Supreme Ventures moves to launch “Vax and Win” lottery competition

In an effort to stimulate the country’s vaccination levels, the Supreme Ventures Group today announced its new Vax & Win “lottery” promotion enabling persons to win hundreds of thousands in cash and prizes every week.

In a release, the company noted that the campaign which will hit the market soon pending authorization by the BGLC and will ensure that persons who get their vaccinations can also receive great cash and prizes.  It adds that effective June 20, any individual over 18 who has been vaccinated can enter and get their chance to win.  Entries will be submitted via an online entry form, each person is allowed one entry, and upon winning persons will simply need to present their vaccination card and ID to receive their prizes.

“We all need to pull together to ensure that the country is able to get back on track as we learn to live and work with Covid-19” said Xesus Johnston, CEO of Prime Sports Jamaica Ltd. “The vaccination program is a critical part of the way forward, and at Supreme Ventures we are ready to do our part to encourage as many persons to get vaccinated as possible. As the country’s leading lottery provider with one of the largest distribution networks across the country, we want to contribute significantly towards the national effort.”

Pending BGLC approval, the first drawing of the raffle will be June (26, 27, 28) just in time for the company’s celebration of their 20th anniversary of operations in Jamaica.  Subsequent drawings will be conducted each week following.

Stated Johnston “We are in discussions with the Ministry of Health regarding Vax & Win, and we will definitely be closely monitoring the response and ongoing potential of the program.”

Supreme Ventures urges all Jamaicans to follow the Ministry of Health’s defined protocols as the country continues to face the challenges of the pandemic.  Wearing our masks, frequent hand washing, observing social distancing guidelines and staying home if you are ill are some of the methods that everyone can use to help each other fight Covid-19.

Levy spends millions more on Supreme Ventures

Already a major shareholder, businessman Ian Levy increased his holdings in Supreme Ventures Ltd by purchasing an additional 10 million shares, each valued at $19.

The transaction was effected early Friday morning on the Jamaica Stock Exchange, and the move to spend $190 million, according to Levy, marked a vote of confidence in the current direction of Supreme Ventures.

“I buy shares in other companies too, but my motivation of buying shares in Supreme is obvious for two reasons: I have confidence in the company and the future of the company, and also I have confidence in Jamaica and the future of Jamaica,” stated Levy, who came off the board of Supreme Ventures over a year ago.

Levy is a founding director of Supreme Ventures, which was formed in 1995 by himself, Paul Hoo, the former chairman, and Peter Stewart, now deceased. Levy also served as deputy chairman.

Levy’s move on Friday was hailed by Supreme Ventures’ Executive Chairman Gary Peart as a boost to the efforts of the company, which has faced competition from other players in the lottery business, Supreme’s core function, since earlier this year.

“The purchase demonstrates confidence in the management team strategies and the future direction of Supreme Ventures Group in general,” Peart said.

Supreme Ventures Group has earned the title of premier gaming and entertainment provider in Jamaica and select territories throughout the Caribbean. According to the company, what started out as a vision to operate a successful gaming entity has developed into a broad spectrum of gaming brands and entertainment companies that have been indelibly ingrained in the fabric of the Caribbean, especially in its home country, Jamaica.

Supreme Ventures launched its lottery operations on June 25, 2001 with 28 employees, and started with two games — Lucky 5, and Cash Pot. A third game, Dollaz, began in January 2003. The company now operates 11 games, and also runs the entire horse racing operations at Caymanas Park in St Catherine.

Source: https://www.jamaicaobserver.com/news/levy-spends-millions-more-on-supreme-ventures_221539

Supreme Ventures buys stake in Main Event

Steven Jackson – Jamaica Gleaner – May 5, 2021

Supreme Ventures Limited, SVL, announced the purchase of a 10-per cent stake in Main Event Entertainment Group Limited, an events production company valued at $1.05 billion on the stock market.

The stake bought by SVL Group would be valued around $100 million, but the actual price paid for the shares was not disclosed. The transaction was reflected on the market Friday.

SVL Group Executive Chairman Gary Peart said he would speak to the price at an investor briefing later this week.

Main Event is co-owned by its CEO Solomon Sharpe, who co-founded the company with partner Richard Bair. Sharpe is connected to SVL Group by virtue of his chairmanship of its horse racing subsidiary, Supreme Ventures Racing and Entertainment Limited.

