Betsson
Another Leading Ontario Supplier Turns to Neccton for AML and RG Tools
With Neccton’s mentor, players in Ontario using Betsson’s well-known Betsafe brand are now protected with best-in-class software that monitors player behaviour in real time and communicates with both player and operator should negative play patterns emerge.
Mentor looks for a raft of potential markers in player behaviour, including a significant increase in deposit frequency, to keep players safe from harm. The software contacts the player directly when required, and alerts the operator to the issue so further care can be administered if needed.
Betsson Group is also harnessing the software’s Anti–Money Laundering module, which is compliant with European requirements, plus Ontario and many other jurisdictions worldwide. Neccton’s rule engine is preconfigured for each specific market and allows for individual customisations by a customer’s AML or RG officers.
The software – which has become the market leader in Europe and is used by most of the top iGaming operators – also features modules for Fraud and CRM, so it is a one-stop solution for many of the most pressing needs facing operators today.
Mentor has been developed using the research of Dr Michael Auer, who acts as director and head of development for Neccton. His research spans more than 15 years and tens of academic publications, all of which have established him as one of the world’s leading experts in the field.
“Another world-class operator has signed up to work with us, which validates both our approach and their dedication to protecting the customer from potential harm. We are delighted to welcome a customer of this calibre into our family,” Dr Michael Auer said.
“Betsson takes Anti-Money Laundering and Responsible Gaming very seriously and we are committed to providing the safest and most efficient platform and experience for our players. We are delighted to be working with Neccton’s state-of-the-art innovative solutions to be able to provide our players added confidence in betting and game play,” Marina Bogard, Betsson Group’s Managing Director for North America, said.
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Betsson
Betsson Data: Portugal is Most Backed Team for World Cup
As the World Cup has begun, Betsson’s international betting data reveals a clear divergence between odds favourites and bettor behaviour. While the odds position Spain as the most likely winner, global betting activity tells a different story: Portugal is the most backed nation across Betsson’s 25 markets. Spain, despite having the lowest odds, ranks only fifth among bettors.
As the tournament kicks off, the familiar question resurfaces: who predicts tournaments most accurately — octopuses, banks, or betting companies? Regardless of where you stand, betting odds are ultimately less about predicting the winner and more about aggregating probability and market sentiment.
This year’s tournament will be the largest World Cup ever, featuring 48 teams, a halftime show and a return to a summer schedule for much of the world.
Ahead of the kickoff, Betsson has analysed odds movements and betting patterns from Europe to Latin America. According to current odds, Spain enters the competition as the favourite, followed by France and England. However, betting behaviour paints a different picture. Based on Betsson’s global betting volume, Portugal is the most backed team to win the tournament, ahead of France, the Netherlands and Argentina. Spain, despite being the odds favourite, ranks fifth among bettors.
“With a few days still to go, Portugal is currently the team we’ve received the most bets on. Higher odds can naturally draw attention, and our players clearly see Portugal as having a strong chance — and consider it a very attractive bet,” said Robin Olenius, Head of PR Betsson.
In the top scorer market, the alignment between odds and betting activity is stronger. Kylian Mbappé is both the favourite and the most backed player, followed by Harry Kane.
Both Mbappé and Lionel Messi also have the chance to challenge the all‑time World Cup scoring record, currently held by Germany’s Miroslav Klose with 16 goals in 24 matches (2002–2014). While Mbappé tops the odds at 7.00 and Messi has the third‑lowest odds to win the Golden Boot, betting patterns tell a different story — Messi is only the tenth most backed player.
Odds to Win Word cup 2026 (Betsson)
Spain: 5.60
France: 6.60
England: 8.00
Brazil: 9.00
Portugal: 9.00
Argentina: 10.00
Germany: 15.00
Netherlands: 21.00
Norway: 31.00
Belgium: 35.00
Most Backed Teams (Global Betting Stats, Betsson)
Portugal
France
Netherlands
Argentina
Spain
Brazil
Germany
England
Belgium
Norway
Most Backed Top Scorers
Kylian Mbappé
Harry Kane
Mikel Oyarzabal
Erling Haaland
Cristiano Ronaldo
Vinícius Júnior
Raphinha
Lamine Yamal
Ousmane Dembélé
Lionel Messi
The post Betsson Data: Portugal is Most Backed Team for World Cup appeared first on EE Gaming | Global iGaming & Tech Intelligence Hub.
