PokerStars has quietly rolled out a new feature on its .NET platform that has the potential to have a significant impact on the game of online poker once it is deployed for real money.
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The All-in Cash Out feature allows cash game players in an all-in situation with no more action pending to forgo playing out the remainder of the hand in exchange for a cash payout equal to their equity in the pot minus an administrative fee equal to 1% of their equity.
Earlier this month, PokerIndustryPRO.com was first to report that the new Cash Out feature was in the works at PokerStars as part of a major new product update and correctly predicted the mechanics of the new innovative feature.
How Does All-in Cash Out Work?
To illustrate how All-in Cash Out works, consider the following: If a player is all in on the flop with a hand that has 80% equity in a $100 pot, that player would have the option to take $79.20—calculated as 80% of $100 minus 1% of the equity or $0.80—instead of taking the result of the hand after the Turn and River have been dealt. Note that the 1% fee is based on players’ equity and not the entire pot.
If an all-in player opts to cash out their equity and their hand beats the other hands in the pot, the proceeds of the pot will be collected by the house. Player also have the option to continue to play the had out as normal regardless of their opponents’ decision about cashing out of the hand. It appears that players’ decisions on whether or not to cash out will be depicted in real time at the tables for all opponents to see.
Choosing the Cash Out option does not affect the outcome of the hand itself —the probabilities of each hand winning the pot does not change.
Players have the ability to disable the All-in Cash Out option by simply making that selection in the Settings menu.
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All-in Cash Out Coming to All NLHE, PLO and 6+ Tables
Currently the new feature is offered at selected 6-handed No Limit Hold’em tables, but according to the rules posted on the .NET site, future plans include making All-in Cash Out available across all No Limit Hold’em, Pot Limit Omaha and No Limit 6+ Hold’em cash games. The feature will presumably be rolled out for real money in select regions following the play money trial on the .NET platform.
On the tables where All-in Cash Out is available, PokerStars has removed the option to Run It Twice, another feature that caters to those players looking to reduce the effects of variance at the tables. One key difference between Run It Twice and All-in Cash Out is that the former requires all remaining players in the hand to agree for the feature to be triggered, whereas the latter can be chosen on an individual basis without affecting the outcome of the hand for other players.
The real money deployment of the new feature is expected to happen across the .COM market, but All-in Cash Out is not expected to debut in ring-fenced markets such as the Southern European market (comprised of France, Spain and Portugal) or New Jersey any time soon.
The ring-fenced markets are some of the most highly regulated jurisdictions in the world and approval for the new feature can take a significant amount of time to make its way through regulated testing environments. In some cases, the new feature may require a new type of license, or it could be prohibited altogether because opting to cash out one’s equity could be viewed as a non-poker wager as it is no longer peer-to-peer.
How All-in Cash Out Can Change Online Poker
Insuring your hand against variance is a part of poker that was made famous on television shows that featured high stakes games along with some of the biggest personalities in poker.
The idea of protecting one’s equity even made its way into the online game in 2012 when a company called InsuredPlay provided a third-party service to insure cash game hands against bad beats. InsuredPlay was available for play on PokerStars, Full Tilt, iPoker and partypoker, but undisclosed “difficulties” caused the company to shutter its doors some sixteen months after it had launched.
But even a small change deployed across the majority of cash games on the world’s leading online poker site stands to have the potential to cause significant changes to the way players approach the game.
Reducing the amount of variance in online poker cash games could cause players to shove all-in more often, as they will know that even if they are way behind in the hand, they will have the option of cashing in their equity to avoid being felted. An increased amount of shoving all-in could create a more exciting gaming environment
The ability to realize your equity in any all-in situation may also detract from the excitement of big bet poker games. No Limit and Pot Limit variants are popular in part because of their exciting nature, therefore, reducing the risk and variance could have the opposite effect and also reduce the fun.
Presumably, PokerStars will do its due diligence and thoroughly test the feature and players’ reactions before rolling it out for real money to the majority of its customers.
Portugal does offer land based casino gambling, although there are only 9 in total, and many feel that the government not issuing more casino licenses has stifled competition. Some of these casinos are fairly large though and the casino scene in Portugal is fairly vibrant in spite of the limited selection.
In any case, there’s only two of them that offer live poker, with one poker table each, so the live poker scene in Portugal is virtually non existent. If you want to play poker in Portugal you’re either limited to these two casinos, home games, or playing online, and almost all of the real money poker that goes on in Portugal these days is the online version.
