Good afternoon, ladies and gentlemen, and welcome to Super Group's first ever Investor Day, here in beautiful, cloudy London. To the folks joining us online via webcast, on behalf of Super Group, the management team, I say good morning, good afternoon, or good evening, wherever you are in the world. We are thrilled to have you here with us. I am Nkem Ojougboh. For some of you, my name is Ink. I'm the Head of Investor Relations here at Super Group. Lucky for you, I am also your host for today. If you enjoy yourself, feel free to drop my name and leave a five-star Google review. We're excited to take you behind the scenes at what makes Super Group truly super.
I am delighted to be joined on stage by our senior leadership team, who will walk you through our strategy, performance, and why we believe we're just getting started. Ladies and gentlemen, it is my honor and privilege to introduce to you the Chief Executive Officer of Super Group, Neal Menashe. Neal.
Thank you, Ink. Good afternoon, everyone. I'm Neal Menashe, and I have the honor of being the CEO of this amazing, amazing business. We've been doing this now for over 25 years. Haven't gone great totally yet, but soon. It is great to see so many of you here in person, and to those joining us online, welcome. I'm excited to be joined by my leadership team today, who will help walk you through the Super Group story, how we've built a global, resilient business, and where we are headed next. Today is all about giving you clarity and confidence in our long-term strategy. Super Group has come a really long way. We launched Jackpot City in 1998, acquired Betway in 2010, and went public in 2022. Going public was all Eric's fault. Today, we're standing in our brand new purpose-built London office and hosting our first ever Investor Day.
It really is a super proud moment. Super Group's decentralized model makes us fast and adaptable and allows us to focus on our customers. We don't believe in one size fits all. Instead, we empower local teams to quickly work with strong leadership across our regions. This gives us real depth of talent, the ability to tailor strategies to local markets, and most importantly, the resilience to change, to adapt to changing regulations while continuing to grow globally. This adaptability is why we're still around for the last three decades. What makes Super Group super? It's the combination of our people, our brands, our global reach, innovation, and operating discipline. You'll hear more today about how we scale profitably, how we leverage technology and data, and how we drive efficiencies while staying true to our entrepreneurial roots, and that is super important.
Our brand architecture is built upon the ground up. We run our businesses in two segments: one, Betway, our sports-led single-brand segment; and two, Spin, our multi-brand casino offering. On the sports side, we go to market with a single flagship brand, Betway, a name synonymous with trust, scale, and premium sponsorship. On the casino side, we operate a portfolio of over 20 distinctive brands under Spin, giving us unmatched flexibility in targeting specific markets and customer segments. Tying it all together is our network of 70+ partnerships, from global football clubs to F1 and tennis, that amplify visibility, drive affinity, and reduce customer acquisition costs across every region. Our Betway brand has become a household name in sports betting, and that's no accident. We have built it brick by brick, match by match, league by league.
Today, Betway sponsors some of the most iconic clubs and sports properties around the world, including Arsenal, Chelsea, Manchester City, to others in the Premier League, to Simba SC in East Africa, and top-tier partnerships in box football, tennis, cricket, rugby, F1, ice hockey, and more. Most importantly, our brand shows up where fans are. The results? Built-in trust, global fan engagement, and a marketing engine that delivers visibility and low customer acquisition costs. Technology is at the heart of how we operate. We are constantly evolving our stack to make it faster, more scalable, more tailored to the needs of each market. From modernizing our backend systems to enabling more real-time personalization, the upgrades we are making today are the foundation for tomorrow's growth, whether it's in payments, casino, or sports. What's next?
We're rolling out new account management systems, as well as new banking and payments architectures and more. We're implementing AI and crypto capabilities. This isn't hype. This is truly real. All of this is aimed at one thing: strengthening our competitor edge and dominating in core markets. The future is AI-powered and people-led. At Super Group, we're combining human experience expertise with smart technology across marketing, compliance, and customer support to operations. We are moving faster, scaling smarter, and enhancing our customer services. On the marketing front, we're using predictive models to target the right customers, automate journeys, and target more efficiently, driving a 25% uplift in wagering per customer while lowering CAC. In fraud and risk, real-time anomaly detection protects both us and the customers. We're also applying AI into customer service using chatbots and multilingual support that improve experience while lowering costs.
Thanks to our new customer support software, 56% of our customer service responses are now automated, making support faster, more efficient, and scalable. In trading, AI helps to optimize odds and margins in real time, improving our hold and giving us better visibility into risk. What we have seen is the impact. Sports GGR hit almost four margin hit almost 14% in the first half of 2025, up from 12.6% over the same period last year. This is not theoretical. It is happening now. Most importantly, we are just getting started. At Super Group, our leadership reflects a powerful blend of tenure and fresh thinking. 47 of our department heads have been with the company for over a decade, anchoring us in experience, culture, and continuity. 36 new departmental heads joined us in just the last year. They bring fresh energy, perspective, and innovation. This mix is 100% intentional.
It's how we preserve what works while staying nimble, future-focused, and ahead of the competition. Now, let's talk about the beating heartbeat of our global sportsbook, and it's not even close. One sport consistently delivers loyalty and volume like nothing else: football. With over 3.5 million global fans and accounting for 76% of our sports betting volume, football gives us unmatched scale and consistency. Whether it's Premier League, local African leagues, La Liga, Caesarea, or Major League Soccer, football is the gateway to engagement, retention, and revenue. Our sponsorship strategy is simple, built around high visibility, high-impact partnerships that deliver global reach. The English Premier League makes up the largest share. Even though we exited India just under a year ago, our cricket partnerships continue to resonate across the world, showcasing the enduring strength of the Betway brand.
With brand ambassadors and localized touchpoints rounding up the mix, these partnerships are more than just logos. They are a business, and our ambassadors believe in our brand. They help elevate brand equity, reduce customer acquisition costs, and create lasting fan engagement. Thank you, Thierry Henry. Our super-class sponsorships like Manchester City, Arsenal, Atlético Madrid, and Williams Racing give us built-in fan affinity on the global stage. We don't just stop at just placing our logo out there. That would be simple. We activate locally with consistent branding, customized campaigns, and strong regional teams behind the scenes. This dual approach makes every sponsorship work harder for us. Our product strategy is grounded in five core principles: personalization, customer-first design, gamification, cross-vertical engagement, and feature-rich experiences. These principles guide how we build and continuously refine products that attract and retain customers across casino and sports.
Most importantly, across our different business units, which you'll hear from Craig, Kevin, and Laurence will delve into. We are not just delivering games. We are providing customer-tailored experiences every single step of the way. Super Group is built to scale. Our strength comes from the flywheel. It sounds so simple, but this is truly what it is. It's between our amazing people, a resilient tech backbone, and a smart, data-driven acquisition. It's that combination of people, marketing, and technology that allows us to grow efficiently across markets and maintain our edge at scale. Our product mix is intentionally designed for resilience and monetization. Today, casino represents 80% of our revenue, driven by high engagement, low volatility, and better unit economics. It's scalable, can be personalizable, and most importantly, works 24/7. Meanwhile, sports accounts for 20%.
It plays a critical role as our customer acquisition engine, brand amplifier, and a cross-sell funnel to casino. This mix provides balance, combining stability with strategic growth. Super Group is really global, but smart diversification baked in. Today, 39% of our business is anchored in Africa, a continent filled with potential. North America contributes 36%, and we have a meaningful presence in Europe at 16%, APAC at 8%, and a small footprint in LATAM. Clear strategy, strong fundamentals, and strategic discipline underpin every single thing we do at Super Group. The combination of what makes us super, our proprietary tech, product innovation, global sponsorship, brand power, and deliberate product and geographic diversification, it is what drives real growth.
Our global football focus and operational leverage have led to 5.5 million monthly active customers, a more than $6 billion market cap, $2.1 billion in the last 12 months' revenue, and $486 million in EBITDA, adjusted EBITDA for the last 12 months. We have returned $166 million to our shareholders through dividends as at the end of June 2025. This global interactive betting and gaming market continues to expand rapidly. In 2025, the total addressable market is projected to hit $209 billion, and by 2030, it's expected to grow to $339 billion, a 10% compound growth rate over the next five years. We believe this secular tailwind, combined with our scale and focus, positions Super Group to capture significant upside. Our strategy is clear and simple and disciplined and anchored by five key pillars: technology, people, marketing, product, and scale. It starts with technology, modern, scalable, and increasingly AI-driven.
It's powered by people, over 3,000 talented colleagues across 16+ countries, driving execution every single day. It's amplified by marketing, a global brand portfolio with deep fan loyalty and efficient customer acquisition. It is realized simply through world-class products, built for engagement, personalization, and localization. Most importantly, it's deployed at scale across regulated, high-growth markets where we are winning. Together, these pillars fuel our ability to grow, adapt, and most importantly, deliver long-term value to all our shareholders. At the heart of Safe Play, responsible gaming isn't just a checkbox for us. It's core to how we operate. We have built dedicated infrastructure to ensure a safe, secure, and sustainable environment for our customers. That includes a global team of more than 60 responsible gaming specialists who are driving more than 3.8 million customer interactions over the last 12 months.
Importantly, 56% of our customers are actively using our Responsible Gaming tools. We have seen a 21% increase in engagement with our well-being questionnaires. We have passed 100% of our external responsible gaming audits, launched an employee-facing Safer Gambling Hub, and enhanced our interactive player questionnaires. We are really proud to have won the 2024 award for Best Responsible Gambling Messaging and Marketing Campaign in Africa. Overall, we are proud of the progress, but we're not stopping here. Safe Play is a journey, and we remain committed to leading from the front. When we talk about responsible gaming, it's not just about policies or tools or awards. It's about our people. That's why we're especially proud to work with voices that carry meaning far beyond our industry. One of those voices is football legend Thierry Henry, a trusted advocate and someone who shares our belief that Safe Play is the only way forward. Let's hear from him directly, a football legend, Thierry Henry.
Bonjour. You know you don't always have to go all in. Every game needs a bit of in-game management. Reset. Breathe for a second. The best managers always stick to the plan. Play within the lines. That's how the game works best. If things feel off, take a break or set limits. No harm in taking a moment on the sideline. Just remember to bet the responsible way with Betway.
As you can see, we really do believe in responsible gaming. I'm really proud to introduce Spencer McNally, our in-house super actuary, who's probably been here longer than everyone, has also seen it all. Most importantly, our super metrics flow through his blood. Spencer.
Thank you, Neal, for those very generous words, and good afternoon, everyone. I really love my job. In fact, please don't tell Neal this. I would do this job for free. I was 26 when we started this business. That was 28 years ago. That's more than half my life gone. I don't know where it went. I'm getting old. I'm going gray. The data and the numbers and the performance that I've seen from this business over almost three decades is what keeps me young. Today, you're going to see a super growth story thanks to some amazing metrics, including revenue persistency at the group level that is world-class and industry-leading. Our monthly average unique depositing customer count has grown more than 50% over two and a half years and more than 30%, 20%, sorry, year on year. That's another slide.
From 3.5 million in Q1 of 2023 to 5.5 million in Q2 of 2025. You can see clearly where the European football season kicks in every year, showing the value of all of our sponsorships and partnerships. Remember, this is customers, not accounts. In many markets, we have multiple brands. We could boost these numbers if we counted accounts instead of customers. What we care about is customer satisfaction and customer persistency. That growth in customers is driving net revenue and deposits very nicely. There's a similar trend for net revenue growth. There's the 30% up year on year, with deposit growth slightly stronger due to changes in the market mix. On average, customer value is holding steady across the group, underlining how it is growth in active customers that is driving our revenues. That gives us a sustainable, high-volume, mass-market business. Growing the customer base requires strong acquisition.
This is the trend in our first-time depositing customers since Q1 of 2023, showing ongoing markets only, so amongst others, but in particular, no India, no U.S.A. There's a general upward trend, Q2 2025, around 1.5x of Q1 2023. Solid growth, given that we are acquiring hundreds of thousands of new customers every month. There's some fairly clear seasonality. Q4, Q1 are generally the stronger quarters. There's usually some relative weakness around Q2 and Q3 during the Northern Hemisphere football season or soccer, the off-season. 2025 actually looks like it's backing that trend, but that's because of the very successful Botswana launch earlier this year, and Laurence will take you through that just now. Now, return on marketing is key for profitable growth, and you'll hear about how our markets differ shortly. In the meantime, this is the group picture.
Again, continuing markets only and also excluding revenue share channels because, by definition, ROI on those is positive from day one. The white line shows you that we break even pretty quickly on average, around six months across the group. The blue line shows you that the long-term returns are pretty good also. Acquiring lots of customers doesn't help you if you can't keep hold of them. That is where we are really strong. This next set of charts is actually by far my favorite. They really do show the superpower of this business. We actually have a name internally for what I'm going to show you next. We call this our super persistent annuity revenue, or SPAR for short. So that you can see what we're going to work up towards, I'm going to start with the total net revenue curve, again, continuing markets only.
I'm going to break this down into the underlying cohorts for you so that you can see for yourself how we bake the layer cake that drives our powerful SPAR streams. The first layer of this cake is our pre-COVID cohort. Some of these customers have been playing with us almost every month since 1999. As you can see, this graph is basically a straight line. It has been for a while already. I could tell you about all of the analysis that we do to prove the persistency of this cohort. Trust me, we do do that analysis, and it does prove it. You don't need to be an actuary to see that we can take this revenue to the bank. These customers are the epitome of responsible gaming. Why? Because they have a budget for gambling entertainment. We speak to them. That's what they tell us.
They also tell us that they enjoy risking their money every month. They've been doing so consistently with us, in some cases, for 25 years now. It's clear that they can also afford it. That's the definition of responsible gaming right there: affordable, sustainable, enjoyable. Let's add in the customers that we acquired in 2021 to 2022. That's the next layer of the cake. These customers have now been with us for around three or four years. What you can see is a fairly straight line. Again, it's a super persistent annuity revenue stream. The customers that we acquired in 2023. The layer starts out smaller at the left. As that cohort gets going, it grows for a while. Then it dips for a while. That's exactly what we would expect in the first year or two of business from a new cohort.