Betsson
What the Betsson/Inter Milan case reveals about cross-border gambling branding when two restrictive regimes collide
By David Nilsen, Editor-in-Chief, Kongebonus
European football rarely stays confined within national borders. Teams compete internationally, brands operate globally and sponsorship deals are designed for audiences far beyond a single market. Yet gambling regulation remains firmly national. When these two realities meet, tensions are almost inevitable.
That tension was visible during the UEFA Champions League fixture between Inter Milan and Bodø/Glimt at the Aspmyra Stadion in February, when the Italian club took to the pitch wearing Betsson.sport on its shirts. The Norwegian Gambling Authority later confirmed it had opened a case following the match, after concerns were raised that the branding could violate Norway’s strict marketing rules.
At first glance, the situation appears straightforward. Norway prohibits gambling marketing from any operator other than the state-owned Norsk Tipping and Norsk Rikstoto. Under this framework, foreign operators are not allowed to advertise or actively target Norwegian players. However, the details of this particular case are more complex.
The logo that appeared on Inter’s shirt was not a betting website, but Betsson.sport, a sports-focused platform linked to the company’s sponsorship activity in Italy. The site itself does not offer deposits or betting functionality. Instead, it operates as a sports content and partnership platform connected to the club’s commercial agreements.
This distinction matters because the regulatory context in Italy is very different from Norway’s. In 2018, Italy introduced the Decreto Dignità, one of Europe’s strictest gambling advertising bans. The legislation effectively eliminated traditional betting sponsorships across media and sport, even for licensed operators.
As a result, many brands have had to rethink how they maintain visibility in sports environments. Alternative branding, content platforms and sports-focused domains have become one of the few remaining routes available in a market where direct betting advertising is largely prohibited.
Seen through that lens, Betsson.sport is less an attempt to bypass regulation and more an example of how companies adapt to it.
When Inter Milan travelled to northern Norway, however, that Italian solution entered a completely different regulatory environment. Norway’s restrictions are not based on a broad ban on gambling advertising. Instead, they are built around the protection of a state monopoly. Only two operators are permitted to market gambling services domestically, and enforcement tools such as payment blocking and website restrictions are used to limit access to foreign operators.
The key question raised by the Inter match therefore becomes one of interpretation rather than simple legality. Does the presence of a brand associated with gambling, even when it links to a non-betting platform, constitute marketing towards Norwegian consumers?
It is a question regulators across Europe are likely to face more often as global sport continues to expand and sponsorship models become more complex.
Another factor worth noting is accessibility. Betsson does not currently operate in Norway, and access to its gambling platforms has been blocked for Norwegian users. This raises the issue of whether brand visibility alone, without a functional gambling product available to local players, should be considered the same as active marketing.
From a regulatory perspective, authorities may still decide that the brand association itself falls under advertising restrictions. That interpretation would be consistent with Norway’s broader efforts to protect the monopoly model and prevent indirect promotion of unlicensed operators.
At the same time, cases like this highlight the practical challenges regulators face when global sports competitions cross with national advertising rules. European tournaments bring together teams, sponsors and audiences from multiple jurisdictions, each operating under different regulatory philosophies.
Italy, for example, has taken a sweeping approach by banning gambling advertising across the board. Norway, meanwhile, has focused on maintaining exclusive rights for state operators while limiting the presence of international competitors.
Both systems are strict in their own way, but they are built on different principles.
When a club like Inter Milan competes internationally, the sponsorship arrangements negotiated within one regulatory system inevitably travel into another. This creates situations where branding designed to comply with one set of rules may still raise questions under another.
