LADBROKES CHIEF TO QUIT
15 January 2010
After almost twenty years, Chris Bell is
moving on
The major UK online and land gambling group Ladbrokes
plc has announced that its 52-year-old CEO, Chris Bell
is departing after almost 20 years with the company.
Bell, who joined Ladbrokes in 1991, will leave in
the summer by mutual agreement, the company statement
revealed, adding that Bell's successor, who will come
from within the group, will be named Tuesday.
Industry observers speculated that the two internal
candidates are likely to be John O’Reilly, managing
director of the online gaming division, and Brian
Wallace, finance director.
Bell became chief
executive when Ladbrokes was split from the Hilton
International hotels group in February 2006. Before that
he was chief executive of Ladbrokes Worldwide. He joined
the company in 1991 and became managing director in
1995. He previously worked for drinks company Allied
Domecq.
The Times reported that Bell told
journalists last October that the recession had had a
worse impact on the business than he had expected.
Looking ahead to 2010 at the time, Bell said:
"Unemployment, in my view, is going to have to peak
before things start to get better."
Recent times
have been hard for the gambling group. In October 2009
(see previous InfoPowa reports), it launched a GBP 275
million rights issue to help cut its GBP 962 million
debt. Earlier in the year, Ladbrokes had responded to
the tough trading environment by cutting its dividend
and putting its loss-making Italian betting shops up for
sale for an estimated GBP 50 million.
Last
August, the group reported a 26 percent fall in
first-half operating profits to GBP 98.6 million, from
net revenues down 6.6 percent at GBP 504.4 million. The
company, along with arch rival William Hill plc, also
announced that it was moving its internet sports betting
operations to Gibraltar, a move expected to save up to
GBP 7 million net in tax and other costs and allow it to
better compete with offshore Internet competitors.
This year the group, along with the industry will
face the challenges of new moves by the British
government to better regulate and tax online gambling
firms operating from 'white listed' licensing
jurisdictions outside the UK.
Bell is also
vice-chairman of the Association of British Bookmakers,
chairman of the Bookmakers’ Committee, a member of the
Horserace Betting Levy Board and a non-executive
director of Game Group, the computer games retailer. He
earned GBP 2.04 million last year, including GBP 617 000
basic pay and a GBP 957 000 bonus.
Online Casino News Courtesy of
Infopowa
More news here.
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