said in a statement.

Newly chosen Svenska Spel board chair Margareta Winberg issued a statement expressing her regrets over Kärrbrink’s decision to step down as head of Sweden’s state gaming monopoly.

Kärrbrink doesn’t share the owners’ fundamental attitudes about how the company should be managed, said Winberg.

She added that the search for a new CEO has already begun and that treasurer Anders Hägg will serve as temporary CEO until further notice.

Kärrbrink is set to receive severance pay of 2.88 million kronor ($487,000), the equivalent of one year’s salary. He has also signed an agreement not to work for a competing company for one year, reported Winberg.

Discussions about Kärrbrink’s future began shortly after Winberg took over as board chair on Wednesday of last week.

“It was in relation to the change in the board chair. It became very clear, from the side of the owners, that they wanted a different direction. And that was also a reason for the change in chairperson,” Winberg said to the TT news agency.

More responsible gaming and a cautionary approach will be important ingredients for the new CEO’s assignment.

According to Winberg, the board made a final decision on Kärrbrink’s fate on Monday morning following several days of discussions with him.

GAMBLING

Spain to force gamblers to set time and spending limit before playing online

The Spanish government wants to limit the amount of time and money gamblers spend on online betting and gambling platforms by making them set limits before they start playing. 

Spain to force gamblers to set time and spending limit before playing online
Photo: PAUL ELLIS/AFP

This is the proposal in the latest draft decree of Spain’s General Directorate of Gambling which could be approved at the end of 2021 or early 2022.

Under the new rules, people who play online games such as bingo, roulette, black jack, baccarat and virtual fruit machines would have to first set how much money they intend to gamble and how long they intend to play. 

Whichever of the two limits runs out first would end the gambling session. 

If the law is approved, online gamblers in Spain will still be able to start another session straight afterwards, as the objective of the law is to help prevent players from losing control over what they’re spending and to give them a break to let the adrenaline rush drop and a moment to reconsider their options. 

In any case, online gamblers in Spain would have a daily spending limit of €600 or €1,500 a week if the draft law is approved.

With this clause, lawmakers hope to distinguish “serious” gamblers – those who surpass the 50 percent daily limit of €300 – from those who don’t play online as regularly. 

Once an online gambler was classified as “serious” (intensivo), they would not be allowed to pay for their gambling sessions with a credit card in order to prevent them from piling up debt. 

Spanish authorities are particularly concerned about the increasing number of young people who are becoming addicted to gambling and betting sites, often lured in by the promise of free bets when signing up.  

A 2019 report by Spain’s Federation of Rehabilitated Gamblers found that Spain has the highest rate of young gamblers (aged 14 to 21) in the EU. 

READ MORE: Spain has Europe’s highest rate of teen gamblers

The pandemic, including the lockdowns, restrictions and boredom that have come with it, have only served to intensify the trend. 

The average annual spending per player in Spain went from €312 in 2016 to €533 in 2020.

Under the new rules, young people would be considered “serious” gamblers if they spent 25 percent of the limits set: €150 for two days in a row, or €375 over the course of two weeks. 

More than 8.5 percent of online gamblers in Spain (of the 1.5 million total of active players) do not reach the mentioned levels that signal addiction.

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