Prior to the sale, Sharpe and Bair controlled 80 per cent of Main Event through MEEG Holdings Limited. SVL now becomes the third largest shareholder behind Mayberry Jamaican Equities Limited, MJE, which holds 11.22 per cent of the events company. Peart is CEO of MJE’s parent company, Mayberry Investments Limited.

Acting Chairman of Main Event, Dr Ian Blair, said SVL acquired its stake from MEEG Holdings. That leaves MEEG with 70 per cent interest.

In the press release announcing the transaction, Peart said Main Event’s strong reputation for the staging of private and corporate events since 2004 was a perfect fit for the SVL brand in “cementing an additional foothold in the lucrative entertainment industry”.

The release noted that it is keen on further developing its entertainment business lines, but it wasn’t immediately clear how the acquisition of Main Event shares would result in both companies forming synergies going forward.

“I think the future partnership with SVL is best answered by MEEG Holdings Limited,” said Blair.

Main Event is known as the largest event management, production, promotions and digital signage solutions company in Jamaica.

The entertainment company is in the process of relocating its Lady Musgrave Road location in Kingston to other property held by the company.

“Most of our staff activities have already moved to our Ardenne Road facility,” the acting chairman said.

Source: https://jamaica-gleaner.com/article/business/20210505/supreme-ventures-buys-stake-main-event

SVL and Main Event partner to establish production company

Following the recent purchase of a 10 per cent stake in production and entertainment company Main Event Limited, Supreme Ventures Limited (SVL) said it will be leveraging growth from this transaction through the establishment of a production company.

This as SVL seeks to gain a foothold in the entertainment space and double down on the venture in a half and half partnership with Main Event.

“One of the things that’s going to come out of this acquisition of 10 per cent is that SVL and Main Event have an understanding that we will form a production company. It will be owned 50 per cent each between [both companies]. That production company, we believe, is going to take advantage of huge potential in the marketplace,” said executive chairman of SVL Group, Gary Peart, during a Mayberry Investors forum this week.

“When we read this pandemic and study what is happening globally we think that there is a great potential for Jamaica to see the entertainment value,” added Solomon Sharpe, CEO of Main Event, in speaking to the synergistic value to be derived from the recent deal.

Sharpe, who is also the chairman of Supreme Ventures Racing and Entertainment Limited (SVREL), the racing subsidiary of SVL, believes that the affiliation of both companies with the lucrative Caymanas racing business strategically positions both entities to gain significant earnings from the entertainment activities lined up to take place at the almost 200 acres venue in the COVID aftermath.

“When the pandemic is over destination Caymanas Park, destination Jamaica will be ready and the new production company will also be ready — we already have some things in the pipeline. While many other companies use my business to look good, SVL identified a real opportunity to make it bigger and to potentially even look further into the Caribbean,” Sharpe said.

SVL, which posted record revenues of $10.7 billion during the first quarter of this year amid adverse effects from COVID-19, said that it was also bullish on achieving greater growth through its other segments.

The company, which operates businesses in gaming, betting, lotteries, racing and pin codes [phone credit top–up vouchers], said that its recently acquired 51 per cent controlling interest in microfinancing firm McKayla Financial services, through its Supreme Ventures Fintech Limited subsidiary, will has also helped to push the company towards more business as it opens up a pool of funds for on-lending to its large network of retailers and customers.

Peart said that despite heightened competition in the lotteries market, the company was more focused on growing its brand.

Providing update on the company’s foray into the South African market with its cash pot product late last year, he said that the company remained hopeful about the prospects despite a slowdown of gaming activities in that country due to adverse effects from the virus.

“We’re still excited about South Africa and we believe that as markets reopen there, we will definitely make the gains that we expect from that venture,” Peart said.

Source: https://www.jamaicaobserver.com/business-report/svl-and-main-event-partner-to-establish-production-company-this-as-companies-seek-to-benefit-from-activities-in-lucrative-entertainment-industry_220858?profile=1056

SVL bringing illegal lottery game sellers into the fold

Neville Graham – Jamaica Gleaner – April 30, 2021

Amid the emergence of new rivals and an economy pressured by the pandemic, Supreme Ventures Limited, which trades as SVL Group, saw a decline in both net lottery sales revenue and group profit in the March quarter.

