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DraftKings Reports Fourth Quarter and Full-Year 2020 Results and Raises 2021 Revenue Guidance

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DraftKings Inc. reported fourth quarter and full-year 2020 financial results.

Fourth Quarter 2020 Highlights

For the three months ended December 31, 2020, DraftKings reported revenue of $322 million, an increase of 146% compared to $131 million during the same period in 2019. After giving pro forma effect to the business combination with SBTech (Global) Limited (“SBTech”) and Diamond Eagle Acquisition Corp. which was completed on April 23, 2020, as if it had occurred on January 1, 2019, revenue grew 98% compared to the three months ended December 31, 2019.

“With a favorable fourth quarter sports calendar and strong marketing execution, DraftKings was able to generate tremendous customer acquisition and engagement that propelled us to $322 million in fourth quarter revenue, a 98% year over year increase,” said Jason Robins, DraftKings’ co-founder, CEO and Chairman of the Board. “In the fourth quarter of 2020, we saw MUPs increase 44% to 1.5 million and ARPMUP increase 55% to $65. We are raising our revenue outlook for 2021 due to our expectation for continued growth, the outperformance of our core business and newly launched states that were not included in our previous guidance.”

Favorable Sports Calendar and Strong Customer Engagement Drove Q4 Results

  • Monthly Unique Payers (“MUPs”) for our B2C segment increased 44% compared to the fourth quarter of 2019. On average, 1.5 million monthly unique paying customers engaged with DraftKings each month during the fourth quarter. The increase reflects strong unique payer retention and acquisition across DFS, OSB and iGaming. For 2020, MUPs increased 29%, which includes the impact of COVID-19 on our MUPs for Sportsbook and DFS primarily during the second quarter and early in the third quarter.
  • Average Revenue per MUP (“ARPMUP”) was $65 in the fourth quarter representing a 55% increase versus the same period in 2019. Our ARPMUP was positively impacted by increased engagement with our iGaming and mobile sports betting product offerings as well as successful cross-selling. For 2020, ARPMUP increased 29%.

Increasing 2021 Revenue Guidance

  • DraftKings is raising its fiscal year 2021 revenue guidance from a range of $750 million to $850 million to a range of $900 million to $1 billion, which equates to year-over-year growth of 40% to 55% and a 19% increase compared to the midpoint of our previous guidance.
  • The increase reflects strong performance in the fourth quarter of 2020, substantial user activation due to the effectiveness of our 2020 marketing spend, and the launch of mobile sports betting and iGaming in Michigan and mobile sports betting in Virginia. This guidance also assumes that all professional and college sports calendars that have been announced come to fruition and that we continue to operate in states in which we are live today.
  • Detailed financial data and other information for the fourth quarter and full-year 2020 is available in DraftKings’ Annual Report on Form 10-K, being filed today with the Securities and Exchange Commission (the “SEC”), as well as in a slide presentation that can be accessed through the “Investors” section of the Company’s website at investors.draftkings.com.

DraftKings Grows Its Nation-Leading Mobile Sports Betting and iGaming Footprint

DraftKings expanded its footprint to include mobile sports betting in Tennessee in the fourth quarter of 2020. In 2021, DraftKings launched mobile sports betting and iGaming in Michigan and mobile sports betting in Virginia.

  • In November, DraftKings launched mobile sports betting in Tennessee. The state of Tennessee had the best two month launch in U.S. sports betting history with over $300 million in handle in its first two months of operation including 38% month-over-month growth in December.
  • On January 1, 2021, DraftKings began mobile registration in Iowa according to state regulations. By 3PM ET on January 5, DraftKings registered more customers via mobile registration than through the entirety of 2020.
  • Following successful launches in Michigan and Virginia in 2021 (combined these states represent 6% of the U.S. population), DraftKings is now live with mobile sports betting in 12 states, which is more than any other company in the industry. These 12 states together represent 25% of the U.S. population, a position that DraftKings has achieved less than three years after the Supreme Court struck down the Professional and Amateur Sports Protection Act of 1992.
  • In 2021, 19 state legislatures have introduced legislation to legalize online sports betting, five state legislatures have introduced legislation to expand their existing sports wagering frameworks and one state legislature has introduced legislation to legalize sports betting limited to retail locations. In addition, four states have introduced iGaming legislation and two states have introduced online poker legislation.

