Unibet is the latest company to withdraw its application for a Spanish online gambling license. The company’s Spanish-language site posted a notice that Unibet “will suspend its activities in Spain on Dec. 20, 2011.” While Unibet’s Spanish customers will be permitted to make withdrawals after that date, they will be blocked from all wagering activities and bonuses across all channels expire on the day. Quite what this means for Unibet’s sponsorship of La Liga team Valencia is unclear. Unibet recently returned to the French market after a brief sabbatical/protest over the punitive tax rates imposed on French licensees. Will their Spanish withdrawal be similarly temporary? Spanish authorities are expected to announce the country’s first round of official licensees on Dec. 19.
On Dec. 15, Denmark is expected to reveal its list of initial licensees under the country’s new online gambling regime. Applicants were recently thrown a bit of a wobbler with the news that Danish identity verification company DanID would not have its ducks in a row in time to handle player checks for gambling companies by the new program’s Jan. 1 launch date. Danish Online Gambling Association CEO Morten Ronde told GamblingCompliance.com that the hiccup means international companies will have to handle the checks themselves, using social security numbers plus copies of driver’s licenses, passports or other government-issued ID. Companies will be given two months in which to verify a player, but until the process is complete, players will be limited to deposits of DK 10k (€1,350) and no withdrawals will be permitted. DanID hopes to have its verification system in place by February.