But the company, whose dominance is still untested, is working on strategies to gin up revenue and gain market share in the lottery space that it once monopolised but now shares with Mahoe Gaming and Goodwill Gaming.

One of its tactics involve locating and regularising the underground trade in its popular Lotto game. SVL Group executive and division CEO of Prime Sports Jamaica Limited, Xesus Johnson, is reporting that the company began the process of formalising former black-market sellers of illicit Lotto tickets in December.

Such traders, often found in low-density, rural communities, as well as the hard-to-reach sections of urban areas, are being outfitted with SVL point-of-sale machines, Johnson said.

Typically, the black-market traders would sell the fake Lotto tickets, pocket the revenue, and pay out winnings from the take, based on the game results from the publicised SVL lottery prize draws. With the deployment of SVL terminals to the reformed ‘subagents’, those earnings will now flow to the gaming company.

Alongside the reorientering of the black market, SVL is also partnering with micro-entrepreneurs to drive ticket sales – two channels that could potentially become the source of hundreds of new agents.

For the quarter ending March, the SVL Group, whose operations include sports betting, horse racing, pin codes, bookmaking and microfinance, experienced an improvement in overall revenue by nearly six per cent to $10.7 billion, net of prizes. But lottery game revenue fell by more than seven per cent, from $4.99 billion to $4.62 billion in the period, net of prize payouts.

Within the quarter, the Izzizzi game, operated by Mahoe Gaming, and Lucky Play, operated by Goodwill Gaming, both entered the market. To ring-fence its market share, SVL started paying out more prize money for certain games, the upshot of which was a 31 per cent increase in gross ticket sales to $16.9 billion within the quarter, according to the company’s earnings report, but a decline in net inflows due to the extra cost incurred in paying out prizes, Johnson added.

For instance, the payout for every $10 bet on Cash Pot – SVL’s most lucrative game – was increased from $260 to $305, according to the company.

Johnston says the effort was worth it, and necessary, because of the impact the pandemic had been having on lottery sales. With tens of thousands of jobs lost and a contracting economy, there has been less disposable income for unnecessary purchases such as lottery tickets.

The net effect of the market changes and reconfigured prizes was an 18 per cent compression of the gaming company’s bottom line in the first quarter, from profit of $737 million in the previous period to $602 million.

“The marginal decline in our net profit over the period should be expected when you’re giving higher payouts to customers and greater giveback to the market by SVL,” said Johnston.

“As with every other business, COVID and the restrictions do have an impact on us. What we’re fortunate with, is that the strategic imperatives implemented have served us well at a time like this,” he said.

The company’s ‘strategic imperatives’ include: convenient access; growing market share; and “also having the best products in the market,” said Johnston.

“When we came in to February 2021, we just accelerated some of the consumer promotions we already had,” he said of the noticeable increase in advertising, when the new rivals entered the market.

Johnston says there was a 40 per cent year-on-year increase in “givebacks”, that is, prize payouts, across the gaming segment, amid other changes to the portfolio of 11 games.

Money Time draws were moved down from every five minutes to every four minutes; mega balls were added to make the games more exciting; and each quarter the Lotto jackpot was made to grow faste,r beginning with the escalator promotion in the fourth quarter of 2020, he said.

Before SVL entered the scene as Jamaica’s first licensed lottery company in 2001, illegal games such as ‘picka peow’ and ‘drop pan’ thrived. SVL seized on their popularity to promote its lottery offerings, to the extent that Cash Pot and the Pick games actually mimic what obtained in the early illegal games.

In turn, as SVL’s games gained popularity, the one-man illegal gaming operators shifted to take advantage of the lottery company’s success.

Now, SVL is looking to stem, and corral, the revenue leak by formalising the illegal sellers of its games as legal agents, leading to what the company calls its Supa Sellaz concept.

“Yes, it is a part of the strategy to reach that last mile in the small communities, whether it be an inner-city enclave or a very rural community that would not be able to accommodate a full Supreme Ventures store,” said Johnston.

“It also allows us to reach back into the market and grab market share from the illegal market,” he said.

SVL’s game distribution network currently comprises more than 1,200 agents.

Johnston declined to identify the numbers targeted under the Supa Sellaz initiative.

“You’re actually equipping a micro-entrepreneur,” Johnson said. “It all falls into the strategic objective, which aims to provide convenient access to our customers and to take market share from illegal operators, who had been gaining traction in the market in the past.”