Commercial and Strategic Agreements

DraftKings announced several advantageous commercial and strategic agreements in the fourth quarter that are expected to provide the Company with access to unique and valuable content, intellectual property and marketing assets, including:

  • a multi-channel deal with the Mashantucket Pequot Tribal Nation and Foxwoods Resorts Casino, which would provide DraftKings with access for online sports betting ahead of the anticipated launch of legal sports betting in Connecticut, subject to necessary legislative and regulatory approvals. As part of the deal, DraftKings also became the official daily fantasy sports partner of Foxwoods Resort Casino;
  • a multi-year agreement with Turner Sports, making DraftKings the exclusive sportsbook and daily fantasy sports provider across select Turner Sports and Bleacher Report properties, excluding NBA programming;
  • an agreement with Triller which allowed DraftKings to be the “Official Sports Betting and Fantasy Sports Partner” of the boxing match between Mike Tyson and Roy Jones Jr.;
  • a multi-year deal with the Philadelphia Eagles, making DraftKings the Official Daily Fantasy Sports Partner and Official Sports Betting Partner of the team;
  • an exclusive, multi-year relationship with Bryson DeChambeau, who became the first active professional golfer to represent DraftKings via an integrated brand, content, marketing, and VIP centric collaboration;
  • an agreement with the Detroit Pistons, making DraftKings the team’s exclusive Official Daily Fantasy Sports Partner, as well as an Official Sports Betting and Casino Partner;
  • a multi-year deal with the Nashville Predators, making DraftKings the Official Daily Fantasy Sports Partner and an Official Sports Betting Partner of the team;
  • the successful launch of a mobile and online iGaming and sportsbook platform for PalaceBet (PalaceBet.co.za) in South Africa, powered by DraftKings’ cutting-edge B2B sports betting and iGaming technology;
  • the renewal and extension of our relationship with MansionBet, the Gibraltar-based sport betting brand of the Mansion Group, which will see DraftKings’ B2B technology continue to power the tier one operator’s sportsbook and casino platform; and
  • an agreement with InComm Payments to launch an industry-first retail gift card. The launch enables consumers to gift the DraftKings experience to others in $25 and $50 denominations and expands our brand across retail locations nationwide.

Product, Technology and Content

DraftKings’ migration to SBTech continues to be on-track for completion by the end of third quarter of 2021. We also continued to invest in our products and create engaging content:

  • maintained the highest DFS app store ratings for both iOS and Android as well as the highest iOS rating for Casino and Sportsbook. As of March 1, 2021, Google is expanding the number of countries where developers can publish licensed real money gaming apps to include the United States. DraftKings’ Sportsbook and Casino apps will be available to download for Android users via the Google Play Store;
  • announced a multi-year agreement to become a primary sponsor of the Center for Gaming Innovation, housed within the International Gaming Institute (IGI) at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas (UNLV); and
  • developed an original concept show, B/R Drop Zone: DraftKings Big Game Prop Reveal, that provided football fans with an exclusive first glimpse at DraftKings’ proprietary Super Bowl prop bets in a new reveal show which streamed live on the Bleacher Report app.

Environmental, Social and Governance Initiatives

DraftKings raised and donated over $1.6 million to charity through a variety of ESG-related initiatives in 2020. Fourth quarter 2020 and first quarter 2021 highlights include:

  • published our first ESG report on February 22, 2021 outlining our views on environmental, social and governance factors and highlighting those factors that are most relevant to our business;
  • raised $113,000 to help fund breast cancer research in collaboration with the Larry Fitzgerald Foundation through the second-annual DraftKings Pink ‘Em initiative, a month-long philanthropic effort that featured four charity contests on each NFL Sunday in October. More than 385,000 DraftKings customers participated throughout Breast Cancer Awareness Month this season;
  • raised $183,000 through charity DFS contests in support of the Company’s Tech for Heroes initiative, which provides recent and returning veterans and their spouses with free, high-tech skills training in areas like front end web development and cybersecurity; and
  • raised $180,000 through charity DFS contests in support of the Community Foundation of Middle Tennessee, which created the Neighbor’s Fund in response to the Christmas Day explosion that occurred in downtown Nashville, Tennessee.

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Fewer Canadians gamble than 20 years ago. So why is Canada’s market still growing?

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By CasinoCanada.com

In 2002, 76 percent of Canadians aged 15 and over reported gambling in the previous year, according to Statistics Canada’s report Fighting the Odds. By 2018, that figure had fallen to 64.5 percent, based on the agency’s Gambling Rapid Response module.

At first glance, that suggests gambling participation in Canada has declined over the past two decades.

Yet over the same period, gambling has become more visible, more digital and more embedded in sport and everyday life. Sports betting brands sponsor professional teams, betting segments are embedded in live broadcasts, and provincial regulators report billions of dollars in annual online wagering.