For players and fans, these nuances are rarely visible. What they see is simply a football shirt and a brand name. But for regulators, operators and industry observers, the case illustrates how complex the global gambling landscape has become.
None of this changes the underlying reality that gambling advertising remains one of the most tightly controlled areas of the digital economy. Governments are increasingly focused on consumer protection, and enforcement tools are becoming more sophisticated each year.
But as the Inter–Betsson example demonstrates, the real challenge lies not only in writing regulations but in applying them consistently in a world where sport, media and digital platforms operate across borders.
For the industry, it is another reminder that regulatory debates are rarely black and white. In many cases, they sit somewhere in between legal interpretation, practical enforcement and the global nature of modern sport.
The case opened by the Norwegian Gambling Authority and its conclusions may help clarify how situations like this should be interpreted going forward.
But as long as football continues to be played across borders, questions like these are unlikely to disappear any time soon.
The post What the Betsson/Inter Milan case reveals about cross-border gambling branding when two restrictive regimes collide appeared first on Eastern European Gaming | Global iGaming & Tech Intelligence Hub.
Betnacional
Brazil: Betting pressures household budgets and reshapes the competition for consumer spending
As the industry prepares for BiS SiGMA South America 2026, the largest and most influential iGaming event in Latin America, real market data begins to reveal a profound transformation in the behavior of the Brazilian consumer.
It is no longer just about “betting volume”, but about a reconfiguration of the Share of Wallet (participation in household spending).
The unprecedented study “Bets na Mesa, Consumo em Jogo”, carried out by NielsenIQ Brazil, sheds light on a reality that will be the center of technical debates at the Transamerica Expo Center: in 2025, 26.3% of Brazilian households participated in some form of betting.
This figure is not just a number; it is the reflection of a “new parallel shopper journey” that is capturing the attention and income of the population.
Radiography of Consumption: Who and what is being bet?
The Brazilian market in 2026 shows a clear fragmentation.
Despite the explosion of digital platforms, traditional modalities maintain notable resilience, creating a hybrid ecosystem between analog and digital.
Dominant Modalities
According to the NielsenIQ study, preferences are distributed as follows:
• Mega-Sena: 15.8% of households.
• Video Slots (such as the “Jogo do Tigrinho”): 7.7%.
• Jogo do Bicho: 3.9%.
• Sports Betting (Bets): 3.6%.
Socioeconomic and generational profiles in Brazil
The study reveals that bettors are not a homogeneous group. There is a marked division by Socioeconomic Level (SEL) and age:
• The Slots phenomenon: The “Jogo do Tigrinho” concentrates bettors from middle SEL (63.3%) and a notably young audience, with 42.4% of bettors up to 35 years old.
• The maturity of Mega-Sena: It predominates in high SEL (45.5%) and in a more mature profile, where 49.1% are over 51 years old.
As Gabriel Fagundes, Insights Leader for the Industry at NielsenIQ, points out: “We had already identified that betting became a popular and common practice in the routine of the Brazilian consumer.”
“Now, the numbers also point to the dimension that this practice is taking within household expenses and in the income of bettors.”
The Economic Motivation: Extra Income or Entertainment?
One of the most critical points for operators that will meet at BiS SiGMA is to understand the “why” behind betting.
The data from 2026 shows a diffuse frontier between gambling as leisure and gambling as economic hope.
For 49% of bettors, the main motivation is to obtain extra income, while 43.5% expect a “radical change of life”.
This second profile is more common in casual Mega-Sena players.
Classification by Intensity
The market is divided into three levels of commitment:
- Casual (73%): They play at least once a month.
- “Pro” (28%): They bet once a week. From this group, 65.8% seek extra income.
- “Elite” (9.3%): They bet weekly and spend more than R$ 100 per month.
This “gaming intensity” is, according to the study, the real driver of the economic impact on households, especially in the Northeast regions (29% penetration) and South (28.3%).