By Q2 of 2025, that's another fairly straight line emerging. Now, the customers from 2024 again start out small, but by 2025, already look pretty good. Too early to call that a straight line, maybe, but hopefully not too many quarters away. Now we round out the picture with 2025. Still only halfway into the year, you can expect that cohort to grow some more in the second half. What do we see here? It's simple. Our business has a set of super persistent annuity revenues from historic cohorts that we can just about securitize once the customers have been with us for a few years. Every market is different. Some take longer for the layers to straighten out. Some get there faster. Together, they give you that lovely layer cake that we are confident will keep growing as it acquires more layers.
Remember, very important, this is net revenue retention after the deduction of free bets and so on. This is not just about giving away lots of free money. I'll tell you more about that shortly, actually. Right, so far, I've shown you fixed calendar year cohorts. By definition, the number of customers in those cohorts can only ever decrease. What I'm going to show you instead is durational cohorts, which are defined by the number of months since we acquired a customer. The difference is these cohorts will grow over time as customers mature. Here we have the revenues, again, ongoing markets only, from customers who have been with us for 60 months or more, as at each point in this graph.
Thanks to the growing number of customers reaching that 60-month milestone with us, revenue growth from this durational cohort has been very strong, more than 2x since Q1 of 2023. It really gets exciting if you're an actuary when you look at the next durational cohort, customers who have been with us for 36 to 59 months. Here, you can see even faster growth, more than 2.5x since Q1 of 2023. As you've seen already from the previous set of graphs, if we hold onto a customer for this long, then the super persistent annuity revenue stream kicks in pretty reliably. Comfortably, more than 40% of our total revenue is currently coming from these two groups of customers. That's a super foundation for super visible future revenue growth.
Of course, revenues from these long-duration customers hit the bottom line at almost the full marginal rate of 40%- 50%, depending on the market. We do have some overhead against this, but for the most part, the marketing money was spent long ago. This group of customers, these super persistent customers who've been with us between three and 25 years, is the engine that drives our profitability. The bigger this group gets, the better our EBITDA margin gets. Now, I'm going to move on to some of the models that help to drive the numbers that I've been showing you. We call these our super models. If that gives you visions of me or Neal in a swimsuit, I'm sorry. Many things drive customer satisfaction in this industry: speed and quality of customer service, product features, innovation, usability.
Craig, Kevin, and Laurence are going to talk to you about that. What I want to talk to you about now is value for money for our customers and what happens when you get that right. Value for money is all about optimal pricing. For sports, it starts with the odds. For casino, it starts with the ITP. For both, it includes bonuses, comps, generosity, rewards, subsidies, whatever you want to call it. It comes down to the net price that the customer pays for their entertainment. That's a huge part of what determines the value for money that they get, and it determines a huge part also of their long-term persistency with us. Most importantly, we do not simply price all of our customers together. We aim to consider each customer individually, and that's where the super models come in.
Our goal is to achieve optimal levels of profitability and value for money on a per-customer basis in order to drive those high-quality super persistent annuity revenue streams. By optimal, please, let me be clear. This is not about the value of the customer in absolute terms. It's about how the customer behaves, how they interact with our products, how much entertainment they get from the experience, regardless of how much they win or lose. Who wins or loses, that's random. We can't control that. We can, and we do use our understanding of customer behavior and product pricing to do our best to responsibly deliver maximum per-customer value for money, which our mass-market customers soon learn they will not get from our competitors.
Very simply put, we evaluate each customer's behavior over a range of dimensions and over multiple time frames to determine where they fit on the behavior spectrum. At the same time, we're evaluating the customer's gaming experience in real time. Then, based on how their experience interacts with the behavioral characteristics of each customer, we do our best responsibly in real time and using models and systems that collectively process hundreds of millions of calculations a day to give our customers a level of value for money that is appropriate for their long-term expected profitability.
The net effect of this is that our customer base is continuously evolving positively and responsively in favor of high-quality, highly persistent customers who can afford to engage with our products sustainably for the long term because that's what we all want in order to produce the super persistent annuity revenues that I showed you earlier. How do we know that our models work? Sorry, I didn't get this thirsty during practice. The first piece of evidence is how well we can predict long-term customer profit margin. Again, nothing to do with absolute value because we want a sustainable mass-market business that looks after $10 customers as well as any other. On the left here is the predictive accuracy of a fairly standard model within the industry. We believe that there are still operators that are using versions of this as the foundation of their retention programs.
If you don't understand what it is, every blue dot there is a customer. If everyone was on the diagonal line, then the model would be predicting per-customer profit margin perfectly. As you can see, the standard model doesn't do a great job, not much better than random, in fact. On the right is the accuracy of our model, much better than the industry standard, clustered much closer around the diagonal. For some time now, we've consistently been able to predict lifetime per-customer profit margin with almost 90% accuracy for around 80% of new customers. There's a bit of variation between markets and products. I'm not going to go down that wormhole, but those are the general numbers. Most of the difference simply comes down to random variance in sports and casino outcomes because we can't predict who wins or loses.
Our model irons that out over time, ultimately hitting around 90% accuracy for most of the business. We love that picture. For more evidence, I'm going to show you a case study of how we successfully evolved the Jackpot City customer base in the U.S.A. over the past five quarters. Now, while total monthly active customers grew 4.5x, we grew optimal customers from less than 25% of the total to more than 35%. We reduced the suboptimal segment by a significant percentage. Remember, in our eyes, even a $10-a-month customer can be optimal. On the right are the results. Jackpot City's U.S. revenues from all customers, net of bonus and gaming taxes—very important in the miracle of the gaming taxes part—grew by 4.6x over five quarters. Most importantly, while the rest of the business grew 2.1x, the optimal segment grew 5.6x, helping to narrow our losses in the U.S.A
over recent quarters. Why am I talking to you about a market that we're in process of exiting? This is a great example of just how disciplined our capital allocation process is. Our financial models did actually project a profit for the U.S. in 2027 if we'd stayed. Despite what I've just shown you, the U.S. market simply wasn't projected to meet our return on capital requirements, and so we're out. Regardless, this is still a super example of what we can achieve with our super models. We've got a number of them operating to different degrees across the business in different ways, many still with plenty of room for improvement, and I'm sure there's an AI for that. Ultimately, the proof is in the pudding, or rather, the layer cake that I showed you earlier, those super persistent annuity revenue streams.
The fact that they straighten as quickly as they do, they layer as beautifully as they do, that's great proof that our models deliver value for money for our customers and high-quality, highly persistent revenues and profits for us. Let's talk about something that you can see in the overall numbers, but our casino business tends to obscure it: sports seasonality, which I've quantified here by the number of sports bets per month indexed to 100 in January of each year. Excluding Botswana again, we don't want to distort the prior year comparison. There's a pretty obvious little bump around April, May. That's when the European soccer season ends. There's been a significant dip during the off-season. FIFA World Cups do tend to mitigate that a little bit. Then comes the start of the new football season.
There you can see the value of all our partnerships and sponsorships kicking in. Seasonality isn't the same for all markets. It's different for singles versus parlays, or what they call accumulators over here in the U.K. This graph does not adjust for our underlying growth, so that Q3-Q4 bump on the graph is exaggerated. It's not only seasonality, but you get the big picture. You can see from the 2025 line that overall, it's a relatively stable pattern. One word of caution, though, the number of sports bets isn't always a good guide to revenue. There's some margin volatility. Customers who win on sports often like to move over to casino afterwards, and that's a strong feature of our business, by the way. If you're looking at revenue, you don't see seasonality as strong as when you look at the number of sports wagers.
Please don't use this graph too literally if you want to model our business. You might wonder why I'm not going to move on and show you a similar graph for casino, and that's because this question actually highlights a really interesting difference between our sports and our casino businesses, again, one that we think is a major strength of our business. No matter where they are in the world, fans of English and European football will follow the Northern Hemisphere sports season, whereas casino customers don't really care about sports calendars. In some markets, there's some casino seasonality. It's usually not very significant, but we've got big casino businesses in the Northern Hemisphere and the Southern Hemisphere. At a group level, any seasonality that you see in those casino markets largely gets canceled out. Now let's look at sports a bit closer.
This is the overall split of GGR by sport. The big change from 2023 to 2024 is obviously the closure of India. You can see cricket falling away. Football is now three-quarters of our group revenue. Alongside this, you want to look at the parlay or accumulator mix. Parlays and accumulators are a minority of wagers, but a big majority of revenue, and that's obviously because of the much higher margin. Historically, that high parlay or accumulator percentage could be dangerous in the European Champions League, and that's because of the old format to the group stage. Sometimes what you'd see is a night where all the favorites won, lots of parlays or accumulators would get paid out. You can see the effect of that in the group's monthly gross margin for sports, and that 12-month moving average is heading up nicely. You can see that slight trend.
That's due to Africa growing strongly. Also, what we've seen is a hopeful sign of reduction in margin volatility. That's thanks to changes in the Champions League format last season. Maybe a bit early to call that with strong conviction just yet. We'll have to see how the rest of the year goes. Something else to remember when you look at this graph, and you can literally see it in the shape of the graph, the entertainment value of the product that we offer is like a roller coaster. The ups and the downs are what makes it fun. Ideally, you don't want anyone getting off the roller coaster halfway. Our job is to make sure that it's all fun and safe for everyone. Disney doesn't want anyone losing their lunch on the roller coaster. We don't want people to lose more than they can afford.
We want our customers to enjoy the ups and the downs, and hence all of the effort that we put into responsible gaming and maximum value for money for our customers. Meanwhile, the game split for casino is pretty stable, consistently 85%- 90% slots and similar. Again, some variation between the markets. In fact, casino margin is a really interesting story because of the variation between markets. We're obviously not putting numbers on this chart. It's very sensitive information. What you can see is significant variation in ITP between the markets. Trust me, your first reaction is wrong. This is not just tables versus slots. There's a lot more going on under the hood. Also, very super important, you can't have this kind of variation, profitably at least, without understanding your customers.
You have to do that at a per-customer level to make sure that you give customers value for money while optimizing at the EBITDA line. Casino margin is a very complex picture. When you get into the detail, we've been doing it for almost 30 years, and we know what we're doing. The net result is here's the overall casino margin across the group. As you can see, it's pretty stable. I've shown you how we've grown our new customer volumes while maintaining impressively fast average breakeven for our marketing. I've shown you how our monthly active customer count continues to grow and how that drives our total revenues.
If you remember only one thing from my presentation, then please make sure that it is this: the superpower of this business is our super persistent annuity revenue streams from our high-quality, highly persistent historic cohorts, which we can take to the bank and which you can use as the foundation for your models for super visibility of our future revenues and profits. Thank you very much for your time. I'm going to hand over to Craig to talk about our Spin division.
Thank you, Spencer, Neal, and Ink. Good afternoon. I'm Craig Hovey, Managing Director responsible for our Cape Town operations, the servicing hub for Spin and Betway Global, home for over 1,000 of our staff. I joined the group back in 2001, and wow, what a journey it has been. I'm going to be very pleased to take you through our Spin business today. At Spin, we hold podium positions in the rest of Canada, New Zealand, as well as a top 10 position in Ontario. We have over 25 years of operating our 16 brands in these regions, with a focus on our primary brand, Jackpot City. Jackpot City is a well-established household name in our podium position regions. We also operate in more than 120 other regulating countries. Yes, we really do make the world spin.
TAM estimates for our markets provide a good baseline for consistent growth projections of 11%. We think those numbers only tell part of the story and understate the long-term prospects. Let's talk a bit about how we win a year at Spin. Unlike my colleagues who also operate Betway sportsbooks, at Spin, we are all about casino. We have decades of experience running a highly cash-generative business, and we understand the metrics so well we can adapt and change our user experiences at a moment's notice. We do this constantly. However, we do not do this blindly. We are able to run multiple concurrent tests, allowing data to drive our decision-making processes. For example, we have recently managed to effectively decrease our level of customer incentivization with 100% confidence, increasing profitability and growing our customer numbers at the same time.
In other words, we no longer need to impress our dates with fancy dinners. They are just happy to be with us. Now, I'd like to introduce you to Grizzly. Grizzly is our Canadian-friendly mascot for our newest brand, Grizzly's Quest. Grizzly is a testament of how we like to get local. Part of our success is about understanding current market trends and being able to react quickly. We have done this multiple times, most recently when it comes to Canadian pride and creating this fun and inviting brand. Delivered in just two months, Grizzly is already winning hearts. At Spin, every customer is unique, and every customer has different needs, and our systems understand this.
By leveraging our data science models, or super models, like Spencer prefers to call them, we monitor each of these individual customer behaviors, analyzing billions of bets every month, continually assessing current levels of engagement and enjoyment. Using this wealth of data, our promotional engines calculate millions of personalized rewards, waiting for that moment to engage our customer in a meaningful way. Finally, right at that right moment of truth, our CRM systems deliver that reward immediately in product, as well as over our many traditional marketing channels available to us. We have already delivered over 40 million of those personalized in-product messages this year. Who doesn't like that kind of attention? All of this gives that customer several reasons to continue playing with us.
These real-time personalized rewards translate into strong persistency through both early and longer durations, with 80% of our H1 revenue coming from previous years and 25% coming from customers acquired pre-2021. Okay, we are product marketers. This is meaning we use product to effectively execute our strategies. We are fortunate to have full product autonomy and make the most of this. We listen to our customers, and we build features that both delight and drive our desired performance outcomes. Before I show you some examples of how we have done this in the past, how about a sneak peek into the future? On your right, we see our friend Grizzly's new home. I am extremely excited to share our very first public view of our new casino client, rebuilt from scratch and personalized for Grizzly's Quest, providing a friendly, non-overwhelming interface that guides our customers to their next best action.
Focused on maximizing their entertainment experience, expect to see this in the wild later this month. Anyone from Canada here? Hey, welcome. While I'm not from Canada, we all know they have very long, cold winters. When summer finally does come, they love to get outdoors. Great for them, but we miss them. In 2023, we utilized our product experience to compensate for the seasonal effect and crafted a compelling promotion to keep them engaged. This was released just before summer, and ever since then, the summer dip is a thing of the past for our business. Our future roadmap has us going all in on gamification, partnering with some of the best providers in the industry, and furthering the rollout of our casino client to all brands.
