Latest News
Sportradar Reports Strong First Quarter 2023 Results
Sportradar Group AG, a leading global technology company focused on enabling next generation engagement in sports through providing business-to-business solutions to the global sports betting industry, today announced financial results for its first quarter ended March 31, 2023.
First Quarter 2023 Highlights
Revenue in the first quarter of 2023 increased 24% to €207.6 million ($226.2 million)1 compared with the first quarter of 2022.
The RoW Betting segment, accounting for 52% of total revenue, grew 25% to €108.5 million ($118.3 million)1, primarily driven by strong performance from Managed Betting Services (MBS) and Live Odds.
The U.S. segment revenue grew 55% to €39.7 million ($43.3 million)1 compared with the first quarter of 2022, driven by higher sales of betting products as well as the Company’s digital advertising (ad:s) product. The U.S. segment generated positive Adjusted EBITDA2 for the third consecutive quarter with an Adjusted EBITDA2 margin of 17%.
Total Profit for the first quarter of 2023 was €6.8 million compared with €8.2 million for the same quarter last year. The Company’s Adjusted EBITDA2 in the first quarter of 2023 increased 37% to €36.7 million ($40.0 million)1 compared with the first quarter of 2022, demonstrating operational leverage from higher revenue despite increased investment into Artificial Intelligence (AI) for liquidity trading, and Computer Vision technology.
Adjusted EBITDA margin2 was 18% in the first quarter of 2023, an increase of 176 bps compared with the prior year period.
Adjusted Free Cash Flow2 in the first quarter of 2023 was €12.4 million, compared with €12.9 million for the prior year period, as a result of improved working capital management offset by an unfavorable impact from foreign currency exchange rates. The resulting Cash Flow Conversion2 was 34% in the quarter.
The Company’s customer Net Retention Ratio (NRR) was 120% in the first quarter of 2023, an improvement over the NRR from the fourth quarter of 2022 of 119%.
Carsten Koerl, Chief Executive Officer of Sportradar said: “We started fiscal 2023 on solid footing, as we continued to deliver strong top line growth, predominately by growing our value add products such as MBS and Live Odds in the Rest of World business, and strong, profitable growth in our U.S. segment. We are also demonstrating operational leverage as we continue to focus on cost discipline across the organization and invest prudently to grow our top line. We are confident that our ongoing product innovation in AI and computer vision will enable us to remain a market leader and increase shareholder value for our investors.”
Key Financial Measures
In millions, in Euros € Q1 Q1 Change
2023 2022 %
Revenue 207.6 167.9 24 %
Adjusted EBITDA2 36.7 26.7 37 %
Adjusted EBITDA margin2 18 % 16 % –
Adjusted Free Cash Flow2 12.4 12.9 (4 %)
Cash Flow Conversion2 34 % 48 % –
Segment Information
RoW Betting
Segment revenue in the first quarter of 2023 increased by 25% to €108.5 million compared with the first quarter of 2022. This growth was driven primarily by increased sales of the Company’s higher value-add offerings including MBS, which increased 40% to €37.1 million as well as Live Odds services which increased 29% year over year.
Segment Adjusted EBITDA2 in the first quarter of 2023 increased by 6% to €47.4 million compared with the first quarter of 2022. Segment Adjusted EBITDA margin2 decreased to 44% from 51% in the first quarter of 2022 due to increased investment in AI technology for MTS and Computer Vision technology. These investments will enable the Company to further grow revenue and improve its Adjusted EBITDA margin over time.
RoW Audiovisual (AV)
Segment revenue in the first quarter of 2023 decreased 3% to €44.6 million compared with the first quarter of 2022. Revenue was impacted by the expected completion of the Tennis Australia contract partially offset by growth in sales to new and existing customers.
Segment Adjusted EBITDA2 in the first quarter of 2023 increased 27% to €11.3 million compared with the first quarter of 2022. Segment Adjusted EBITDA margin2 improved to 25% in the first quarter of 2023 compared with 19% in the first quarter of 2022 due to savings associated with the completion of the Tennis Australia contract.