The Impact on Retail and the Consumption Basket
For the iGaming industry, understanding which expenses are being substituted is vital for sustainability and social responsibility.
The study reveals that only 10% of households admit substituting expenses directly for betting, but the affected categories are alarming.
Affected Categories
Among those who substitute expenses:
• Food: 47% of the cases.
• Fixed bills (water, electricity, internet): 45.3%.
• Beer: It is the category with the greatest retraction, registering a drop of 1.7 percentage points in the participation of spending.
• Cookies, perfumes and soft drinks: They also present negative impacts.
The main strategy of the consumer to accommodate spending on betting has been to reduce the quantity of items purchased; in fact, 60% of the consumption categories registered a decrease in the volume acquired in 2025.
Strategic Challenges for the Legal Market in 2026
The NielsenIQ data presents a direct challenge for brands and operators that seek to consolidate themselves in “Legal Brazil”.
The pressure on the domestic budget forces manufacturers of fast-moving consumer goods (FMCG) and betting operators to compete for the same currency.
“Betting is a new competitor in the consumer’s Share of Wallet.
This pressures manufacturers to act with more precision in communication, price and activation to recover relevance in front of this new competitor: the habit of betting itself.”
Towards BiS SiGMA 2026
As we approach the largest event in the region, this study serves as a warning and an opportunity. The Brazilian market of 2026 is mature, but it is under intense social scrutiny due to the impact on low-income families.
Operators that wish to have long-term success must:
- Differentiate the profiles: It is not possible to treat the young middle SEL slot player the same as the high SEL Mega-Sena bettor.
- Promote Responsible Gaming: The substitution of food and fixed bills for betting is a regulatory “red flag” that could tighten laws in the near future.
- Regional Innovation: The Northeast and the South are the markets with the highest intensity, requiring more aggressive localization strategies.
BiS SiGMA South America will be the perfect stage to discuss how the industry can grow without compromising the economic stability of Brazilian households, ensuring that iGaming is seen as entertainment and not as an unsustainable financial burden.

Superscore consolidates in Brazil and launches weekly analysis for the press.
The platform offers statistical analysis of the Brazilian Championship and of the main national and international championships, such as the Copa Libertadores, the World Cup and the Champions League, among others, with metrics that go beyond goals and assists for fans and sports experts.
Superscore Insights is the new newsletter for the press, with a weekly publication and another analysis of the latest news.
Superscore, a sports intelligence application associated with Superbet, advances and consolidates itself in Brazil as a strategic platform to transform data into reliable information for football fans in real time and without advertising.
With its own methodology, the solution establishes itself as a reference among sports fans, bringing together advanced statistics, rankings and in-depth analysis of the main tournaments, players and coaches in the country.
Now, the platform takes a new step with the launch of Superscore Insights, expanding its collaboration with the press by offering even more solid analysis, contextualized data and specialized support for sports coverage.
On Mondays, journalists will receive an exclusive bulletin with deep and original analysis of the weekend matches, a specialized analysis of the most important events of the day, as well as predictions and statistics of upcoming events.
With global coverage, Superscore already gathers more than 1,900 competitions, 63,000 teams and more than 480,000 monitored players, offering a solid base for historical and real-time analysis.
The data from Superscore comes from leading partners worldwide in the collection and distribution of sports data, the same ones used by Superbet and the main companies in the sector.
These providers offer high precision, low latency and comprehensive coverage of competitions worldwide.
“Superscore was born as a free sports intelligence application, without advertising, that goes beyond the basics by offering a wide database and statistics for those who want to understand the game in depth.
In just one year, it has already achieved thousands of users and grows approximately 30% monthly, climbing positions in the Google Play ranking.”
“The platform offers a solid experience for both fans and professionals, in addition to facilitating more informed decisions in sports betting, thus reinforcing the commitment to responsible gaming,” states Patrícia Prates, Marketing Director of Superbet and of the alliance with Superscore.