This new client will further hero the perceived value of level progression that our gamification ecosystem creates to truly drive increased persistency with our engaged customers. Our new clients will be far more responsive and super personalized to each customer's unique interests, delivering best-in-class experiences. This client will also have an improved testing ability, so we significantly improve our ability to increase needle-moving feature release cadence. We are ready to take on regulation, and 2026 is set to be an exciting one for us, with Alberta and New Zealand expected to regulate around the back half of the year, and our product is ready. We also have the experience of multiple market entries and many valuable experiences from Ontario that can be applied to these market entries.
Our intention is to leverage our existing and significant market shares in these regions and act as first movers to capture the market early and maintain our podium positions. Okay, let's talk operating efficiencies. Improving our 24/7 operation centers has been a focus for us, with many key hires to support the strategy. By redesigning processes and deploying new technology platforms, we've unlocked material productivity gains and reduced costs. For example, the rollouts of our Genesys platform in our customer contact center, which is powered by AI, has already delivered significant efficiency uplift and higher customer satisfaction, while ongoing investments in risk and fraud automation are expected to drive further efficiencies. On the technology side, we have flattened our team structures and implemented a scaled agile framework designed to increase productivity. It's resulted in a 200% increase in delivery velocity.
We've also significantly reduced our technology footprints, cut down our legacy systems, and reduced our technical debt and lowered IT-related costs. These changes reduce complexity, and we've already realized a 60% reduction in high-impact outages, with much more to come. AI adoption is also accelerating rapidly within Spin, with a 200% increase in uptake across the entire business. This is already driving measurable efficiency gains, and we see AI as a major lever for future productivity. Our numbers speak for themselves. We've focused on profitable markets, we've reduced headcount, and we have reached single-digit operational cost ratios. Better yet, we still have numerous cost efficiency initiatives in the works and expect to see even further gains over the coming quarters. For us, the rest of Canada has an incredible amount of untapped potential, which is why we are investing heavily right now in growing this market.
We got in early, over 25 years ago, back when Friends was still airing new episodes on TV and social media didn't even exist. Assisted by strong affiliate partnerships, as well as above-the-line TV advertisements, we have built an extremely strong business with high brand awareness. Furthermore, when we consider how the Ontario TAM exceeded our expectations post-regulation, we think there is plenty of headroom here, and that these numbers are heavily understated. As I said earlier, we are investing in growing this market. Over the last three quarters, we have significantly increased our marketing spend, resulting in a 150% increase versus 2024 and a 30% growth in new customer deposit value. With this spend, we are purposely engaging broader audiences, going beyond our traditional seasoned slot players, and extending our reach to more casual gamblers.
More impressively, we are doing this while maintaining a six-month payback, meaning we are confident in the strategy and we anticipate further growth. Ontario is a highly competitive market with many operators. For us, it has been about carefully managing our marketing spend, keeping those payback periods below 18 months, and adapting to the continuous changes in effectiveness as competitive spend pressures drive costs up. Despite this, in 2025, we have seen double-digit growth in customer value, and our specific focus on premium customers is starting to pay off. In this area, we have also leveraged our key sponsorships with the MLSC and [Atlassian Williams Racing] to offer super-class money-can't-buy experiences for our customers. This focus on both marketing and customer value has seen a consistent growth in bottom-line profits, allowing us further headroom to invest in this market. Invest we will.
We really want everyone in Ontario talking about Jackpot City. To achieve this, we will continue to roll out incredible campaigns like the ones highlighted now. We have many more in the works that will continue to push the boundaries and get more and more people talking about us. New Zealand is a market very few have managed to crack, but one we dominate. While many of our 16 brands perform really well here, Jackpot City again stands out. It is known by the Kiwis as the most trusted online casino in New Zealand, and with the same established tenure we enjoy in the rest of Canada. The TAM also presents great opportunity, with an increasing trend of customers moving away from traditional land-based towards the simplicity of online, with most of these land-based venues currently reporting declining revenues.
New Zealand is a bit of a volumes game, with lower than average player values that we cope with, especially when we compare it to Canada. Knowing this, we believe we have designed relevant offers that work well to attract customers to our products and help us to continue to grow our customer base. Another strength is that despite imminent regulation, we are already paying taxes here and expect minimal impact to profitability post-regulation. We have also more recently built a strong relationship with the regulator, complying with their restrictive marketing rules. With all our experience in this market, we see significant opportunity post-regulation to further entrench our dominant position here. Finally, we are betting on crypto. We've let our customers know it's an option, and we've made it super easy for them to use it.
This has resulted in an impressive Q1Q increase in deposit value, sitting at over 400%. On top of this, processing costs go down as more customers use crypto. Crypto is indeed here to stay. With that, I'm going to hand back to Ink. I just want you to remember, the future is spinning. Thank you.
Thank you, Craig. We will now take a 15-minute break. Please stand up, stretch your legs, grab a drink. We'll be right back. Thank you.
Ladies and gentlemen, we are about to return from our break. If you are joining the Super Group Investor Day online, we thank you for your patience. If you're joining us in person at our Super Group headquarters in London, please return to the bleachers and take a seat. Please silence your phones. Everyone, please can you take your seats? We're due to start any moment now. Thank you so much.
Welcome back, everyone. We hope you enjoyed your nice break. We're now going to jump right into the second part of the day. Kicking us off is our Chief Operating Officer of Betway Global, Kevin Kovarsky. Kevin.
Thank you, Ink. Good afternoon, everyone, and welcome back from the break. My name is Kevin Kovarsky, Chief Operating Officer at Betway Global. Our team looks after the Betway brand in all our international markets outside of Africa. My claim to fame in this group is that I've worked across four different continents in my various roles. I did some work when I was on vacation in Hawaii, but technically, it's not a continent, so I didn't count that. Now I'm publicly putting my hand up if you ever want to send me there. Speaking of continents, here's a snapshot of our global footprint. The majority of our revenue comes from our core markets, the U.K., Canada, Spain, and Germany. The balance comes from our rest of the world portfolio, which we operate under our multi-license. One global brand, Betway, delivering at scale across very different markets.
At Betway Global, we are good at knowing when it's time to pivot and having the courage to act boldly when we do. Take 2015, for example. We knew that if we wanted to build a business worth tens of billions of dollars, yes, we had huge dreams. We needed a world-class sports brand. We made the call. We went all in on Betway. We handed over our casino brands to the Spin team, rebranded the business, and invested heavily in above-the-line marketing and sponsorships. That bet paid off. Today, Betway is a huge global brand. Another big pivot back in Q3 2023. We made the tough decision to exit India. We took a short-term hit in revenue and profits, but it turned out to be a blessing in disguise. That reset forced us to make big changes, and the result has been outstanding growth and profitability.
Today, I'm proud to say that our EBITDA is tracking in the high eight figures annually. One of the ways we did this was by focusing on efficiency. We knew we had to offset the revenue drop, so we took a hard look at how we operated. We streamlined our processes, leaned into automation, and as a result, we've reduced our headcount by 26% since December 2023. Let me be clear, this wasn't just about cutting costs. At the same time, we also brought in dozens of new hires, new skills, new energy, and a new way of working. The result? Our OpEx-to-net-worth ratio has dropped from 36% in 2023 all the way down to just 19% today. We have plans to reduce this even further. Efficiencies are great, growth is even better. As you can see here, we've grown our net revenue considerably since exiting India.
Quarter after quarter, we've been hitting new records, and that momentum is only building. We've made a deliberate push, investing both marketing and product resources into casino, and it's paid off. Casino now accounts for 65% of our revenue. Today, our revenue stream is more reliable and consistent, exactly what you want when scaling globally. In sports, our customers are more engaged. Wagering is up 13% this year, and margins are on a healthy uptrend since the end of 2023. The key drivers: improved tech, sharper pricing, and a better all-round product. Just to highlight, this growth came without major football tournaments like the Euros and Copa America, which gave us a big boost last year. We aren't just growing; we're outperforming the comps. All of this momentum is showing up where it matters most: in our marketing paybacks. Take the white line on the chart.
Our 2024 customers are already at 117% payback in just six months. Marketing is working faster and more efficiently, with both 12 and 36-month paybacks trending even higher. We've achieved this while increasing our absolute marketing spend. That's not just growth; that's efficient, high-return growth. Our customers love our products, and they stay with us for a long time. Call it the Betway love language. 74% of our H1 revenue in 2025 came from customers who were acquired before 2025. This is locking in that annuity income that Spencer referred to. Let's now zoom in on some of our key markers, starting with the U.K. market. This has been a top-performing country for us. All our key metrics are up and to the right. Inkreased casino marketing and improved product have led to good casino performance.
We have also benefited from optimizing our ecosystem off the back of greater regulatory clarity. In our Spanish market, we have seen good growth in key metrics, particularly in casino. We have a team based in Madrid that runs this region, and they have improved the localized marketing. The Royal Decree was relaxed, and we took advantage of the new marketing opportunities that this allowed. Canada revenues have seen growth, a good growth thanks to increased focus on casino and reduced customer friction points. We are ramping up our marketing spend here to unlock even more growth. 2025 was a breakthrough year for our products because we have built a totally new platform on new architecture. We have named the new platform Super Client. Yes, we love the word super. This was actually the same platform that powered our U.S.A.-facing business.
We have rolled this out country by country over 2025. The look and feel is a subtle refresh, but it's faster, smoother, and more responsive, leaving us with happier customers. The real magic comes from the architecture that it's built on. It's very flexible, which allows us to do much more quick feature deployment than we could ever do in the past. Here are some examples. On the casino side, we greatly improved our messaging for free spins, which has led to better uptake rates and retention rates. We also introduced tile size variability, which makes the product more user-friendly. Our teams have also invested heavily in a new gamification platform, which we have recently gone live with on Jackpot City U.K.. We've seen a good uplift in revenue from the customers who engage in this product. We've also recently rolled out a new feature called Game Changer.
It's one of our super models, and it knows what games our customers want to play even before they do. We have seen a material increase in our click-to-play rates and active playing time off the back of this feature. On the sports side, we have recently improved our recommended bets section. They are very popular, and they promote our BetBuilder product. As a result, we've seen BetBuilder handle increase by 36%, and this handle carries a much higher margin than single bets. Coming up soon, Cross Match BetBuilder, which will allow customers to wager on multiple matches in one BetBuilder selection. Soccer is the big winner from BetBuilder, and our aim is to have a soccer product which rivals the market-leading soccer products. We aim to have this in place before the start of the World Cup in June next year.
The second example of a new feature is payout boosts. This allows customers to use tokens to get a higher payout on their bets. The third example is free bet tokens. These will enable us to be more generous with our customers, as they can be ring-fenced to relevant matches and markets. Our horse racing numbers this year are strong out the gates. The teams have done outstanding work to upgrade our horse racing product on the SuperClient. Pricing has been improved, and the front-end user experience has way more features which our customers love. The results speak for themselves. Horse racing volume increased 16.3%, and our margin improved from 11.2% to 13.2%. The good news is that this was launched very recently in the U.K., which means the uplift isn't fully baked into our year-to-date numbers. Looking ahead, in Germany, we are expanding our market into casino.
We aim to get a slots license in Q4 this year. The German revenue has been resilient, even though we have stopped marketing while we await casino. Next will be Jackpot City Spain, where we will look to repeat the success that we've seen in the U.K. with this brand. Ireland is set to regulate next year in H2, and we'll be applying for this license. After that, it's on to Alberta, where we will be implementing what we've learned from the Ontario migration. I'm excited about these new markets, our new product features, and fresh marketing channels. For Betway Global, the best is still to come. Thank you, and I'll now hand you over to Laurence.
Good day, everyone. Great to have you here. Good afternoon. I'm Laurence Michel, and I'm the CEO of Betway Africa. I've been with the business for 24 years. In 2015, when we launched Africa, we knew it was different from the start. Now we are 10 years into this incredible journey. Along the way, we have demonstrated discipline, strategic expansion, trusted relationships, and a market-leading presence across the continent. We have eight strong markets across Africa. We have cemented our reputation as a local hero with an iconic presence along the way. We have created a platform for the Betway brand to become one of the most trusted brands on the continent. Africa is a massive opportunity, with a total addressable market of $12 billion in locally licensed markets, over 1.5 billion people, and some of the fastest growing populations and economies in the world. The upside is enormous.
Betway Africa, backed by Super Group, has a head start with over 1,000 dedicated employees, $420 million in total revenue for halfway in 2025. We've been on the ground for a decade, and we have a healthy pipeline for further expansion. Our deep local knowledge and expertise and operations are our competitive edge. Our portfolio currently stands at eight countries, and the estimated TAM for the rest of Africa that we're not in is a potential $2.5 billion. Most of the countries in our portfolio are clustered around South and East Africa, and these are South Africa, Mozambique, Malawi, Zambia, Botswana, and Tanzania, with Ghana and Nigeria in West Africa. We are on the podium in seven of our eight markets. What truly sets us apart is our commitment to local teams, local voices, and local wins. We support local languages across markets, execute data-driven marketing, and employ local residents.
This local-first approach ensures we resonate with our customers and deliver sustainable growth. We're not just operating in Africa; we're winning locally in Africa. We attribute our growth to the following key success factors, which differentiate us from our competitors in Africa. These are product, customer value management, banking, and sponsorship. We are seeing some major success in the evolution of our product platform, which we call Synapse. Think of it as a nerve center. This platform has improved our scalability, performance, and the ability to deploy features rapidly. It's very, very important to note that we own and control the whole tech stack. This results in better customer experience and operational efficiency. The Synapse development is a major leap forward in terms of product rollout. We also introduced two new world-first products, namely Bet Influencer and Bet Saver.
These products, along with a new rewards program and additional product features, set us apart in the markets that we operate. Betway Scores is our live scoring app, which has been enriched with sport content. The app is a great value add for our customers and potential customers. We know that our business thrives when we retain customers well into the future. Acquiring customers means nothing if you can't retain them, and we do. We have developed our own marketing tools backed by AI, and these tools are integrated into our platform, giving us the best chance of retaining customers. As part of our drive to enhance customer support, we have created an entity called Betway Premium. This is akin to a concierge service for high-value customers. The lifeblood of any great gambling business is how effectively the business can take money in and get money back to customers.