How can participation fall while the industry expands? The answer lies in how Canada’s gambling market has changed, and in who is driving its growth.

This analysis draws on national participation surveys and provincial financial reporting to compare long-term participation trends with recent regulated market performance.

Research highlights of this article

  • National gambling participation declined from 76% in 2002 to 64.5% in 2018.
  • Ontario’s regulated online market generated approximately CAD 1.3 billion in revenue in 2022–23, rising to CAD 2.9 billion in 2024–25.
  • Total wagers in Ontario increased from approximately CAD 63.2 billion in 2023–24 to CAD 82.7 billion in 2024–25.
  • Online casino accounted for roughly three quarters of Ontario’s regulated online revenue in 2024–25.
  • Approximately 2.6 million active player accounts were recorded in Ontario in 2024–25.

Growth without more players

If fewer Canadians report gambling today than in the early 2000s, market growth cannot simply be explained by expanding participation. Since its launch in April 2022, Ontario’s regulated online gambling market has grown year over year. According to iGaming Ontario’s Annual Reports, in its first full fiscal year, the market generated approximately CAD 1.3 billion in gaming revenue. That rose to CAD 2.2 billion in 2023–24, before reaching CAD 2.9 billion in 2024–25. Total wagers also significantly increased from approximately CAD 63.2 billion in 2023–24 to CAD 82.7 billion in 2024-25.

The latest annual report also recorded approximately 2.6 million active player accounts in a province of roughly 15 million residents. Even allowing for multiple accounts per individual, the figures suggest a highly active digital environment concentrated among a defined segment of players.

The implication is clear: recent market growth appears to be driven less by an expanding audience and more by increased activity per active player.

Operators active in the market say the same shift is visible in player behaviour since Ontario introduced its regulated online framework. Dmitry Arabuli, CEO at Tonybet, said: “Since regulation launched in Ontario, the player landscape has changed significantly as many of the largest North American operators entered the market. Competition increased, with the focus shifting from chasing large volumes of casual participants to building stronger relationships with more informed and engaged players. These players tend to interact more frequently with betting products and show stronger loyalty to the platforms they trust.”

“Regulation also drew a clearer line between grey-market operators and licensed platforms. Many players who were previously using offshore sites have migrated towards regulated products. This did not necessarily expand the total number of gamblers, but it redirected an existing player base into the licensed ecosystem.”

Despite sports betting dominating headlines since the passage of Bill C-218 in 2021, online casino remains the commercial engine of Ontario’s regulated market. iGaming Ontario’s 2024–2025 annual report shows that online casino generated approximately CAD 2.2 billion of the CAD 2.9 billion in total gaming revenue.

In other words, casino accounts for roughly three quarters of the province’s regulated online revenue.

Sports betting reshaped visibility, but casino sustains the economics.

Modern growth appears to be driven less by player acquisition and more by retention and increased engagement within the existing customer base.

A provincial and digital transformation

One reason the national picture can appear contradictory is that Canada does not operate a single gambling model.

Ontario runs a competitive regulated online market with dozens of licensed operators. Other provinces continue to rely primarily on government-operated platforms. Alberta has signalled plans to introduce its own regulated framework.

Since 2018, most of the meaningful growth data has been provincial and digital, not national and survey-based. While participation surveys provide a broad snapshot, provincial market reports reveal how play is evolving in practice.

The shift from retail-based lottery and venue gambling to app-based multi-vertical platforms represents a structural transformation. Gambling is increasingly platform-based, integrated into smartphones and digital ecosystems rather than tied to specific locations.

That structural change helps explain how the industry can grow even without broader participation.

Visibility versus participation

Following the legalisation of single-event sports betting, sportsbook partnerships and advertising have expanded across professional sport. Major leagues, including the National Hockey League, have entered into official betting partnerships at the league level, while Canadian competitions such as the Canadian Football League and Canadian Premier League have also announced sponsorship agreements with licensed operators.

Betting brands now feature prominently in arena signage, broadcast integrations and digital content, embedding gambling directly into the commercial presentation of professional sport.

Dmitry Arabuli, CEO at Tonybet, said: Ontario regulation made gambling become much more visible in sports broadcasts, live events and daily sports culture. It opened significant opportunities for operators such as Tonybet to do business in Canada legally and build brand awareness through marketing and PR campaigns. For example, Tonybet has previously partnered with the Canadian Premier League and currently works with the Canadian Elite Basketball League.”