Aside from these casino licenses, all other forms of gambling is controlled by the SCML, which has a monopoly on sports betting and online gambling, including online poker.
Portugal has been mulling over changes to its gambling laws for quite a few years now, especially recently, with some new law that is expected to go into effect fairly soon. The original intention of this new law was to preserve the SCML’s monopoly on offering online gambling, and they not only don’t offer online poker but also came out as saying that they don’t have any interest in doing so either. (2)
So since then, the Portuguese government has rethought this stance, moving away from thinking that they can simply make things like online poker just go away by not offering it and blocking people’s access to it. The fact that Portugal doesn’t officially offer online poker certainly has not prevented people from playing it, and the government’s attempts to keep people from accessing it hasn’t worked very well either. (3)
The focus of the SCML has been on sports betting, and totally neglecting the online poker market doesn’t seem like the best way to either regulate it or generate tax revenue for the government, and their monopoly on online gambling in itself puts them at odds with the EU, which is clearly against gambling monopolies and has worked hard over the years to seek to bring them to an end in other countries.
Blocking people’s internet access to gambling sites is something that many countries attempt, but it has only limited success. It doesn’t stop people from actually gambling on the sites, it only seeks to block access to gambling home pages, and players can access and download software from other sources, in addition to other means to get around these restrictions that are readily available to players.
Portugal has had some economic problems of late as well, which even required a bailout from the EU, so they could certainly use some extra tax revenue, and online poker certainly would represent a source of that, in addition to the benefits and need to comply with EU regulations. So this set the stage for a more reasoned approach to the issue of online gambling regulation which is now in the works.
Portugal’s New Online Gambling Regulatory Scheme
Some new legislation is in the works in Portugal and they will soon have a regulatory scheme for online gambling in place, as several other countries in Europe have done. It may be of benefit that they did take their time with this as this has provided them the opportunity to learn from what has taken place in other countries, to aid in allowing them to put together a set of regulations that will perhaps avoid the mistakes made elsewhere and therefore be more successful.
Whether they have done that sufficiently though is yet to be seen.
One of the big issues here is obtaining a high enough level of compliance among players, and to get this right, you need to account for the fact that in this environment, player buy in is necessary, as well as getting buy in from online gambling companies.
Both are important, and they do work together, as if you can get a site like PokerStars to participate, then Portuguese players who want to play at PokerStars are going to be playing Portuguese regulated poker, since part of the deal is going to require a poker site segregate players at least for tax purposes.
So the more large poker sites you attract, the more you reduce the competition from outside the scheme, so it’s important that you design the regulatory framework to be friendly enough to online poker companies that it is going to be worth their while to want to participate.
In addition, it also has to be player friendly, and there will always be options outside the framework, non regulated sites in other words, that they will always be able to choose from.
There are two main areas of concern here, which are player pool access and tax rates. Player pool access is one that’s particularly important to players, and this boils down to whether or not the player pool will be limited to those residing in the particular regulated country or not. It’s preferable to all that players be allowed to play in the main player pool, and it looks like Portugal’s system will allow for that, thankfully. (4)
The second important issue is that of taxation, and if you tax this too heavily then this tends to drive away players, and there’s a price to be paid here when players play on regulated sites, and it’s that the extra tax paid will affect their bottom line. Someone has to pay this extra tax after all, and an extra amount needs to be siphoned off from the games to pay for this.
Portugal’s proposed tax scheme is on the heavier side, although it does give a break to smaller operators who only have to pay half the tax rate, 15% instead of the 30% that normal operators will have to pay. This likely won’t please the larger operators of course. This also doesn’t make much sense.
So we’ll have to see how this all pans out but it might turn out that Portugal may have to do some more thinking on this to get it to work, and we are particularly interested in what kind of operators this will attract, as well as what the participation rate among players may be.
In the mean time online poker players from Portugal are still accepted at most online poker sites so the effect of this is more to generate more tax dollars for the government than anything, but players will still be watching closely to see how it all unfolds.
References:
(1) Portugal Poker Rooms
(2) Will Portugal Become the Next Online Poker Monopoly in Europe?
(3) Portugal Gambling
(4) Portugal’s New Online Gambling Regulations: What Poker Players Need To Know
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