We continue to redefine the banking experience with over 150 banking integrations across all markets and the provision of Betway-branded banking instruments, quite a mouthful, like Betway Bucks, which is a vouchering system, and Betway Pay, which is an instant funds transfer product. These are just two amongst other Betway-branded products. The growth and usage from these products has risen to approximately 20% of our banking receipts in South Africa. Customers not only trust our brand, they trust our financial instruments too. We dominate the sponsorship environment in South Africa. We have the top four sponsorships across the top four sports: soccer, rugby, cricket, and horse racing. The Betway Premium sponsorship was the biggest sponsorship deal ever done in South Africa. Across the continent, we have multiple high-profile league and club sponsorships. We have more than 30 ambassadors across Africa, with some of the most illustrious names representing our brand.
None of this happens without operational efficiencies. Our focus on operational efficiencies has yielded game-changing results in the past year. The Synapse platform settles bets three times faster, and up to 3 million bets are settled quicker than the time it takes you to brush your teeth. Our technology and infrastructure refinement produces 99% uptime, handles around 5,000 bets per second every single second of every day. We have, on occasions, run up to 28,000 bets per second. These are incredible numbers indeed. Data is at the heart of accurate decision-making. We've refined and modernized our data warehouse to provide real-time insights. Data users can create their reports through self-service. The biggest change that we have made is in the operations space, where we've introduced an AI chatbot in our call center. Our bot services more than 30% of customer queries.
Automated KYC has brought down manual checks by up to 85%, and we are close to completing AI and machine learning tools in-house, I may include, to provide real-time security from fraud. Consistent growth across the continent is key for us, and the three areas that we see growth coming from are casino, mobile penetration and TAM, and new market development. We will keep growing our casino business both through Betway and Jackpot City wherever possible. Jackpot City is now live in four of the eight countries. As I showed you earlier, the total addressable market is growing, as is mobile penetration, and this bodes well for the markets that we're in. Multiple markets are at different stages of development, and we will consistently identify and roll out new markets. Internet and mobile penetration presents one of the greatest opportunities in Africa.
The global average Internet penetration rate stands at 68%, with Sub-Saharan Africa at 27%. Most of the markets we operate in have Internet penetration rates greater than the Sub-Saharan benchmark. Africa is late in adopting mobile and Internet technologies compared to the rest of the world, so there is enormous potential for growth. Interactive activity across all gambling verticals is estimated to grow at around 13% compounded until 2030. This is promising for our business. Exceptional growth, especially in the casino vertical, drove halfway in 2025 to a 40% increase year on year. Casino consistently continues to be the dominant vertical at 68% of net revenue. We experienced robust sports wagering in Q2 2025, despite all the major leagues closing down in May. Sports wagering has grown consistently from 2022 to first half 2025, resulting in a 52% increase.
Sports gross margins continue to be strong as the results have been favorable. On the casino side, casino wagers continue to be incredibly strong, resulting in a 757% growth since 2022. As Spencer mentioned earlier, casino margins are typically very stable compared to sports, and this graph shows that. Our customers have multiple balls in the air. As you can see, our betting mix shows a strong direction to parlay betting versus single-match betting. This results in an enhanced margin across Africa. This jackpot-style betting is indicative of customers looking to win big by betting small and contributes 90% of our gross gaming revenue. Our platform is also optimized to support this style of betting. Football or soccer, as some of you know it, the one with a round ball, okay, just to be clear, because there's a lot of talk about football here.
This is the one with a round ball. It is far and away the most popular bet on sports across Africa. On a busy weekend, there are at least 1,800 professional football matches and leagues available to be bet on. That's on a weekend. Let that sink in. Proper numbers. U.S. sports are the second most bet on sports in Africa. A lot of you will be pleased to know. We are obsessed about our return on marketing spend. This chart shows how this obsession and excellent customer retention pays off at every single duration over 6, 12, 24, and 36 months. A superb illustration of this shows that the marketing spend in 2023, just 12 months later, has returned over three times that spend. Years and years of loyalty generate growth. 93% of half one gross gaming revenue comes from pre-2025 cohorts.
We are really in a long-term relationship with our customers in Africa. We're particularly proud of our work in South Africa, where we've become a market leader faster than our competitors. We realized that in order to grow quickly, we needed to market hard and as hard as we could, while keeping a close eye on the returns. We were able to do so with a strong leadership team that focused on operations, product, marketing, and banking. Our work is not done in this market, and everything that we have learned is applied to all the countries that we operate in. Jackpot City, our casino-only brand, as I mentioned, is in four African countries at the moment, has become the seventh biggest brand in South Africa in only 16 months. With this growth in revenue, the marketing percentage of net revenue has decreased.
This is a really positive sign and exactly what we would expect. Our goal is to get Jackpot City into a podium position in South Africa. When it comes to success, I know Spencer alluded to this, Botswana is a blockbuster for us. Our best country launch ever. Since we entered the markets in February 2025, we've had stellar customer acquisition and retention, and our market share is at 95% according to Gambling Board returns. It's not a number that we've made up. We also have very, very strong gross gaming revenue growth to boot from both casino and sport in that market. Nigeria is ready for super investment. A few years ago, we decided to reduce our operating business there and remain prudent and cautious for a number of reasons. Now we're very excited about Nigeria, and here is why.
There are 235 million people in Nigeria, with 86% of those people under the age of 44. The TAM here is estimated at $2.6 billion. Smartphone penetration is at 60%, and Internet penetration at 45%. Mobile wallets and digital payments have reached 60% penetration. Regulatory issues are now much clearer in the market, and we are now perfectly poised to capture this immense opportunity. We will be activating this market with our Synapse technology in Q4 2025. When Africa thrives, so does our business. Investing in these communities with meaningful initiatives is in our DNA. The Betway Cares Foundation invests in five major pillars, namely education, sports development, community development, creative industries, health, and wellness. We have made an enormous contribution already across Africa. Here's a look at some of the community work that we've done.
Betway is committed to uplifting the lives of the citizens of the African continent, and through the BW Cares Foundation, strives to make a difference in the communities most in need, from water projects and feeding schemes to supporting sporting and cultural initiatives. For BW Cares, it's exciting for us to be part of such initiatives. It's only the beginning. We aim to do so much more when it comes to social impact and assisting the communities.
Betway is really a blessing for the government of national unity because we want to see corporates getting involved. We want to see corporates doing good. We want corporate responsibility all over the place, and that's what Betway represents. I will be using Betway as an example when I speak to other corporates. It's a responsible company.
I'm so grateful to BW Cares. One thing we've always wanted to do is attend more events to be able to get more partners. That's definitely possible now that we've got a set of wheels. Thank you to BW Cares. We have such an incredible team of about 30 girls that we're empowering in Khayelitsha, and really just using bicycles as that instrument of empowerment and change. Thank you so much. As we always say, water is life, and you are bringing life to the people of South Africa.
We're here in the community of Orange Farm, where such facilities, when it comes to sports and access to water, are relatively limited. Really, really excited to launch this, and particularly also for the support from Betway. Fans don't really know how much they carry us during our playing days, and I think for me to be here today is part of me giving back. This means the world to our members. Also, with brain injury, there's a lot of discrimination against it. There's a lot of stigma. To have people come in, famous people, people that are their role models, to come in and to really just show them that they care. We need to be sincere about what we do. We need to give meaningfully. We need to give back, and that is the main aim of the Betway Cares Foundation. You really are going to see a lot of stuff. As a responsible brand, Betway continued to seek opportunities to change lives through sustainable and impactful projects that put human beings first and assist the vulnerable to change their circumstances for good.
We really do care. We operate with heart in all our communities, and we are looking to grow our communities and markets. We have a strong and dedicated team examining new opportunities. Some markets that we are considering are Namibia, Ivory Coast, Angola, and Ethiopia. Should any of these markets and others meet our strict investment criteria, we will have no hesitation in opening them. Africa, as you can see, is the new frontier. Thank you very much. The next part of our Super Group Investor Day features a special guest who has been involved in the business of sport for over three decades, with roles at Umbro, Manchester United, which I'm very happy about, Betway Partners, Chelsea, and currently Board Advisor to our new Formula One partners, Atlassian Williams Racing. We'd like to welcome Peter Kenyon. Great. I'm so happy to have Peter with us here. As I mentioned, I'm a very big Manchester United supporter, so great to share the stage with you.
That's why I'm wearing this one.
That's what I thought. Well done. Peter, just a couple of questions for you. You know we know that you arrived at Manchester United in 1997. That already won four. The Premier League started in 1992. That already won four out of the first five Premier League titles by that point. Was it hard to see any room for improvement at that time?
Yeah, I think we need to look at the environment. I'd been involved with a business. My background quickly, because it's in the context of that, is I was an accountant. I got out of that as soon as I could. I became restructuring businesses for 15 years. Part of that restructuring took me to a business called Umbro, which was a traditional sportswear business, which I took over and bought into. We took it from $16 million to $1 billion in 10 years. That was on the back of football. I'd been in the football world without being in football. I found that I would never work for a football club because they were the most horrible businesses in the world. What happened in the early 1990s was football clubs started to go public. When I sold the business and came in, United were a big partner of ours.
I went around to just see them saying, "Look, I'm leaving the business. It's in great shape. You're in good shape." They said, "Look, we want you to come and restructure us because we are now a public company. That means that we can't do the things that we used to do when we're not a public company. It's not our money anymore." The reason that they went public was really ownership liquidity. Football clubs had no liquidity because in the five years that it was public, it only used about $16 million. The rest we generated, you know, we were making $30 million, $40 million, $60 million a year. We didn't actually need the public environment from that point of view. It was from a liquidity point of view. Because it wasn't our money anymore, and because we've got a regulatory framework which was not football, and the governance structure that needed to be implemented, that's why I came in because it was really a restructuring job.
I think the big question that everyone's asking, and I think we see this all the time in our business and obviously in the football business, is how do you negotiate the twin tasks of keeping shareholders and fans happy? I think fans want one thing, shareholders want something else. Talk a little bit about that.
It's not easy, okay? It doesn't get any easier. It was about looking at the business. Just to give you, in 1996, I joined. We didn't have a full-time doctor. We had a very inadequate training facility. We had one pitch inside, one pitch outside. We had no marketing and comms department. As a business, it didn't exist. As a football club, it was starting to be successful. The first things we did is actually start to structure it like a business. That went through everything like setting up those departments, setting up medical departments to support the players, building the first ever real training ground, extending Old Trafford into one of the best stadiums at that time. With that comes success. I mean, literally stopping Alex from doing everything. People like Alex today are coaches, not managers, okay?
When I walked into Manchester United, he would determine which hotel to stay in, what train to book. He'd do the negotiation with the club. He'd do the negotiation on the salary. We stopped all that. It's tough, but we stopped all that because we had to differentiate what his role was. We couldn't do what he could do, which was coach, okay? You need to realize that's a full-time job because part of the success of United was being successful.
Sure.
Yeah. We took all the work away from him. We put a structure around him, and that took the initial success to be, if you look at 1996, 2004, it's the most successful period, which was partly winning the Treble in 1999.
Correct.
We did that without public money. In fact, we took it private during that period.
Okay. Obviously, you joined Chelsea after that.
Yeah.
During the Mourinho Abramovich revolution.
Yeah.
Okay, let's call it a revolution because he came in and he threw as much as he could at it. What were the building blocks to that success? There was a lot of success initially. How did you keep the business side of the club in line with expectations from the owner? I'm quite sure Roman Abramovich was quite an ambitious owner and expected a lot. How did you balance that with him and the expectations?
Sure. I was Chief Executive of Manchester City, and people don't leave Manchester City.
No, not easily.
It's not easy. It's harder to leave than it is to get in. He came to his first ever game at Old Trafford, and it was Real Madrid against United Wednesday night, one of the best evenings you'll ever have. We lost, and Real Madrid beat us.
Who lost? United lost?
Yeah.
Okay.
He came. That was his first ever game. I didn't know who he was. Nobody had heard of Abramovich. I think he was about the fifth richest man in the world at that point. He came after the game and said, "That was the most incredible experience I've ever had. Thank you very much for letting me be here." I had dinner with him a couple of times over the next three or four months to talk about football, like who owns football? Nobody owns football. FIFA owns football. That got to a point where he called me one day. It was about five days before Chelsea went bankrupt, literally. He rang me to say, "I've just bought Chelsea c an we have dinner?" We had dinner, and he said, "I want you to come and run Chelsea." It took me a long time because what I didn't want to do, I laid out to him what running Chelsea was all about. It was about running it properly. I didn't want to go back to the cowboy days pre-United. It took a long time for him to understand that. What was his objective? What do you want to get out of this? Why are you doing it? If it's a hobby, I'm not interested because you can't do it as a hobby. Just throwing money at it doesn't work. There is a wonderful history of people who spend more money and get no results. We laid out a plan, and the objective was to be the best club in Europe.
We laid out this plan, and with that plan came investment. No doctor, no training ground. It was incredible that this was still competing in the Premier League nine years after I joined, and it was in a worse position than United was. That just shows you that you've got to look under the hood. We laid out the plan, and he said something that resonates to me today. It was a big investment. I said it was important that the culture of this club was that we made money. Whatever money we made wouldn't fill his yacht. That wasn't important. It was the ethos that we had to run this like a business. That was the key thing that I needed him to agree to.
He basically said, "I don't want to wait five years to be the best club to win something." I said, "No, we've got to win things along the way. Let's have some benchmarks." He said, "You can have the money." You can do what you want to do, and I'll support you fully with one proviso. I asked him, "What's that?" He said, "I need you to be successful because if I spend this money and I'm successful, I look really smart. If I spend this money and I'm not successful, I look really dumb. Don't make me look dumb.
Like a business.
Do not make me look dumb, and you do not make Roman look dumb. It is like a business, yeah?
Yeah.
What people don't know is the first week we were together, we decided that Ranieri, that was our coach, was not up to it. We were going to change him at the end of the season. We spent a day in a helicopter looking at locations for our training ground, which was the bedrock of developing talent, giving the best talent in the world a place to work that was better than anywhere else. It was building the foundations for Chelsea to become actually seven or eight years later the best club in Europe.
Amazing. During your time in Premier League football, you worked with obviously such greats like Sir Alex Ferguson, Jose Mourinho. What's the one key leadership trait that they all exhibit? It might not be one, but you know what is the main leadership trait that these guys exhibit?