Arabuli added that these partnerships help operators connect with highly engaged sports audiences.These partnerships help strengthen brand awareness, target high-value players, and improve customer retention by building trusted and long-term relationships in the Canadian market.”

Yet fewer Canadians report gambling than two decades ago.

This disconnect between rising visibility and declining participation creates a cultural tension. Gambling is increasingly framed as a routine extension of sport rather than a distinct commercial activity.

For younger audiences in particular, repeated exposure through live broadcasts and social media feeds helps position betting as part of the sporting experience itself, regardless of whether participation is expanding.

Visibility, in other words, is reshaping how gambling is perceived, even if it is not expanding its audience.

Selected examples of publicly announced partnerships, as of 13 March 2026, are outlined below.

Selected Professional Sports Betting and iGaming Partnerships in Canadian Sport

League / Organisation Betting Partner Nature of Partnership Scope
National Hockey League (NHL) ESPN BET; theScore Bet Official league betting partner North America / Canada
Canadian Football League (CFL) ToonieBet Official sports betting and casino partner Canada
Canadian Elite Basketball League (CEBL) TonyBet Official online sportsbook partner Canada
Maple Leafs Sports & Entertainment (MLSE) Betty Official online casino partner Ontario

Sources: Various league and operator press releases; compiled by CasinoCanada.com.

Risk concentration and policy relevance

If growth is increasingly driven by more intensive digital play among a defined group of participants, the social and regulatory implications become more complex.

Market expansion rooted in activity rather than recruitment raises questions about how gambling risk is distributed. A smaller base of highly active players may account for a disproportionate share of wagering volume.

At the same time, regulators are increasingly focused on channelisation, responsible gambling tools and sustainable market design. If the future of Canada’s gambling market depends more on engagement intensity than expanding participation, policy debates may shift accordingly.

The conversation may move away from how many Canadians gamble and towards how gambling is structured, monitored and integrated into daily digital life.

The next phase

Alberta’s regulatory plans suggest Canada’s gambling evolution is not over. But the next stage may not be about expanding participation. It may be about managing a digital market driven by deeper engagement among a smaller group of players.

Canada’s gambling market is no longer expanding simply because more people are playing. It is expanding because the way people play has fundamentally changed.

The paradox remains: fewer players, larger market.

 

Methodological note: National participation figures are drawn from Statistics Canada surveys conducted in 2002 and 2018. More recent insights are based on publicly available provincial regulator reporting, which measures wagering, revenue and account activity rather than survey participation. As such, national participation trends and provincial activity data are not directly equivalent but are analysed comparatively to assess structural change.

The post Fewer Canadians gamble than 20 years ago. So why is Canada’s market still growing? appeared first on Americas iGaming & Sports Betting News.

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Acquisitions/Merger

Betsson to Acquire Rhino Entertainment Group’s B2C Business in Canada

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Betsson has announced that it has entered into an agreement to acquire Rhino Entertainment Group’s B2C business in Canada. The acquisition scope includes several Rhino Group entities that collectively hold assets, licenses, personnel, and operational capabilities related to Rhino’s B2C activities in Ontario and the rest of Canada. The target business currently serves Canadian customers and is well-positioned to expand into additional Canadian provinces as local regulatory frameworks continue to evolve.

In addition to the B2C assets, Betsson will acquire Rhino’s proprietary front-end and middleware technology. This technology will strengthen Betsson’s B2B offering and is expected to drive incremental licensing revenue within Betsson’s B2B business.

The transaction is consistent with Betsson’s strategy to generate shareholder value by investing in existing and new B2C markets and growing its B2B business. The acquisition is expected to add economies of scale, strengthen profitability and expand Betsson’s growth opportunities in its B2C and B2B businesses. In 2025, the acquired assets generated a combined estimated EUR 13.7 million of earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortisation (EBITDA) on a proforma basis.

The total purchase price amounts to approximately EUR 64.5 million with an upfront payment of EUR 51.25 million at closing and a deferred payment of the remaining amount six months after closing. Betsson will finance the acquisition with existing cash resources.

Completion of the deal is expected to take place after applicable regulatory clearances in the second or third quarter of 2026. Gernandt & Danielsson Advokatbyrå acts as lead legal advisor to Betsson in connection with the transaction.

The post Betsson to Acquire Rhino Entertainment Group’s B2C Business in Canada appeared first on Americas iGaming & Sports Betting News.