United States
Segment revenue in the first quarter of 2023 increased by 55% to €39.7 million ($43.3 million)1 compared with the first quarter of 2022. Results were driven by growth in core betting data products and the ad:s product.
Segment Adjusted EBITDA2 in the first quarter of 2023 was €6.8 million ($7.4 million)1 compared with a loss of (€6.4) million in the first quarter of 2022. This is the third consecutive quarter with positive Adjusted EBITDA2 indicating the strong operational leverage in the U.S. business model despite continuous investments. Segment Adjusted EBITDA margin23improved to 17% from (25%) compared with the first quarter of 2022.
Costs and Expenses
Purchased services and licenses in the first quarter of 2023 increased by €11.6 million to €48.4 million compared with the first quarter of 2022, reflecting continuous investments in content creation, greater event coverage and higher scouting costs. Of the total purchased services and licenses, approximately €14.0 million were expensed sports rights.
Personnel expenses in the first quarter of 2023 increased by €25.2 million to €77.5 million compared with the first quarter of 2022. The increase was primarily as a result of increased investment for growth which was driven by higher headcount associated with investments in AI and Computer Vision, increased share based compensation, and inflationary adjustments for labor costs.
Other operating expenses in the first quarter of 2023 increased by €1.7 million to €21.2 million, compared with the first quarter of 2022, primarily as a result of higher software license costs, higher audit fees and implementation costs for a new financial management system.
Total sports rights costs in the first quarter of 2023 decreased by €2.8 million to €51.2 million compared with the first quarter of 2022, primarily due to savings from the expected completion of the Tennis Australia contract.
Recent Company Highlights
SportradarSportradar renewed its partnership with the Big Ten Network extends partnership with the Big 10 Conference to broaden its footprint in the U.S. college space by powering its OTT platform B1G+ through the 2024-2025 college athletics season. Sportradar is providing its technology and data-driven OTT solutions to manage B1G+’s OTT web, mobile and connected TV apps, UX/UI design and third party integration.
Sportradar announced the integration of its ad:s technology into Snapchat, creating a new channel for betting operators to engage and acquire customers using the Company’s paid social media advertising service. Using Snapchat’s advanced age and location targeting capabilities to ensure only legally qualified audiences are reached, betting operators have a potential to reach Snapchat’s 350 million daily active users and over 750 million monthly active users.
Sportradar was selected as the successful bidder for the global Association of Tennis Professionals (ATP) data and streaming rights starting in 2024 as a result of the Company’s commitment to product innovation. Sportradar offers the broadest reach to tennis fans globally and has been a supplier of official ATP Tour and Challenger Tour secondary data feeds since 2022.
Sportradar published its first Sustainability Report highlighting its commitment to sustaining its business, communities and environment. The report is based on Sportradar’s five key sustainability priorities, sustainability, people, oversight, respect and technology-led (SPORT), which are aligned with the standards and framework of the Sustainability Accounting Standards Board (SASB).
Sportradar Integrity Services released its second Annual Report on Betting Corruption and Match-Fixing in 2022, revealing the Company had identified 1,212 suspicious matches across 12 sports in 92 countries, an increase of 34% year over year. The overall data confirmed that 99.5% of sporting events are free from match-fixing, with no single sport having a suspicious match ratio of greater than 1%.
Sportradar named technology executive Gerard Griffin as Chief Financial Officer effective May 9, 2023. Mr Griffin previously served as CFO of Zynga Inc., a global leader in interactive entertainment, and will be responsible for Sportradar’s accounting, finance and investor relations functions. Mr. Griffin brings more than 25 years of leadership experience in financial and operational management within the gaming, media and technology sectors.
Annual Financial Outlook
Sportradar reaffirmed its annual outlook provided on March 15, 2023, for revenue and Adjusted EBITDA2 for fiscal 2023 as follows:
Sportradar expects its revenue for fiscal 2023 to be in the range of €902.0 million to €920.0 million ($983.2 million to $1002.8 million)1, representing growth of 24% to 26% over fiscal 2022.
Adjusted EBITDA2 is expected to be in a range of €157.0 million to €167.0 million ($171.1 million to $182.0 million)1, representing 25% to 33% growth versus last year.