Yeah, so there is more than one. I think there you're talking about probably two of the best. There are some new guys coming on the block. They've all got a ruthlessness to them, right? I got a call from Alex one day saying, "This boy, Beckham, I want to sell him." Now, Beckham at that point was pretty significant to the team and pretty significant to the brand and pretty significant to what we were doing. I said, "Why is that?" He says, "Because one is why it's disruptive to the team. There's nobody bigger than the team. Secondly, he's past his best." Really? That was his win. I said, "Look, we'll do that. I can do that. What I need you to do is help me create a market for him. Keep playing him," right? The point of that is ruthless, right? They're all ruthless because they win.
They're all winners. They're all winners, and they're ruthless in that pursuit of winning. They're all great leaders, actually. You have the ability to take the team down with them and then bring the team up with them for the right moment. God forbid you're lost in London and you've got a four-hour coach drive back. It was miserable, right? These teams know what high performance is. It's instinctive. The culture is huge. You know, and Mourinho. We decided that Ranieri was not going to be our coach. The reason for that was he's not a winner. The reason I could make that call is because Ferguson's a winner. Okay. We needed a winner. We had a great team, but the team had not won anything. There's a great thing about winning and losing. Until you've won, you don't know what it's like to win. Once you've won, you never want to lose, right? It's true. At Chelsea, we had Terry and Lampard and Čech, and we got Drogba, and we had a great team. They'd not won anything. Mourinho came in and instilled that.
Almost win to win.
Yeah. Mourinho joins us. He'd had two years never losing a game at home. He went a further two years at Chelsea never losing a game at home. People would come to us thinking we can't win this game.
He went to United and parked the bus.
Yeah, yeah. That's another story.
Okay, great. You're now obviously a board advisor at Williams. What's the one thing that you've learned in the football world that you felt that you've been able to bring to Williams and Formula One?
I think Williams is under a restructuring. That's what my skill set is. I just happen to apply it to sport. If you've got a job and you can apply it to sport, why wouldn't you? It's a great environment to be in.
Sure.
Williams is on a journey back. It's a wonderful brand. It's a wonderful independent team in a sport that's growing rapidly, faster than any other sport. I knew the investor group, and they want to take it back to the top. My role there is to advise the board, not on making a car. I can't add any value to that, but I'm grey-haired enough to know about business structures and people. People make businesses successful, right? Not this or that. It's people. Culture is so important. I advise on that. I'm on the MC with James Vowles, who's incredible. You know, being with Toto and Mercedes for 17 years, he knows what good looks like. We didn't. He's injected that, and we put a fabulous team around him. I also, because of my experience in sport, oversee the marketing and merchandising and sponsorship.
What did Williams do that the football teams could learn from?
I think the
What does Formula One do?
Okay, so there's two fundamental things. The big difference is F1 goes to places. Almost every other sport, people come to you. Why does that resonate? It resonates in the point. If we're in town for three days, it's the hottest ticket in town, right? We can get everybody, government, huge businesses, sports people, entertainment. They want to be part of what F1 circus brings.
Yeah, as you said, like a circus.
Yeah.
Keeps moving around.
It's a very expensive circus, but it is a circus from that point of view. The fact that it goes is a fundamental difference. Once you're there, I'll guarantee that Williams will give you an experience that I don't care how.
I've heard them.
How many sports things you go to, you will not get. The reason being is you're behind the scenes. You're in with the team. It's like going to a football game and sitting in the changing room. You're that close to it. The drivers are there. The engineers are there. You're in the garage. You're listening to what's going on. You're part of it. The experience we can give is phenomenal. I think we offer to our partners one of the key things we do is building authenticity. This is not about us just... Our partners are critical to the success of what we do. Right? We need our partners' money, but we need more than our money. We need their help to get us where we need to be back to the top. To do that, we've got to do... We've got to give you an ROI. It's not advertising. You can go and advertise cheaper than being in an F1 car. It's what else we can give you. Authenticating that relationship is critical to the success that we both have.
I think I've heard that people have gone to the experience, have just come away completely blown away by what they've seen. I think that football doesn't have that properly. You know, I think football teams, and I know there's some exceptions, think that they take you to a match and they put you in a nice suite, and that's kind of the experience, but Grand Prix takes it to the next level.
Yeah, you'll be in the garage. You'll be in our motorhome. That's where the drivers eat, that's where the drivers get debriefed, that's where they get changed to go from, you know, non-racing to racing. That's where our engineers work out why we've won, crashed, or lost. It's dynamic, but you're actually inside it. That's the big difference.
What role do you think documentaries like Draft to Survive certainly have brought new fans to Formula One, and what other, you know, what lessons can be learned from this type of content? I know for sure that it's brought me to Formula One. I knew nothing about it, and now I'm addicted to the series.
Yeah.
Could football do the same? Should it be doing the same? What can we learn from that?
Look, I think the reality, the success of Netflix is that the drivers took the helmets off. They became recognizable. They became characters. What it's done is transform F1's fan base. F1 was a very technical, wide-aging male audience. Nothing wrong with that because I'm one of those, I think. What Netflix did is actually broaden that. It brought younger people into F1. It certainly brought women and girls into F1. That coincided with the ability of putting, you know, two more races in the U.S. The growth of the sport, the growth of the U.S. has been phenomenal on the back of that.
I've got one more, one last question for you. Obviously for us at Betway, it's been an amazing deal. We've even got a car in the office here. I think you've seen it.
Yeah.
I think if you guys haven't seen the car, I think you need to go and have a look. It'll blow you away. What has this deal been like for Williams ? What is it like working for Betway for Williams ? Working with Betway for Williams ? We'd obviously like to hear your thoughts on that.
Neal and his team are really tough. Okay.
Cool. Okay.
That's what we look for. We've got 14 partners. Our strategy is to have no more than 24 partners, and those partners, the key to success is repeating the length of those partnerships. That's point one. Point two, we want to be with winners. We want to be with people who can help us win and get back to the top. Super Group come absolutely in the center of that. It's not the biggest deal we negotiated, certainly one of the toughest deals we negotiated.
Glad to hear that.
Okay. Again, Super Group's got energy. Super Group's different than our... It's a different type of partner than we've got with some of our other partners who are B2B. This is a B2C business. That gives us other opportunities. You push the envelope. We like that. You push yours. We like that. I'm pretty sure that we're bringing value back to you in terms of what we bring. It's a collaborative piece. It's not sign the deal and then come back in three years' time. We see you as a partner, not as a sponsor. I think the other thing I will say is we thought long and hard about [Betway]. Right? Should we do it? I'll tell you now, we wouldn't do it with anybody else but you. That is because you're a public company. It's all the things that I went and joined United for.
You've got good governance, you've got good people, you're regulated. We're not interested in getting just money. We want people that do the right things, do the right things in scale. You're global. You're going more global. We can help that. Fundamentally, you do it in the right way.
Thank you for your time. Maybe we'll spend a little bit of time trying to figure out United's woes. Okay. Thank you very much.
I'll give them a little time.
Thank you.
Okay. Thank you, Laurence and Peter. Gentlemen, whenever you both decide to retire, I think you should start a podcast. Call it Old Timers Sports Meets Gaming. Something. Folks, we are almost done. Now kicking this off is my second favorite person, our CFO, Alinda Van Wyk. Alinda, you should be hugged.
Thank you. Good afternoon, everyone. It's great to be here with you today. Before I start, just give me a quick moment to say thank you very much to Ink. Ink, thanks for everything you brought to Super Group. Thank you. Ink has only been with us for, I think, close to nine months. You have truly, truly put us on another level. Thanks, Ink. At Super Group, we believe in creating long-term value. We drive exceptional returns through operational leverage, focused marketing, discipline, capital allocation, and strategic market dominance. We utilize our platforms across all regions to help us build for scale, keep costs down, and make sure we return marketing value. This framework delivers strong free cash flow, a healthy balance sheet that allows us to return capital to our shareholders while fueling long-term sustainable growth.
We're also always assessing new markets, and when we see a potential, we can execute quickly and with confidence. Our global footprint is a key strength. We operate a localized model, which enables us to adapt locally and to gain a deep understanding of our customers, all while making use of our worldwide infrastructure. Africa is our fastest growing region, delivering a 59% compound annual growth rate. Europe had also delivered a 34% growth over the same period, with strong contributions from the U.K., Spain, and Ireland. This regional mix helps us to ensure resilience, operational leverage, and long-term sustainability. Today, 95% of our revenue comes from 10 countries, where we have built scale through strategic marketing. We've also focused on unifying our technology infrastructures to build for scale, and that is not just where we operate. It's how we operate that really matters.
Let's take a quick look at our cost structures and how that positions us to scale profitably. Our cost structures are built to support our revenue growth. Around 40% of our cost base is cost of revenue, fully variable and tied to the top line of our performance. Marketing represents another 40%, a blend of fixed and variable spend. As we scale in key markets, we are seeing improved returns and faster payback periods. The remaining 20% is GNI, where we continue to drive operating leverage that allows us to grow revenue faster than we grow our weights. Taking this all together, our cost structure gives us the ability to have strong marginal visibility and meaningful upside as we grow. As we operate around the globe, our direct expenses remain flat and within our guided range.
Quarterly fluctuations do occur due to seasonality and the effect of margin on the hold. This consistent pattern reflects our cost discipline and ability to negotiate Super Group rates on a global scale. As revenue grows, we don't see costs creep, a clear signal that our business is running efficiently. We've had remarkable growth. Since the first half of 2021, we have increased revenue from $812 million to $1.1 billion for the same period in 2025. That's a 35% increase. During the same period, our cost of revenue has remained broadly stable. It went up with less than 200 basis points, despite facing higher gaming taxes, which is largely outside of our control. One of the most compelling aspects of our business is how well it performs when markets shift from regulating to fully regulated. Four years ago, regulated markets made up 24% of our revenue.
Today, that figure stands at 65%. That transition demonstrated that even as tax burdens increase, we've been able to maintain and, in some cases, even increase our profitability. This is a result of detailed operational planning, local market execution, and adaptable platforms built for compliance. While other sees r egulations s obstacles, we see them as opportunities. Regulated markets allow us to achieve long-term, high-quality earnings. We have gotten smarter when it comes to managing our cost bias. When we compare our costs from 2021 to the same period in 2025, we see processing costs have declined by over 500 basis points. Royalty, content, and product costs have come down by 14%, while taxes unfortunately increased by 20%. This mix shift underscores our deliberate efforts to negotiate more favorable processing agreements, reduce third-party royalty costs, and internalize our key technology components. Despite increased taxations from greater regulatory exposures, these levers have helped us to preserve and even grow our margin profile. As our core markets mature, we have seen a natural evolution in our marketing spend. Several markets are transitioning from acquisition-focused strategies to more retention-led focused marketing. These shifts unlock meaningful growth.
In markets where we've already built strong brand equity and scale, we can now optimize our spending, moving from broad-based acquisition awareness campaigns to more targeted, data-driven retention and cross-sell efforts. This not only reduces our overall ratio of marketing spend but also improves our LTVs and return on investment for every dollar spent. We see room to further reduce our percentage of marketing as a percentage of revenue over time, particularly in the markets where we already have reached critical mass. Our GNI expenses as a share of revenue continue to decline. This is a clear result of disciplined cost management and efficiencies we have unlocked through local centralization. By centralizing key functions and automating core processes, we can support the growth without increasing overhead, and this creates operating leverage and supports strong-term margin expansion.
We also achieve efficiencies with AI integrations, more in the operational sides of our business, such as customer support and fraud management. When we listed in 2022, we had 4,000 employees. Today, we're operating with a headcount of around 3,000. This headcount is not just about reduction; it's about optimization. We've streamlined our organization, sharpened the accountability, improved our processes, and aligned our talent around execution. The result? A much more agile workforce with better unit productivity. One of the most meaningful ways of announcing savings was when we unlocked through the acquisition of this sportsbook from Apricot. By internalizing our technology stack, we will be eliminating royalty fees, as well as reduce cloud hosting and operational development costs. This will lead to an annualized projected savings of around $35 million. These are recurring cost savings and efficiencies that will drop straight to the bottom line.
In quarter two, we've also announced the exit of the iGaming market in the U.S., and we can now expect to complete this wind-down in the next couple of months. We will allocate around $185 million we originally projected for in 2026 to higher-return markets where we're already winning. Together, these moves represent our commitment to structural efficiencies and disciplined capital deployment. We have built a lean, efficient operating model, and every cost line reflects our deliberate return on investment mindset. We can thank our dynamic Chief People Officer, Kirsty Ross, for leading our organizational restructure and operations, which helped our profit margin. We have also recently employed our new Group CTO, Alon Ben-David, who will be focusing on aligning all the technology infrastructures and optimizing product around the globe. Return on investment-focused marketing allows us to balance spending from acquisition to retention as markets mature.
We think before we spend, we make sure there's faster payback and better quality customer values. We continue to deploy capital through a disciplined framework focused on maximizing long-term shareholder value. This includes investing in high-return growth markets and innovation while selectively pursuing built-on M&A that further bolster our core. Over the last 12 months, we've returned $166 million back to the shareholders through dividends. At the same time, we've maintained strong cash discipline and preserved our balance sheet flexibility. Our unrestricted cash position stood at $393 million at the end of quarter two, up from $355 million at the same time last year. This is even we've returned this $166 million back to our shareholders. With zero debt and a healthy recurring free cash flow, we have the flexibility to invest in high-return opportunities, navigate macro uncertainty, and return capital to shareholders.
Our ability to convert our EBITDA into free cash flow is a core strength of Super Group. We run an asset-light business with limited CapEx requirements. This efficiency is further enhanced with disciplined working capital management and tight cost controls. The result is high-quality recurring free cash flow, which can be used for reinvestment or capital returns, and that also helps to build our balance sheet. Now for the more interesting part of my presentation, turning to outlook. 2025 has been an amazing year for Super Group. In the first quarter of this year, we raised group-adjusted EBITDA to between $470 million and $480 million while leaving revenue unchanged. The third quarter is typically a seasonally weaker period, but we have continued to have strong momentum in core markets, disciplined execution, and robust earnings.
