This was in the Local Sunday Paper
I don't think ONPT is going to anything over the internet
DON BAUDER Falling gambling stocks pinch baby's new shoes DON BAUDER 04-Apr-1999 Sunday San Diego gambling stocks are crapping out. Most are trading near their lows, and one hit a new low Thursday, even though some are booking improved profits. In general, gambling stocks are up this year, but still down sharply from past years. The Standard & Poor's index covering gaming, lottery and parimutuel stocks is up 20.3 percent this year. However, the index closed 1996 at 107.81, closed 1997 at 100.94 and closed February of this year at 86.47. Although gambling revenue has been surprisingly strong this year, there is a feeling that Las Vegas is saturated, that lotteries are losing their luster, at least in the U.S., and that with almost all states offering gambling in one form or another, the thrill of forbidden fruit -- say, the three cherries that make those coins roll out of slot machines -- is waning. Shares of International Lottery & Totalizator Systems in San Diego, the maker of computerized wagering systems, closed Thursday at 31 cents, unchanged from the previous day, barely above its low of 29 cents on March 5 and a long way from its all-time high of $12.60 on March 3 of 1995. Stock of Inland Entertainment, the consultant to Barona Casino, Web site developer and consultant to three Internet gambling operations, closed at $2.25, down 25 cents. That's a nickel below its previous low of $2.30 in February of last year and well down from its high of $9.59 in May 1995. Shares of Virtual Gaming Technologies, which conducts online gambling from the Antigua tax haven, closed at $4.44, up 50 cents, down sharply from the high of $9.35 in May of last year but above the low of $1.71 in spring of 1997. Stock of On-Point Technology Systems, maker of instant-ticket lottery machines, is somewhat an exception to the rule, largely because its fortunes have improved. The stock closed Thursday at $1.88, down 6 cents and down from the all-time high of $4.34 in early 1995, but up around 30 percent from last fall. Chief executive Frederick Sandvick came to On-Point in 1996, when costs were out of line. "The company had lost $8.5 million two years in a row," he recalls. "We right-sized the company in 1996 and 1997," and things improved. For the fiscal year ended Dec. 31, 1998, net income rose 9 percent to $1.71 million, even though sales declined and research and development spending soared. Earnings have now risen for three straight years. The company recently got a fat contract from France, which has the largest instant-ticket lottery business ($3 billion annually) in the world. "Over the next three years, they will order only from us," Sandvick says. This summer, "we are going to re-attack the market (domestic and foreign) with the next generation of machines," Sandvick says, and at that time, he says, the stock market might notice the company's headway. "Sandvick has done a heckuva job cutting cost, providing focus," says Bud Leedom of San Diego Stock Report. "The deal with the French should bring in a lot of revenue." Meanwhile, for its second quarter ended Dec. 31, Inland reported a loss of $899,000, although revenues grew from $3 million a year earlier to $3.5 million. It lost money for the last six months, too. Among other things, says Andrew Laub, Inland's chief financial officer, the company spent $800,000 on political contributions: $500,000 on Prop. 5, last fall's Indian gaming initiative, and $300,000 "for additional contributions related to the general California election." Inland gets 89 percent of its revenue from American Indian gaming, 8 percent from a Web site producer named Cyberworks and 2 percent from serving as a consultant to Internet gaming sites. One of those sites is named for singer Kenny Rogers, who until last week was the major voice in advertising for the Barona casino. "We are still encouraged about Internet gaming," says Fritz Opel, executive vice president. Congress is considering whether to ban it in the United States, and because it's now a gray area legally, Inland says its Internet customers are all foreign. Virtual Gaming also says it accepts bets only from non-U.S. citizens. In its fiscal year completed Dec. 31, the company lost $3.9 million on revenues of $262,000, compared with a loss of $5 million on revenue of $3,600 the previous year. "We're still in the development stage," says Bruce Merati, chief financial officer. The company offers cyber casino gambling in English, Japanese, Korean, Spanish, Portuguese and Chinese and has introduced unusual wrinkles: For example, its customers placed bets on the outcome of Clinton's impeachment. One reason Virtual Gaming stock is down, Merati says, is "people don't understand the potential of Internet gaming companies." International Lottery has been a yo-yo stock for years -- up, down, up, down. Last year the company whacked employment, and there was a 3 for 1 reverse split of the stock. However, the shares, which once traded on the Nasdaq National Market, are now on the Bulletin Board. In December, the company couldn't qualify the stock for the Nasdaq SmallCap Market. The company has recently had good news: Fourth quarter revenues jumped 52 percent as the company turned narrowly into the black. It has had two straight profitable quarters. Still, it hasn't had a profitable year since 1993, says Dennis Klahn, chief financial officer, who blames the low stock price on both the dismal results and Bulletin Board listing. Leedom of San Diego Stock Report says the "company has no set direction." Meanwhile, the analyst says that expenses at Inland -- it had "a cash cow with Barona" -- have gone up sharply because of its Internet gaming adventure. "I don't know that the whole strategy will pay off," he says. Don Bauder's e-mail address is don.bauder@uniontrib.com |