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Canada’s Ontario iGaming Market in 2026: Advertising Rules, Self-Exclusion and the Next Phase of Regulation

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Ontario’s regulated iGaming market has moved beyond its launch phase. In 2026, the bigger story is no longer market entry. The focus has shifted to advertising oversight, player protection, and long-term regulatory credibility.

Ontario launched its competitive iGaming framework in April 2022. Since then, it has become one of North America’s most important regulated online gambling markets. Today, the province stands out not only for its size, but also for the way it is refining rules around compliance and responsible gambling.

Ontario’s iGaming market is entering a more mature phase

The market has already reached a significant scale. According to iGaming Ontario’s 2024–25 annual report, Ontario recorded C$82.7 billion in wagers and C$2.9 billion in gaming revenue during the fiscal year. The market also counted 50 operators and more than 2.6 million active player accounts by year-end.

These figures show that Ontario is no longer an early-stage regulatory experiment. It is now a large and established online gambling market. That matters because mature markets face different questions. At this stage, success depends not only on growth but also on visibility, public trust, and consumer safeguards.

Advertising rules are becoming more important in 2026

Advertising has become one of Ontario’s most important regulatory themes. Operators must still follow AGCO’s Registrar’s Standards for Internet Gaming, which set rules on marketing, inducements, and protections for vulnerable groups.

A new layer of scrutiny now adds to that framework. From January 1, 2026, Ad Standards began accepting complaints under the Canadian Code for Advertising of Gambling. This change gives the market a more visible complaint and review structure for gambling ads.

This development matters for several reasons. It strengthens accountability. It also shows that gambling regulation in Ontario is expanding beyond licensing and market launch. Regulators and industry bodies are now paying closer attention to how operators communicate with players and the wider public.

Ontario is entering a new stage of public scrutiny

As regulated gambling grows, public attention tends to shift. Early debate usually focuses on whether the market should exist. Later, it focuses on how the market behaves. Ontario now appears to be in that second phase.

Ad Standards’ review of gambling advertising complaints from April 2022 to April 2025 reflects that shift. In the early period, many complaints challenged the overall presence of gambling ads. Later, more complaints focused on the content of specific ads. Ontario also generated the largest share of gambling advertising complaints in the most recent period covered by the report.

That change suggests a more mature public conversation. People are no longer reacting only to the existence of the market. They are paying closer attention to how the market presents itself.

Centralized self-exclusion marks a major regulatory step

Ontario is also moving forward on player protection. In December 2025, the AGCO announced standards for a centralized self-exclusion program for iGaming. iGaming Ontario has also identified this initiative as a major strategic priority.

This step matters because it moves the system beyond operator-by-operator self-exclusion. A centralized model can create a more consistent approach across the regulated market. It also shows that Ontario is trying to strengthen responsible gambling tools in practical ways, not only through policy language.

For the industry, this signals a broader shift. Ontario is no longer focused only on market growth. It is also building the infrastructure needed for long-term oversight and safer play.

Strong channelization does not end the policy debate

Ontario has performed well on channelization. According to an AGCO-commissioned Ipsos study, 86.4% of Ontario online gamblers used regulated sites in early 2024. iGaming Ontario later reported an 83.7% channelization rate for 2024–25, noting that the change remained within the survey’s margin of error.

These numbers matter because they show that the legal market is attracting users away from unregulated alternatives. That is one of the main goals of a regulated online gambling model.

Still, strong channelization does not settle every issue. Once a regulated market captures most of the activity, expectations rise. Policymakers, media, and the public begin asking harder questions about advertising pressure, player safety, and the overall tone of the market. Ontario is now entering that stage.

Why Ontario matters for the wider Gaming Americas market

Ontario remains one of the clearest case studies in North America. It shows what happens after a successful market launch. Many jurisdictions still focus on legalization, licensing, and tax structure. Ontario shows that the next challenge is maintaining legitimacy once a market becomes large, visible, and commercially successful.

That is why Ontario deserves attention in 2026. The province is no longer trying to prove that regulated iGaming can work. It is showing how a mature market handles advertising oversight, public scrutiny, and stronger player protection measures.

The next phase is about credibility

Ontario’s next chapter will likely depend on balance. The market must remain competitive and attractive to operators. At the same time, it must show that regulation can support player protection and public confidence.

That makes Ontario one of the most important gambling regulation stories in North America this year. The biggest question is no longer whether the model works. The real question is whether the model can keep its credibility as the market grows and public scrutiny increases.

The post Canada’s Ontario iGaming Market in 2026: Advertising Rules, Self-Exclusion and the Next Phase of Regulation appeared first on Americas iGaming & Sports Betting News.

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