That performance gives us the confidence to not only just raise our adjusted EBITDA guidance but also our revenue guidance for the full year. We are increasing group full-year revenue guidance to be between $2.125 billion and $2.2 billion, and our group-adjusted EBITDA guidance ranging between $550 million and $560 million. We are excited about the rest of 2025, and we remain focused on delivering high-quality earnings and long-term shareholder value. Before I turn to Neal, I would like to give you a quick general framework on how to think about our medium-term goals. Here are some key inputs. Organic compound growth, revenue growth of around 10% annually from 2025 to 2028. The adjusted EBITDA margin will grow closer to the 30% mark, reflecting scalable operations and efficiencies with EBITDA flow-through between 40% and 50%.
Free cash flow conversions remain stable between the 60% and 70% range, underpinned by our asset-light model and disciplined capital allocation. Capital return expected to be greater than $0.16 for every share, subject to capital needs and market conditions. These inputs support a high-quality capital-efficient earning profile and underscore the super growth we are delivering across all our businesses. I will now hand back to Neal, who will provide more color on what to expect next from Super Group. Thank you.
Thanks, Alinda, for those insights. Because we're almost done here, and then we'll go to we have a break, and then go to Q&A. I think it really has been an incredible year. Earlier, Spencer mentioned how he'd love to do this job, and he'll do it for free. Spencer, we'll negotiate after this. I'll also say I also love my job. I've also loved the company, and we've been doing this for such a long time. We have built this remarkable business together, and this is just beginning. When we first started, I remember our first goal was let's get $1 million of EBITDA. Then it was $10 million. Then it was $50 million. Then it was $100 million. Then it was $150 million. What happened? COVID hit. We built scenarios, the good, the bad, the ugly. What we didn't plan for was the super good scenario.
Yet here we are. We smashed through $300 million in EBITDA last year, and now in 2025, we are going to deliver over $500 million of EBITDA. Next up, loftier goals, $750 million, and then $1 billion. That's all organic. No M&A, no gimmicks, just simple disciplined execution, brand strength, and operational leverage. The model works, and our upside is really real. We showed you from Spencer our layer cake imagery, how the cohort stabilized and compound. You have seen the power of the brand, our ability to market for both acquisition to retention and expand into markets like Botswana. That's before we lay in core market TAM expansion, new market launches, AI integration, and crypto. We are just getting started. Success equals growth, and we're seeing growth across customer metrics. Customer lifetime value is up thanks to deeper personalization.
Feature adoption is up, driven by smarter positioning and product innovation. Retention rates are climbing, supported by gamification strategy, and cross-vertical engagement is rising thanks to more unified experience across sports and casino. We are not just adding customers; we are keeping them and making each relationship more valuable over time. While our gains are determined by chance, our strategy is designed to win. Our experienced management team knows how to succeed. Our modern tech stack is faster, leaner, and smarter. Global sponsorships and partnerships deliver scale and stickiness. Our customer-first mindset with localization, personalization, and trust at its core, this is the basis of our business. Our strong brand portfolio and the operational muscle to support it. We are deliberately diversified, 80/20 product mix favoring casino and global yet localized footprint that spans Africa, Europe, the Americas, and beyond.
Add top-tier pricing and trading, and you've got a machine that's built for long-term profitable growth. We have the foundation, we have the momentum, and we have the wings. There is a really long runway ahead. I want to thank everyone for being here on the super journey with us. Thanks for joining us for our first ever Investor Day. I'll hand it back to Ink, and we'll have a little break, and then we'll do Q&A. Thank you.
Okay, thank you, Neal. In just a few moments, we're going to take questions from the audience. In the meantime, please enjoy a quick 15-minute break. Thank you.
Ladies and gentlemen, we're about to get started in about two minutes, so we ask that you please return to the bleacher area for our Q&A session. Thanks so much.
Oh, where are my notes? Okay, thank you again for being here for our presentation. As I mentioned, it is now time for Q&A. For that, I would like to welcome back Neal, Alinda, Spencer, Laurence, Kevin, and Craig. Folks, come in. While they take their seats, I'd like to remind you we're resuming our webcast live right now, and we are being recorded. Laurence, you're in my seat.
Yeah, exactly.
Very organized.
Done, Spencer.
We're doing age order here. Laurence got it wrong.
If you do have a question, please just raise your hand, and we'll bring a microphone over to you. Please keep in mind we'd like you to ask just one question and one follow-up, as we'd like to get to as many folks as possible. Thank you. Okay, first on the list.
Jordan Bender from Citizens. Thanks for today. Question we get around is stability in the framework in Africa or the regulatory framework in Africa. Maybe can you spend some time just going over what you're seeing on the ground just to help us understand, you know, what you guys see there? Thank you.
Okay. Yeah, so the regulation framework in Africa is actually a lot more developed than you think it is. As countries have adopted gambling and seeing what other countries are doing, one of the things that we really make sure about when we go into a country is that the regulatory framework is well-defined. They have a proper gambling board. They have a proper, the revenue service works with the gambling board. I can tell you that almost every, in fact, every market that we're in has very, very good regulatory frameworks in terms of licensing and taxes, and it's quite well, it's actually well-defined. We don't like to go in markets that don't have this. I must say, you know, although regulatory is always our biggest concern, it's actually quite well-defined. Some of the markets are ahead of other markets.
Certainly what's even happening in Africa now is that they're asking us to plug into their back-office systems so they can actually check our revenues and make sure that the taxes are paid correctly. As a public company, we obviously have always followed that. It's certainly not a major issue. You know, they all have, they have gambling laws. They have reasonable tax rates for the most part. It's actually quite well-defined, but different in every single country.
All right, follow-up, this special dividend was pretty high on the list for capital allocation. Can you kind of just give parameters around, you know, if and when we could see that?
We give now $0.04 a quarter, right? Last year we issued a special dividend at the end of the year. This year we'll look again at that, sit with our Board of Directors, and see where best to deploy the capital. That's how we'll do it.
Thank you, Clark Lampen, BTIG. I'll echo Jordan in saying thanks for all the time that was invested into today's presentation. Your regulated market mix has come down dramatically over the past couple of years. You have two big markets ahead of you with Canada and New Zealand. Can you give us a sense for how you're approaching that transition this time around, I guess having had some experience with Ontario previously?
Okay, so I mean, I'll start and then obviously Kevin and Craig can take it from there. Basically, with Ontario, it was the first time one of the provinces in Canada regulated. What we did there, I think we were probably too strict on how we took the existing database over onto the new platform, where our competitors didn't do that. It was the same time that we were listing, so there were quite a lot of things. We've definitely learned from that. The good thing in Canada is it's province by province. That's good. Obviously, we wait for Alberta to come. In New Zealand, Craig talked about it, we've been paying taxes there. That's more regulatory framework. There, they're restricting us in the marketing. We've been actually being really compliant with the laws there. We're not stepping out of any of the gray areas.
For us, as it comes, we've then got the tech power to be able to deliver the product. The question in all these markets is, what does your new product have to do in that market? That's why by having a lesser country mix across the world, we can deploy the tech that we have into the key markets. That's been, I think, a key driver that you see across the world. I'm not sure you've got to.
We want to be first movers, you know, so we're just excited and want to be in there from the get-go. Push hard.
For my follow-up, Alinda, you talked through your presentation about cost leverage over time. Is it possible to dimensionalize for us how much of the marketing budget right now is sort of brand or awareness related as opposed to higher return performance spend? Thank you.
Yeah, so the operating leverage sits in the GNI mostly. It's around our headcounts and our processes, which has come significantly down. I mean, I think I promised the market we will get to an operating EBITDA ratio of 23% about three years ago, and we've shot through the roof there. That is imminent from what we've delivered in operating leverage. In the marketing ratio, we don't really disclose which part of our marketing is, you know, sponsorships versus traditional marketing. We've got three big parts of that: traditional marketing, I call affiliates, which is revenue-based, and then your sponsorships. A good mix. What Neal and I always say is that we feel there's a lot of levers to pull there, still. We are about probably 3% over that we could bring down straight to the bottom line into becoming more efficient in marketing spend. With Spencer's super systems and models, we're really starting to see where to invest and where the returns will come from. There's a good momentum that we're building on looking in detail in marketing.
Yeah, and I'll just add, you know, when it comes to the brand, it's not like we just go up there and take hundreds of millions of dollars and spend it on the brand. That's not what it's about. It's a percentage of the revenue, but now all the other marketing channels have to work around it. It's more about, you know, this year it's been $450 million and $500 million in marketing. It means as you go, revenue, does the marketing ratio still have to be at 23%? I think we put in our goals that we put 22%, but it's more about the number and how efficient that is. That's where we are really working hard with all their marketing teams, actually, to connect the dots and deliver more from this marketing efficiency. In order to do that, you need the product as well. The two are hand in hand. You take the operating efficiencies, put the three together, and that's this flywheel that really we're very confident in delivering super growth.
Jed Kelly, Oppenheimer, thanks for putting on today. It's been great. I guess this question is for Laurence. Just a major question we get from investors probably who don't understand the African market is just the competitive dynamics. Can you just further expand on your moats, and then where are your key competitors from in each of the markets or in the markets you're in?
Sorry, the last part was, where are they?
Who are your competitors? Are they local or?
Yeah, I think that just to deal with the last part first, we have very few, what's the word, big brand competitors or public brand competitors in the markets that we operate in. Most of our competitors in most of the markets are actually local brands that you've never heard of. There's one or two public brands knocking around, some of them more successful than others, but certainly no one from any of the brands that you know and the big brands. It's mainly local companies, local entrepreneurs, which is pretty tough because they kind of understand the landscape. We have seen over time that big brands that come in don't last. We've kind of outlived them and outrun them in most of these markets. That's certainly it. In terms of competitive moats and, you know, what do we have? Certainly, it's across a couple of things.
Banking, as I spoke about, 150 banking integrations across Africa over eight countries. We're talking about almost 20 per country. You better know what you're doing to integrate all those methods, getting money in and out. Product has been an amazing, is definitely a moat. What we find with a lot of these local companies is they'll go out and they will get a third-party software. We own that tech stack, our own. If we decide in Tanzania the product needs to look different to how it looks in Malawi, we'll do that. We can turn that on very quickly. That's been a big competitive advantage for us.
Thank you. I guess my follow-up question is, if we look at the iGaming mix 80% and we look at Spencer's cohort analysis, it kind of implies a very high degree of revenue visibility. My question is, as we contemplate the forward guidance, what do you think you, where are you most worried about if we're talking in two, three years and you've underperformed that guidance? What could go wrong?
I don't think worried is the right word, actually. I don't think we're worried. I think if you look at those cohorts, I think we're very comfortable with the persistency and the value of those cohorts. I mean, literally, as I said several times, we're comfortable we can take that to the bank. The levers that get pulled are how many new customers we acquire and how strong seasonality is when it kicks in round about Q4 generally. The question is whether that'll repeat itself in future years. It's not so much a worry. There are a couple of unknowns. In terms of the way we do that guidance, yes, it is a bit conservative because we're not going to make, try, we're not going to make scary assumptions around how many new customers we're going to acquire or what that seasonality might be.
William Zolezzi from Divisadero Street. Harping back to Spencer's slide, he talked about there's a flywheel here where online sports betting feeds the iGaming piece. Once you get those customers, they tend to be very persistent. Those are one of those cohorts. A big catalyst for the industry next year is obviously the World Cup. Out of the public companies, you guys have the highest penetration or exposure to soccer. Can you help me think about whether that's a big opportunity for the company and to the extent that you get a lot of users coming in on your online sports betting platform, that would be an opportunity for an acceleration in also your iGaming?
Sure. The World Cup next year is really interesting because they are changing the format, increasing from 32 teams to 48, adding an extra knockout round. Number of games is going from 64- 104, I think. I think you add that all up together and it's a really unbelievable engagement, customer engagement opportunity. Tournament's going to last a week longer than usual. You put that all together and I think as an activation mechanism, as a reactivation mechanism, as an engagement mechanism, we think it's going to be quite strong. The unknown from a revenue point of view is those extra 16 teams may not be very strong. There may be some blowout results there that might hurt the sports books perhaps. There's a push and a pull there. On balance, what we've seen every time there's been a World Cup is that the usual summer lull is mitigated quite significantly, or maybe not quite, but certainly significantly. On balance, we think it's going to be a good thing. Yeah.
I'll just add, like if you took June and July when you had that.
Club World Cup.
Club World Cup, that we weren't expecting, and that's where the July was really good because, you know, you had this off-season, but with the engagement.
My follow-up is just looking at the Q2 revenue. You drew nearly in the high 20s. When you take the midpoints of your updated 2025 guide, it contemplates that your operating expenses in the back half will actually be lower than the first half, despite an acceleration in the top line. I want to understand how you're finding efficiencies that allow you to lower the operating expenses at the same time you're able to keep a very healthy top line.
Okay, so I think, listen, this has been a two, three-year project, right? I think its operating efficiencies are actually everywhere, right? Remember, by reducing the headcounts, you get ultimately the costs that come with that have now gone through the system. Plus, on top of that, if you look at processing efficiencies we've got, I mean processing in payments, then the processing of all the systems that we've got, of how the customer journeys work, all of this, it's all about how you engage the customer, where we engage the customer. For example, if we had to double our revenue, would we have to double the number of people in our call centers, retentions, etc.? Absolutely not. It's using the new techniques there and the new software there. It's all coming together, technology. Compounded with that is that as we've taken some of the countries, especially the U.S. and then some of the European markets, Bulgaria, Poland, etc., we weren't seeing a part of profitability there. We take the people and the teams there and deploy them into the markets that these guys for their roadmaps, you then get the product better with the efficiency, so that will come together. It's not like we're looking to just hire for the sake of hiring. Now I think we are super disciplined in having the right people in the right seats and what do we need? I think that's been the big difference, right? With the AI, especially for the developers and stuff, they can then code much quicker, do that. We're still in the infancy there, but I think you'll see a lot of upscaling coming there.
Last one is just on your structural hold. You didn't have a slide on it today, but in a previous investor presentation, you talked about significant improvements in your structural hold. I think part of that is your fastest growing market is Africa. We'd love to understand just how the hold in Africa compares to some of your other markets and if that's an abnormally profitable market.