Adjusted EBITDA margin2 is expected to be in the range of 17% to 18%.4
Latest News
SBC Summit 2025 Adds Latin America & Brazil Track

SBC Summit 2025 introduces a Latin America & Brazil track, further aligning its conference strategy with the global nature of the event, which is set to welcome 30,000 attendees from around the world this September.
The track will form part of the Global Markets stage, which was introduced this year alongside the Emerging Markets stage to spotlight some of the industry’s hottest regions as well as those that deserve early attention from industry stakeholders.
The decision to include a dedicated track builds on the remarkable 126% surge in Latin American attendance in 2024, reinforcing the event’s position as the go-to destination for professionals seeking to engage with and understand this rapidly evolving region.
Held on Tuesday, 16 September at Lisbon’s Feira Internacional de Lisboa (FIL), the track will deliver five expert-led sessions exploring some of the region’s most pressing issues, from Brazil’s evolving post-regulation landscape to Peru’s tax reforms and Mexico’s regulatory direction.
Delegates will gain exclusive insights from the industry leaders driving growth across Latin America. These experts will share how they’ve built market presence through strategic local partnerships, culturally relevant marketing, and a clear understanding of regulatory complexity, offering essential knowledge for any company looking to succeed in these high-potential markets.
Rasmus Sojmark, Founder and CEO of SBC, said: “Latin America represents not just one of the most dynamic regions in global gaming, but also one of the most nuanced.
“Our programme gets to the heart of the challenges businesses face in Latin America and Brazil, whether it’s navigating local rules, understanding cultural differences, or keeping pace with shifting tax policies and digital trends. If you want to grow in this region, these sessions offer insights you can’t miss.”
The track will open with the LATAM Leaders: Latin America First – the Home-grown Operators Reinventing the Game, which will unite industry heavyweights Zeno Ossko (CEO, Betwarrior) and Sebastian Salazar (Founder, EstelarBet) as they discuss how regional operators are outmaneuvering international brands by creating locally-tailored innovations that resonate with Latin American audiences.
The Brazil Leaders Panel: The Bubble That Just Won’t Burst – Looking Back at the Launch of Sports Betting will explore Brazil’s post-regulation landscape and why operators must tailor strategies to local contexts. Regional experts Andreas Bardun (CEO, KTO Group), Alex Fonseca (CEO, Superbet Brazil), Almir Silva (CEO – Brazil, BetMGM) and panel moderator Neil Montgomery (Founding Partner, Montgomery Sociedade de Advogados), will discuss how partnerships with local providers and gaming influencers are key to long-term success in Brazil.
The session Peru and the Impact of ISC: All Eyes on the Andes will examine what Peru’s new tax measures will mean for operators in the region. Experts Xabier Maribona (CEO, RETABet Group), Alejandro Rivero (CEO, Estelarbet), Gonzalo Perez (CEO, Apuesta Total), and Gonzalo Rosell (CEO, La Tinka) will tackle the implications of the new Selective Consumption Tax (ISC) and what it could mean for growth, compliance, and the pace of market development.
Another key session centres on the Mexican market. In Mexico: Reaching Market Maturity, or More to Go?, industry leaders George Athanasopoulos (CEO, Novibet), JD Duarte (CEO, Betcris), Ohad Narkis (CEO, PlayUZU), Dr Miguel Angel Ochoa (President, AIEJA), Aviv Sher (CEO, Codere), and Yono Sidi (CEO, Winpot.mx) will examine the country’s stalled regulatory progress and whether an ongoing lack of clarity is creating the conditions for black market activity to thrive.
The track will also feature the panel Casino in Latin America: from Land-Based to Mobile, where regulatory leaders will examine the evolving legislative frameworks driving the region’s digital gaming transition.
Beyond the Latin America and Brazil spotlight on day one, the Global Markets track will also feature in-depth sessions on Western Europe and North America, rounding off this dedicated summit stream.
Complementing this, a separate Emerging Markets stage will focus on key regions including Africa, Eurasia & the Middle East, and Asia, reinforcing SBC’s commitment to providing comprehensive insights into the markets shaping the global gambling landscape.
