Cyprus Mail
BusinessInternational

888 stakes $3 bln to buy William Hill businesses

william hill

888 will buy William Hill’s business outside the United States from casino group Caesars (CZR.O) for 2.2 billion pounds ($3 billion), making a foray on to Britain’s high streets with 1,400 betting shops.

The purchase, 888’s largest since listing in London nearly two decades ago, will also give the company access to William Hill’s 2 million active UK customers when pandemic curbs have spurred record online gambling volumes.

888 has until now been a pure online player, whereas William Hill’s shops have long been a feature of British streets.

888 CEO Itai Pazner played down speculation that the company might seek to offload the retail stores to maintain its online focus.

“Our plans are absolutely to keep the shops. The shops are run well, they are profitable, they went through a big transformation in the last couple of years,” Pazner told Reuters on Thursday.

Caesars’ 2.9 billion pound takeover of William Hill in April was part of a wider consolidation, which saw several US companies snap up London-listed groups to gain expertise as the United States opens up to sports betting.

Caesars had signalled it did not want to hold on to other parts of the group.

“We have found an owner for the William Hill business outside the US which shares the same objectives, approaches and longer-term ambitions of that business,” Caesars CEO Tom Reeg said.

COST SAVINGS

Pazner said the deal, classed as a reverse takeover under UK’s listing rules because of the relative sizes of the businesses, would allow 888 to be more competitive and take market share in many of the core markets it operates in.

Besides the UK, William Hill, founded in 1934, also has operations in Spain, Italy and the Nordics.

888, known for its online gaming, casino and poker, expects cost savings of at least 100 million pounds per year from the deal, which has the support of its largest shareholder, the Dalia Shaked Trust. The trust owns 23 per cent of 888.

888 hopes to tap investors for 500 million pounds through a share sale “at an appropriate time”, which weighed on its stock price in early trading.

The Times reported earlier this week that 888 had outbid Apollo (APO.N) for the William Hill assets.

888’s shares, which have gained 40 per cent this year, were down 1.4 per cent by 0842 GMT, underperforming the wider index’s 0.5 per cent fall.

888, with a market value of 1.5 billion pounds, said it has secured 2.1 billion pounds in debt financing from banks to fund the deal, which included 0.7 billion pounds relating to William Hill bonds.

Follow the Cyprus Mail on Google News

Related Posts

Binance obtains Dubai licence to target retail clients

Reuters News Service

Winners of Stelios bicommunal awards announced

Tom Cleaver

Electricity authority finds illegal solar installations

Staff Reporter

Cyprus sees ‘one of the largest increases’ in renewable energy share

Tom Cleaver

“Nurturing the talents of tomorrow”: Adsterra Backs Up the 2nd Youth Tech Fest Cyprus 2024

Souzana Psara

Comparing European loans: What borrowers need to know

CM Guest Columnist