Yeah, so the hold in Africa is driven by the parlay mix, as I explained. You know, you've got customers in Africa placing multiple leg bets to win basically, you know, to win big by betting small. It's not uncommon that we could have eight, nine, ten legs in a bet. As we call them in South Africa, we call them multiples rather than parlay. You know, eight, nine legs in a bet, it's quite difficult. A customer would put on $1 to win $1 million. The margin's pretty strong in a bet like that. The hold, as you call it, or margins in gross giving margins in the African business are stronger as a result of that. It's really driven by the parlay.
I think one of the things, and especially when Kevin came into Betway Global to help us there, was that, I mean, it sounds nuts to this, but the Betway Global sportsbook was built to make single bets quick. Why? Because we came from the casino business. In the casino business, you want to make single bets quickly. Actually, in the sportsbook, you don't. You want to be able to have these parlay accumulated bets. They've worked really hard now to build those builder bets. I mean, you can explain, but to build the builder bets, etc. That's fundamentally increasing the margin, right? Whereas it was actually quite difficult before in their sportsbook to deliver what Laurence's sportsbook was. It sounds better. It was totally different. Now you're seeing the market really liking multiple bets. It becomes more lottery style.
Yeah, I mean, the great thing about this group is you all learn from each other. There's a healthy level of competition between all of us, but we always learn and share. What we've seen so successful in the Africa market on the parlays is something that we're now emulating. As I mentioned, it's our bet builder product, and we're going to look to enhance that even further. Laurence has got some other initiatives that he mentioned, like the bet influencer and those kinds of things that enhance it even more. We're going to look to emulate that as well to get it even better.
Thank you.
Good afternoon, Jason Tilton from Canaccord. Thanks to the whole team for taking the time. I have another one for Laurence. I'm curious about, you mentioned Nigeria is the only country on the continent that you don't have a podium position in today. Can you talk a little bit beyond rolling out the revamped app in the fourth quarter? What are some of the things that you plan on doing to drive improved performance in that country?
Yeah, I think just to go back, we've been in Nigeria for a while. We do have a profitable business there. However, we have been a little bit gun-shy given some of the regulations, some of the way the taxes were formed. It was a time in Nigeria where you had to pay tax to the federal administration and to the state administration, and you couldn't take players from one state into another. It became very complicated, coupled with poor exchange rates in Nigeria. We are seeing that the regulatory environment has now improved. Federal versus state has now been cleaned up, and we're ready to now give it a go. Synapse, the biggest problem for us, one of the biggest problems is the platform. Our platform in Nigeria was just not fit for purpose, our old Vuvuzela platform.
Nigeria is the last country that we're moving onto the Synapse platform. Synapse gives us a lot of optionality. It gives us the ability to create products specific for that market. We are going to be reevaluating, or we're busy with it right now. We're in the middle of the process, figuring out what parts of the market. Nigeria is a huge country and stratified across all different bands of wealth and figuring out where we want to be, how we're going to spend our money, how we're going to apply influences. It's a market pervaded by very strong influences, certainly in the music world, how we get those on board, how we get sports guys on board, how we distribute codes into Nigeria. The distribution of betting codes is very, very important in that market. It's just really our whole marketing mix. We've employed a new team in Nigeria.
We've got a new Country Manager who's fit for purpose. She has employed a new Marketing Manager. We're getting really ready to give it a go. We think that we can make a big difference. A lot of our competitors are very retail-orientated. If you know how Nigeria works, there's a lot of retail outlets, but they're not really company-owned outlets. They're an agency model. Certainly the online business is not as well-defined as it is in a lot of other countries. We think that online, we have the smarts and the wherewithal to give it a full go now, which we're going to do.
Very helpful. Just one follow-up, your global casino mix skews very heavily towards slots. I'm curious if there's any sort of internal initiatives to drive greater engagement with table games.
Look, at the end of the day, you're giving customers what they want. It's not about trying to drive them to something else. Ultimately, they're somewhat different products that just get offered in the same location, is the truth of it. I wouldn't think that attempting to drive engagement in one, artificially drive the customer to another form of engagement, is necessarily what we're trying to achieve. Slots players and table players, there's a little bit of crossover, but at a stereotypical level, they're sort of different animals in many respects.
Maybe also just add there's more growth towards the crash games now, which is.
Yeah, look, I think this is a big issue in the U.S. because of the tax reasons. We don't have that problem anywhere else. The U.S. has had a couple of states that differentially taxed slots versus tables. We don't have that problem anywhere else as far as I'm aware of.
Hey guys, Mike Hickey from Benchmark. Thank you for doing this presentation. I think the third biggest TAM in Africa was the four countries that you haven't entered yet. Two things. One, before that, curious on your success in Botswana. I think you said 95% market share. How do you do that? That's incredible. What learnings from the other countries in Botswana when you look at those four countries that measure up to $2.5 billion in TAM? What's the key to the green light there or the unlock?
Okay, so it's quite interesting. Botswana is the smallest TAM probably in the whole of Africa. I'm not joking. I think it has a population of 4.5 million people. It kind of also doesn't always follow that you need an enormous TAM to make a successful business. I think in Botswana, I'll tell you one of the important things that we have going for us in Africa is that we've closed down some very good deals with the television operator, which services the whole of Africa. There are a lot of markets that we're not in that are seeing Betway in their dining rooms and living rooms every single day. By the time we get there, people know who Betway is. That's a major issue. Botswana was one of those. Basically, we launched Botswana with the Synapse platform, which was great. We were able to do that.
It's just been interesting. There are two companies in Botswana, two licenses only, and we both started on the same day. We've got 95% and they've got 5%. We must be doing something right. What can we learn from Botswana? Prosperous economy, which it is, and growing very well. Enormous TAM doesn't always follow to success. Nigeria has one of the biggest TAMs and we haven't been able to get it right there, but we will. That was the first part. The second part was?
Yeah, four countries that measure up to $2.5 billion in TAM that you're looking at as an opportunity in the future. What's the key to unlocking or green lighting those countries?
Yeah, so you know, we're looking at those four countries. We're looking at some other countries as well, obviously. In those countries, we've got, I think Ethiopia has a tremendous TAM. I think that's got the biggest of the four countries that we're looking at. It has a very, very strong ICT. I think it has the best ICT industry in the whole of Africa. That presents a great opportunity, although it's tricky. The regulations are tricky, foreign ownership is tricky. There's a lot of tricky stuff going on there. Certainly, that would be a very interesting market for us. Who knows, Namibia might be interesting. Very close to South Africa, very similar characteristics to South Africa, but not as big population. Outside of those four markets, we're looking at lots of other markets. Those are the four main ones we're looking at right now.
We'll see where it takes us. In order for us to enter any market, it's important for me to say this. Everything has to line up. Regulations have to line up properly to the previous question. The regulations need to be in place properly. There needs to be a coherent regulator. There needs to be a coherent revenue service. Customers need to at least understand what gambling is. That also makes a huge difference. We'll see. Some of them might not be fit for purpose when we finish looking at them. It's just really about being fit for purpose and where we see the opportunity.
Last question from us. You mentioned crypto a couple of times. I don't think I saw a slide though on crypto. Do you have a strategy in terms of how that can be a driver of revenue and also cost efficiencies, and how that plays into your three-year goal?
No, that's yes. We're all over that. We didn't go into that on this presentation, but yes, there's good things happening there. Laurence and his team and the rest of us are all over it. You know, crypto, and Craig also talked about it, cryptocurrency. Someone who has crypto is a different cohort of customer. There's that. In the regulated space, some of the regulators are only recently now allowing us to have crypto, which sounds absurd. In the U.K., you can take crypto, but you've got to convert it into sterling to play, right? It's illegal to actually play in crypto. As they're allowing us to do it, we're doing it. We've got all the payment mechanisms set up, et c. I always say this, someone who's got a cryptocurrency, who's got a wallet with crypto, it's like a chip in a casino.
It's valued differently as if they had money in the bank. Some of the pure crypto casinos that are out there aren't really complying with all the local regs that each of these countries have. In Africa is a whole nother story where they are getting more, I mean, I think in South Africa you can even take crypto and convert it into rands, but even moving the money now with crypto has become seamless. We've got some really good ideas. We have to wait for the next few months coming there. Yes, crypto is a massive opportunity.
In the South African market, we have a product called Betway Crypto Pay, which basically takes you to the big exchanges and you're then able to use your crypto to play. It's had moderate success to start with, but there is a much bigger crypto strategy for South Africa and Africa.
Craig, maybe you can explain some of your works.
Yeah, I mean, we're just pushing hard on marketing this to our existing customers. Now, as Neal mentioned, there's a whole new cohort of customers that are looking for our offering, haven't been able to use it because they're a crypto-native person. Now we're incentivizing them to come into our casino and have a great experience.
Thanks, Ed Young from Morgan Stanley. Just one for me. It's on marketing. You've talked a little bit about how there could be marketing efficiencies, bringing it down a few points, but also you've shown plenty of slides across the presentations about having paybacks in some areas below six months, which maybe suggests you should be spending a lot more than you are. Can you talk about how you calibrate around payback periods and perhaps also talk about what are the limiting factors you see when you're applying marketing to be able to deploy much more capital when the slides obviously suggest you should be?
Yeah, I think we always have to find the balance between showing all of you in the market's EBITDA, right? Like maybe when we were private, we would just be spending more. It doesn't mean because you're spending more and you're getting six months or nine months payback, that that's the right thing to do. That's obviously right if you are performing in those markets. It's that balance. I think one of the things we took on about a year ago, a year and a half ago, I think Alinda , our CFO, has been on us about this for years, is actually exactly your question. How do you see, what do you see in which market? What we do is we deploy the capital to all of them over here. They all want more. Obviously new markets might require new investment, like Botswana, etc., or Alberta.
They'll come to us and say, listen, in Alberta, when it goes regulated, we need more marketing to be able to compete. That's how we then sit down and allocate it. In it, there are inefficiencies in our marketing. That's what we have, like where the customers are coming from, what are the different, are we too much in digital, too little on TV, too much in LED, and it's balancing that. This has been 25 years of this. I remember explaining to people that when we started this business, we took the first $10,000 and had to make it work, right? Then the next. If it didn't work, we wouldn't be sitting today. It's all about that. The question is how we deploy it. I think one of the things we probably did wrong was two things, is we had lots of countries.
In the early days, it was one size fits all. As it becomes regulated, it becomes harder. With that, you're then putting too much marketing into all these countries. On top of that, your product team can't deliver the best product in each of those markets. Now that we've scaled that back on our 16 or 18 countries that we're all in on, we now can start delivering the product and extra marketing. All the operating leverage that kicks in. If Kevin and Betway Global have to increase the U.K., it's all dropping down to the bottom line. We can give him more marketing if we see the paybacks.
Afternoon, thanks for everything today. Chad Beynon from Macquarie. I know tuck-in acquisitions were mentioned a couple of times today, and it's commonly featured on earnings calls. When we think about the wish list, going back to the question in terms of your payback period, should investors think about B2C podium positions, new offerings like bingo or poker, or are tuck-in acquisitions all about the tech stack becoming more efficient and improving margins?
Okay, so I'll start here. You mentioned poker. We've got a lesson in poker a long time ago, right? Listen, we tried poker all those years ago. We had an open network and it didn't work, right? What it really was about for us, it's actually that we are casino and we're sports, right? It's all about those two verticals and how we become the best in those two verticals. Moving forward, it's about looking at those verticals and how with our marketing, with our acquisition, we can deliver in that. That's where the product becomes key. For example, if I had to rate it in my head, I would say the Africa product on competitors is a 15 out of 10. Remember, all the learnings we've had together for 25 years with Laurence, he's been able to deploy in Africa ahead of everyone else, right?
Those were all retail outlets who then went online. We've never been retail. We're the exact opposite, right? What we've done is in the rest of the world, we're too many countries which we weren't deploying enough into for the product roadmap. We've delivered more to these guys, right? It's all about that. We also used to have bingo in the old days. We've still got a little bit of a bingo product. It doesn't mean that if there's any p oker business makes sense in one of the regions if we think that it's, but that's not where the money is. The money is being caught to what we are. You know, people always said when we started, listen, you're marketing machines. Why don't you go start marketing traveling websites? I mean, of course we can go market traveling websites, but that's not what we are. We stick to what we do. I think that is what's key to why we are here today, right? It's actually sometimes much harder to say no, right? That's what we've learned.
Thank you. Follow up related to, I guess, what I'll call rest of Canada. Outside of Ontario and Alberta, you have Quebec and B.C., some higher populated, or I guess two of the higher populated provinces. After Alberta turns, do you think there's going to be, you know, falling dominoes in terms of some of these other provinces, or have they all operated completely independently in terms of how they're regulating?
You know, we have this debate. We've had this debate. How long? Not 25 years. Honestly, if you had told me 25 years ago that Canada would only have one state regulated by now, I'd have said that you've, and it would have gone state by state. I said, you've lost your mind. Like, actually, we don't know, right? It depends on each of the regulations. Because we've got the good footprint there, we've learned how to do it. Maybe with the geo targeting, et c., whenever one's come, we are up for it. Also, the tech team's up for it, right? The scale that we can deploy at. It's the same as Africa. If you ever told us a long time ago that there would have been big business in Africa, I would have said you've lost your mind. The world changes and adapts. I think our key is that we have to adapt with it. That's what we keep doing. We keep pivoting and doing it. I don't know if anyone else could do anything else to that.
Yeah. Right. Yeah.
It depends a little bit on the success of Alberta. Maybe they'll follow it and have a look at that. No, no signs right now.
Yeah. Yeah. Hey, Ryan Sigdahl, Craig -Hallum. You've talked about crypto reducing payment processing costs quite a bit here, unlocking TAM, but I want to ask about cash retention. I know, especially in Africa, but all parts of the world, retention and the kind of the back and forth movement and the costs associated with that. Can you walk through what you guys are working on to reduce that and keep money in the system?