The post SBC Summit 2025 Adds Latin America & Brazil Track appeared first on Gaming and Gambling Industry in the Americas.
Latest News
RankRadar Launches “Operator’s Top Games” – Empowering Game Providers to Track and Compare Competitor Performance

RankRadar, the innovative game tracking and analytics platform for game providers, has launched a powerful new feature: Operator’s Top Games.
This new functionality enables game providers, their product teams, and account managers to gain deeper market insights by tracking and comparing the top-performing games of competitors across all monitored operators.
With this addition, game providers gain clear visibility into the competitive landscape. They can now track which competitor games are performing best across all monitored operators, stay ahead of market trends and shifts in player demand, and identify performance gaps as well as emerging opportunities. These insights enable providers to plan smarter release and marketing strategies — all backed by real-time data.
RankRadar Co-Founder & CEO Gjorgje Ristikj commented: “Operator’s Top Games was built to help RankRadar clients make faster, more informed decisions and stay ahead in an increasingly competitive landscape. Whether analysing competitors, monitoring market changes, or improving their own game positioning — this new feature gives teams the visibility and intelligence they need to drive success.”
The post RankRadar Launches “Operator’s Top Games” – Empowering Game Providers to Track and Compare Competitor Performance appeared first on European Gaming Industry News.
iGaming
The LATAM Online Casino Market: Where Innovation Meets Localization

Latin America, or LATAM, is quickly rising on the global radar as a hot new playground for online casinos. A lively mixture of tech-hungry young people, wider Internet access every month, and rules that are slowly but steadily growing friendlier to gaming makes the region a tempting patch of soil for operators eager to plant their brand. Unlike older markets that are already crowded and tightening the regulatory screws, LATAM still feels fresh and open, letting companies chase fast gains by leaning on bold ideas, local flavors, and mobile-first thinking.
Why LATAM Is a Key Growth Market for Online Gambling
A few key trends are stacking the deck in favor of LATAM casinos. First, smartphones have practically become a third arm for many residents. The GSMA Mobile Economy report for 2023 says more than 73 percent of the region now carries a smartphone, and that share keeps climbing. Such broad pocket-sized connectivity lets gaming sites reach players, even in remote towns, without the extra cost of shops or kiosks.
Second, LATAM’s population is much younger than Europe or North America. Millennials and Gen Z together make up a huge slice of the online betting crowd. Because these generations live, shop, and play through apps, they slide into digital payments and gamified screens with little friction, exactly the kind of audience casinos dream about.
Third, even though rules still differ from nation to nation, the general trend is toward looser, friendlier legislation. Brazil, for example, just passed a law covering fixed-odds sports betting and other online games, a clear sign that officials want licensed, taxable sites.
For LATAM players who prefer local touches, a one-stop hub such as Ingamble proves useful. The service directs users to casinos in their language, accepts their usual payment methods, and meets local laws, building the trust and ease that a young market needs.
How Cultural Differences Shape Casino Preferences
Grasping what people like in each country is critical to success, and LATAM shows that well. Its mix of cultures, customs, and histories means a blanket offer will disappoint in most places. In Mexico, for instance, community bingo nights and brightly themed slots still rule the floor, echoing deep traditions. Developers win by weaving folkloric images, regional music, and familiar tales into those games.
Brazilians, by contrast, look for platforms that merge casino fun with sports betting heat. Because football is almost a second religion, sites that serve live odds alongside a spinning wheel or table gain a clear and lasting advantage.
Localizing a product goes well beyond swapping English words for Spanish or Portuguese. It means building every step of the user journey around local holidays, favorite sports, and even the colors people associate with luck. When a digital service reflects the rhythm of daily life in a country, users stay longer and come back more often.
LATAM’s payments landscape is fragmented, so every casino must meet players where they are. Many customers are underbanked or lean on alternative tools, which makes integrating local methods essential rather than optional. Accepting Brazil’s PIX or the classic boleto bancario has moved from a bonus feature to a bare minimum.
Across the region, Argentina’s Mercado Pago rules wallets while Colombia’s Mercado Pago leads transfers through PSE. If these gateways are missing, carts are abandoned and trust disappears.