Superscore: Exclusive data and decades of history
In a context where sports coverage increasingly requires qualified data and contextualization, Superscore distinguishes itself by going beyond traditional indicators, incorporating metrics such as accurate shots, passes in the offensive third, tackles, recoveries, participation in decisive plays and time on the field, among other indicators.
These data are translated into the Superscore Score, a proprietary index that allows building Top 5 or Top 10 rankings of the best players of each round, with graphical visualizations and quick analysis.
Another differentiating factor is the expanded historical database, which gathers information from the Brazilian Championship since 1937, the Copa Libertadores since 1960 and the Champions League since 1992, which allows comparative analysis and identifying patterns over decades.
“We are talking about a platform built on a solid technological base, which combines a large volume of unique data, history and a team prepared to transform this information into relevant content for football fans.
Superscore organizes and translates these data so that they can also be used in sports coverage,” states Guilherme Simantob, director of Superscore in Brazil.
Superscore offers free and integrable widgets for the press and content creators, facilitating the incorporation of statistics, graphics and comparisons directly into articles, enriching journalistic narrative with reliable and visually accessible data.
The app is available in the App Store and Google Play.

Reevo arrives in Brazil with Betsson
Reevo has expanded its presence in Latin America after launching its aggregation platform and its own games catalog in Brazil in collaboration with Betsson.
The integration, carried out through a single connection, allows the operator to expand its content offering with Reevo’s own titles and third-party titles.
The movement reinforces the alliance between both companies and is part of a growth strategy in regulated markets, especially Brazil, considered one of the most promising in the region after regulatory advances.
From Betsson, Andrea Rossi highlighted the impact of the agreement by stating that the incorporation of Reevo’s content “expands the entertainment offer available for our players in one of the fastest-growing markets in the region.”
Additionally, both companies anticipated new joint expansions in other markets, after a recent launch also in Mexico.
Reevo continues to bet on its aggregation model as a way to facilitate access to multiple studios through a single integration, while expanding its global distribution network.
BTG launches prediction platform and increases the dispute between banks, stock exchange and betting
The launch of BTG Trends by BTG Pactual marks a new chapter in the growth of prediction markets in Brazil, intensifying competition between banks, the stock exchange and the betting sector.
This new platform allows investors to operate binary contracts (“yes” or “no”) based on probabilities about financial events, such as the dollar, the Ibovespa or interest rate decisions, using already regulated derivative instruments.
The movement is not isolated. The Brazilian stock exchange (B3) also advances in this direction, with the development of financial event contracts and digital derivatives, although restricted to professional investors.
At the same time, the platform XP established a partnership with Kalshi, facilitating access for Brazilian investors to international predictive markets, while new startups such as VoxFi explore broader applications, including geopolitics and culture.
At a global level, these markets have gained relevance and volume, driven by platforms such as Polymarket and Kalshi.
However, their regulation continues to be a subject under debate. In the United States, the CFTC considers these contracts as financial derivatives, although discussions still exist about limits and risks, especially in sensitive events.
In Brazil, authorities, including the CVM and the Secretariat of Prizes and Betting, are already analyzing how to frame these activities from a regulatory point of view, especially when they overlap with sports events.
The advance of these products has also generated reaction from the betting sector.
The Brazilian Institute of Responsible Gaming (IBJR) maintains that, when there is money involved in uncertain events, it is essentially betting, regardless of the format, and warns about risks such as unfair competition and lower consumer protection if they operate outside the regulated framework.
The main difference between betting and prediction markets lies in their structure: in betting, the user plays against the house, while in prediction markets prices are formed among participants and reflect collective probabilities.
Even so, the boundary between both models remains diffuse.
With banks, stock exchange and new platforms advancing simultaneously, prediction markets stop being an emerging trend and become a new field of dispute within the financial system.
The regulatory framework is still under construction, and the evolution of the sector will depend on how the limits between investment and betting are defined as these products scale.
The post Brazil: Betting pressures household budgets and reshapes the competition for consumer spending appeared first on Americas iGaming & Sports Betting News.
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