I think you just have to watch the space. Obviously, under strict instructions from Neal not to talk about it, but we are working on something really good. You are right. The backwards and forwards movement of cash hurts. Certainly, in the South African markets especially, some of the costs, some of the fees of cash are very, very, very high because a lot of our customers are cash customers, but they're introduced, they can't introduce cash to us. They've got to go and buy an instrument, you know, Betway Vouchers or Betway Bucks, and then it comes into our system. Those are sold by the retailers or the banks. Because there's cash involved, it always makes them more expensive. Certainly, what we're working on will reduce those cash fees and the money in and out.
Also, another thing important why we need to do this is that the African customer, and I suppose it's no different to any other customer, a lot of customers, a lot of markets, we see customers leaving money in their balances. In Africa, we see a lot of movement in and out, in and out of balances, no secret. There's a big incentive for us to do something about it.
For my follow-up question, you've shut down a dozen or so markets, India, the U.S., kind of the highest of those, but another 10 across Europe. Curious how across that kind of smart but prudent decisions to exit markets, where you're at in that, if there are more to do there, and then you're focusing on the structurally advantaged markets, and now the overall numbers are inflecting in a meaningful way because that growth is showing through. I guess the question is, is there more to do on exiting markets as a whole, or do you feel good about where the portfolio, where the core business is today?
Listen, I think there's a known want to exit India, but when they, I mean, a year ago, they changed the tax rate to a mad number. Actually, we've, all the markets we looked at is if there's not a path to profitability, right? That's really been core. I think what you see today with Super Group is when we kept on telling the story that we had the global business and the U.S. business was making a loss, no one actually understood, actually separated the two and put them together. Now all of a sudden you realize, I'll EBITDA so much more because I haven't got these big losses in America, right? I think for us, it's like, it's not about that. It's about how we can see a path to profitability. We talk about this a lot. Listen, it's really simple t his business, you pay X to get the customer in the front door. You deliver Y in retention. If the one less the other is not profitable, then you're never going to make money. If it's only profitable and you take all the taxes out, then you're not going to make money. I also say to people, they come in the front door, you've got the best engine that brings them in the front door, but your back door's left open, they're also going to go out the back door. It's all of that. That's as simple as it is, is how the business is. We look at them all, all the time. That's what these new markets we look, I think we'll probably be much more conservative now looking at these markets as opposed to, oh, we can do everything. Like it's easy. Going to Belgium will work.
Going to Poland doesn't work because the local, you can't get the product localized as quickly as you can. What we did in the past is we tried in those markets, France, a few others, we used to use other people's software. That was not no good because then they're not aligned with you. They've also got other countries that they need to deliver on. When they don't deliver your product, then your product isn't fit for purpose. It's a five out of ten. How can you compete in a country with a five out of ten product, even though we got the Betway brand, which is amazing? Those were kind of some of the things.
We have five more minutes, a few more questions.
Yeah. Thanks. Thanks for the time, guys. Bernie McTernan from Needham, maybe just to follow up on Ryan's question. Alinda, on one of your slides, you're talking about the U.S. shutdown and about $200 million of expenses to reallocate. Can you just talk about where we should expect those dollars to go, how you think about the prioritization, and if there's any area of the company that was being invested in less than it should have been, either from a management or capital perspective, because of the U.S. investments that were going on?
Yeah, they obviously all stand now in queue for that money. I think the big shift for Super Group was when we started making those disciplined decisions to close markets. Initially, you feel like it's a wrong strategy because where's the gross coming from? By using, Neal just explained that I think the big change for us for the Betway global side of our business is to align our product much more to what we've seen work in Africa, on Portland and BetBuilder. Now we have the resource to do that. Your most intensive resource in America is not just only the marketing money you have to spend as cash dollar, but your capital deployment of building product and all the time, you know, and everything is expensive. Your cloud hosting fees, everything.
Now that just makes it much easier to put in margins in regions where you already see the margin scale. Then start looking, like Laurence just said, is assessing new markets on that back foot of exactly to find that sweet spot between technology, regulation, and marketing investment or reinvestment of funds. We also can obviously just keep it in the balance sheet to be flexible. If in case something happens, we talk about M&A bolstering our core as well. That can also happen. It's a disciplined approach, but very calmly.
Got it. Maybe a less long-winded question. Again, just about product. Gamification was mentioned in a couple of slides. What's working from a product perspective? Could that bend the curve on either payback periods or marketing spend?
I'll touch on that from our side. You know, what we're seeing is customers are really enjoying sort of the concept of being rewarded with, you know, things as simple as badges. You know, just a simple mission. You must go on every day, do these five things, and we will reward you with a badge. You know, they love it. That's working. We're evolving and learning every single week. This is what the customers are doing. We're changing, we're optimizing, and we're just seeing that's driving much more engagement, increased persistency. It's amazing. We're excited, and that's just going to be something we keep evolving over the coming years.
I think what we've seen, we obviously said it's Super Group, so we see the world a little bit differently because we're not in these operations, right? I think it's all great to have a great idea if you want gamification, but you actually got to get the product out in a live environment at scale, and that's where it becomes complicated. We've got, what, a hundred ideas that we can deploy, and it's can you actually get it out? I think in the different markets, they probably say Africa's ahead of the game there because they've been so focused on Africa and their product can do it. We now are actually learning from that and starting to deploy. That's why by being more focused in the regions we are, we can get these things out.
One last question.
Thank you. Ivor Jones from Peel Hunt up here in the cheap seat. Could you talk about third-party content cost for casino? Is a game supplier a commodity from a diversified supply base, and we should just expect the cost to go down relentlessly?
Listen, I think what's happened absolutely has become a commodity, but in these game studios, there are winners and those games you need to have, and they're obviously the more expensive games, or the branded games. Our aim has always been to have those games and then to be able to offer the customers other games that they like. Sometimes, if it's a crash game that they're absolutely obsessed with, to move them over is a bit different, so it's a bit of both. We're always trying to reduce those costs a lot because you also need the good games. You know, you can have Coke Zero and Pepsi and then a no-name brand that might never drink the no-name brand. It's that concept, but it's how much of the shelf space do we give. We always, and we're coming with our own games and own connected games.
The big thing with us has always been, from the early days, these big jackpots, the big jackpot games, etc . That's also changed a bit. Maybe the parlay betting has become more like a jackpot themselves, but that's what we do. Yes, we are all over that, and we're trying to get the volume discount as we should get as Super Group.
Can I just follow up on bandwidth? You've talked about Internet availability as a revenue driver. How much is there currently limited bandwidth in some markets, and how much is that a constraint on revenue that might be lifted if technology changed? Thank you.
I mean, probably referring to some markets in Africa, not an issue at all. We don't really have an issue. What we do have an issue with occasionally is like a transaction might take a little bit longer to go through the financial system and time out. We have a fair amount of that, which we've learned over the years to deal with and how to credit these accounts. On the whole, Africa will surprise you in terms of the reliability of data. You know, 5G is pervasive almost everywhere. If it's not 4G, 3G is gone in Africa, you really don't get it anywhere. The data costs, and I know you didn't ask this, but I'll just embellish a bit. Data costs are actually quite cheap in Africa. South Africa's expensive still, but the rest of Africa, the data costs are reasonably cheap. It's available, reliable.
The biggest issue can be like electrical supply is more of a problem. Zambia has had a lot of blackouts, and then all of a sudden the running generators and the mobile networks would go down. South Africa had load shedding for a couple of years. It's now finished. We don't have it. On the whole, a lot better than you think.
Listen, I also think that even if you go up north on a train, your 5G doesn't work at all. I mean, I think in Africa you might have better. It's actually absurd, right? You know, it goes both ways, you know.
Great, thank you.
I also say even if we go to the football stadiums, Arsenal, et c., I mean, it doesn't even work. I mean, I think 5G's helped, but you would think that Wembley would at least sort out the Wi-Fi. They don't, right? You try to use that. I think there's all the countries on different stages, right? Yeah.
Thank you very much for your thoughtful questions. With that, before we wrap up, I have one more guest to show up. Thank you very much.
Done?
Yeah, you guys are done. [crosstalk] .
Thank you. Thanks, everyone. Thanks.
Okay, you're done. I got two jobs.
Not too bad. Thank you. The last spot was left for the tallest of the myself included.
I am honored to invite someone whose leadership and counsel has been vital to the group's journey, our Chairman, Eric Grubman. Thank you.
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Eric, you've had a long and successful career in sports, media, and gaming. What first attracted you to Super Group and what continues to excite you about the company?
I want to say first because I've had such long experience in sports and entertainment and gaming that people say that the toughest spot is right after lunch. It's not. The toughest spot is between an audience that sat for several hours and a cocktail. With that.
Make it quick.
Super Group is an interesting company and you all have learned about the different qualities of the company and the history of the company. For the first time, maybe because they've sat in front of you together and individually and you've mingled with them, you've got a sense for the culture of the people and the culture of the company. I've been in a few companies and organizations, and I've been around a lot more than I've been in. If I distinguish, if I distill it down to those that are most successful and where the people are happy and want to get up in the morning and go to work, it comes down to culture. This company has it.
Great. To kind of double click on that a little bit, can you speak to Neal's leadership style and the team overall?
Those of you who follow a lot of companies or who invest in a lot of companies will see different management styles. You'll see the professional manager who probably could drop in somewhere and be happy. You've seen that hard driving entrepreneur that wants his or her hands on the business and on the people and on the throats of the people who are not performing. Neal is in the second category. He loves the people.
Sure about that?
No, I'm sure of it. He loves the people, but he's ruthless. He wants results, and he's not afraid to get them no matter how you have to go after them. At the same time, he's got a big heart, and he's loyal. We've seen that in action where people have come and gone and remain as friends. At the end of the day, it's about his business and about his family.
Right. You've seen a lot of investor sentiment cycles in gaming and sports betting. What do you think the public markets are still missing about Super Group?
I think the public markets still haven't really delved into enough of what makes gaming companies tick. You've heard about it. You've heard Neal say, we started with $10,000, and if we ran out, it was going to be over. We're here because it didn't run out. This company still has no debt. It still has no debt. It's a $6 billion market cap, and it came from nothing, and it has no debt. The terminology, eat what you kill, it's real. What's different between this company and other gaming companies is they are not dependent on the capital markets. We love the capital markets, and the capital markets can be a great tool. If there's an overdependency on the capital markets in this industry, you can either be in danger, number one, or there can be opportunities sitting right in front of you.
If the capital markets aren't going to be your rocket fuel, you can't take advantage of them. This company is not going to be in danger because of the capital markets, and it's not going to be without capital if a good opportunity comes along.
To that point, how does a board think about long-term capital allocation?
Easiest way for me to illustrate that is to just tell a little story, and it goes like this. Let me see the business plan. Would you invest your money in that business plan? No. Are you going to invest the shareholders' money in that business plan? No. Take that anecdote to other companies and see if they give you the same answer. You see lots of places, not just in this industry, but lots and lots of places where they're spending shareholders' money and they wouldn't spend their own on that same opportunity. If this company has a good opportunity to invest, good return, and after they make the investment, the results are showing that their analysis was correct, or if they need to make a pivot, they can make a pivot, and then it comes true, terrific. If not, pull back.
If that opportunity doesn't manifest itself and the cash is stacking up on the balance sheet, you all have good uses of cash. Buy XYZ or pay off your mortgage. That's the answer to the capital allocation. Good ROI, and then analyze it. Don't just leave it sit there forever. If you have extra cash, give it back to the people who are the owners of the company.
I mean, with that said, what would you say is your view on AI, crypto, digital transformation that we've talked about all day today?
All right, I'm 67 years old. I know I don't look like it. 67 is a new 47. I love that world. I was an early adopter on a personal level, buying Bitcoin, and when I got an inquiry from the IRS and was told by my tax advisor they are looking for high-profile people who are trading in Bitcoin, I decided to get out. That was a bad decision on my part. I look at, I don't put AI here and crypto here. I put it all together. These tools are a new set of tools. I see some digitally native people here because there's some young people here, but some of us are not. The digitally native part of the world, which is growing and will take it over from all of us, they are more comfortable in that world than they are in the analog world.
Web 3.0 is very empowering to people who are comfortable in the digitally native world. Blockchain is the building block of Web 3.0. All of that stuff to me is fused together in what I think is a massive series of disintermediation opportunities where the upstarts will knock out the heavyweights. When I think about that as it relates to Super Group, I don't want Super Group to be the heavyweight that gets knocked out. I really don't. I like it, and I'm interested in it. Super Group likes it and is interested in it. Trust me, the Web 3.0 world is looking at our world, and our world is looking at the Web 3.0 world. The winners, the true winners, will be the early movers that get together between those two worlds. Probably not going to come from just one or the other as it relates to our industry.
In the payment side, I think Web 3.0 wins. I mean, they talked about it, but I think it wins, which is why if you're running a credit card company, you're deep, deep into AI and Web 3.0 and blockchain. If not, your business is going to be gone. Somebody else is going to own it.
Let's fast forward three to five years from now. What does success look like for Super Group and what would make you most proud as Chairman?
I'm going to answer the first part of the question only in broad generalities. I want Super Group to be thriving. I want the investor base to be happy, and I want the growth curve to be much better than average. In terms of what would make me the happiest as Chairman, I have the same answer as when I was at Goldman Sachs, and the same answer as when I was at the National Football League. It's that somebody younger than each one of the incumbents has either taken over or has demonstrated their ability.
I think organizations thrive when there's upward momentum and when young people look at it and say, "That's where I want to be, because if I perform, I can outachieve." If Super Group is that kind of company in three, four, five years, and I've had a small hand in making that possible, that'll make me happiest, including somebody taking my job. That's happened before, and I hope it happens here.
Okay. The last question of today, what keeps you up at night?
Nothing. No, things keep me up at night. You're only as happy as your unhappiest family member. You've heard that saying. Anything with my family keeps me up at night. Complexity doesn't keep me up at night. If I'm involved with people and I feel like something is being done wrong, not a mistake, something's being done wrong, that's hard for me to give up and go to sleep. It's how I think about being in regulated industries. This is not the first regulated industry I've been in. There's a right way to do things, and there's a wrong way to do things. Then there are some areas that you don't understand. You can spend a small amount of time in the middle, but all the other time you got to be on the side of right. That's not just in regulated industries, but it especially applies here.
Thank you all. You've been very patient. You didn't have to come all this way. I hope you got an exciting picture of Super Group, and let's not stand in the way between people and their cocktail.