Currency support matters just as much. Enabling deposits and withdrawals in pesos or reales spares players conversion fees, and signals the operator treats them like a local. Casinos that add instant payouts and clear fee structures speed up service and earn a valuable edge.
Mobile Dominance: Data-Light Designs Win
Smartphones drive almost all online traffic across LATAM, so any brand that ignores them is courting failure. Yet mobile success goes beyond fitting a website on a small screen; it means building services that run smoothly on flaky networks and budget handsets.
Enter Progressive Web Apps (PWAs), a lightweight layer that gives casino players app-like speed without the hassle of Big Store downloads. Pair that with smart tricks: images that shrink on command, offline pockets so play never halts, and a no-frills layout that cuts data costs for users counting every megabyte.
Market leaders also roll out lite skins, peeling off heavy animations and endless scripts in favor of bare-bones speed and rock-solid uptime. Research shows delays of even a second can send players packing, turning lean design from a tech choice into a profit-or-loss showdown.
Localization Beyond Language: Bonuses and UI
Translation may get the words right, but it rarely captures what a player actually feels. Rewards, loyalty plans, and promos need to mirror local rhythms or they fade into the noise. A Holy Week rebate or a Festas Juninas gift card, for example, speaks straight to a Brazilian wallet and makes gaming personal.
User interfaces should always respect the tastes of the region. Across most LATAM markets, bold colors and lively animations win users more reliably than soft, stripped-back looks. Themes that borrow from local myths, beloved athletes, or street parties hit harder and draw stronger emotional ties.
Clear, honest talk about bonuses – especially wagering rules – matters just as much. LATAM players often arrive wary and quick to abandon sites that hide or twist the fine print. Simple, plain-language promises and fair play keep satisfaction high and churn low.
LATAM Regulation: Fragmented Today, Unified Tomorrow?
The legal landscape across LATAM still looks like a patchwork quilt, with every nation moving at its own rhythm. After years of debate, Brazil has at last laid down the first stones for an official iGaming market. Rules passed in 2023 set out licensing, tax rates and ad norms, marking a huge step for the region.
Colombia stays ahead, having greenlit online gambling in 2016 and handing out more than twenty operators’ licences since then. Its clear framework shows how steady oversight can tempt first-class global brands while still shielding everyday players.
Yet nations such as Venezuela and Bolivia remain at the back, relying on vague or years-old laws. So, firms chasing regional growth move quickly, launching under Curacao or MGA permits and promising to shift to local licenses once the rules firm up.
This patchwork of regulations calls for clear-eyed planning. Online casinos must link arms with lawyers and compliance pros who can steer them through local quirks, keep them out of gray markets, and support lasting operations.
LATAM’s online casino field is tricky but lucrative. Brands that respect local culture, invest in thorough localization, and build mobile-first sites stand a strong chance. As rules continue to modernize and user appetite grows, happy young audiences and friendly smartphone stacks regions shine as a fresh frontier for global iGaming.
The post The LATAM Online Casino Market: Where Innovation Meets Localization appeared first on Gaming and Gambling Industry in the Americas.
-
gaming3 years ago
ODIN by 4Players: Immersive, state-of-the-art in-game audio launches into the next generation of gaming
-
EEG iGaming Directory8 years ago
iSoftBet continues to grow with new release Forest Mania
-
News7 years ago
Softbroke collaborates with Asia Live Tech for the expansion of the service line in the igaming market
-
News6 years ago
Super Bowl LIII: NFL Fans Can Bet on the #1 Sportsbook Review Site Betting-Super-Bowl.com, Providing Free Unbiased and Trusted News, Picks and Predictions
-
iGaming Industry7 years ago
Rick Meitzler appointed to the Indian Gaming Magazine Advisory Board for 2018
-
News6 years ago
REVEALED: Top eSports players set to earn $3.2 million in 2019
-
iGaming Industry8 years ago
French Senator raises Loot Boxes to France’s Gambling Regulator
-
News7 years ago
Exclusive Interview with Miklos Handa (Founder of the email marketing solutions, “MailMike.net”), speaker at Vienna International Gaming Expo 2018