MERGER SPECULATION DRIVES PARTY GAMING STOCK UP
29 January 2010
Online gambling group issues statement on
Bwin talks claims
Informed market rumour drove Party Gaming stock up 11
percent Friday - an eight month high - on speculation
that the group was about to sign a merger agreement with
the giant Austrian online gambling group Bwin.
With media speculation mounting, Party Gaming issued a
statement saying: "Further to recent press speculation,
the Board of PartyGaming plc confirms that it is
continuing to hold discussions with a number of
companies in the gaming sector regarding potential
consolidation opportunities. As all such discussions
remain at a preliminary stage, there can be no certainty
as to whether or not such discussions will result in any
form of transaction with any party."
The report
that Bwin and Party were in negotiations appears to have
orignated in the Austrian magazine Format, which quoted
Bwin chairman Hannes Androsch as saying: "It's true that
talks are going on, but we don't know yet whether they
will succeed."
Press reports indicated that a
successful merger could create a super-company that
would have a value in excess of $4 billion.
Later
in the day Bwin's head of investor relations, Konrad
Sveceny, commented: “We are in talks with a lot of
competitors. Some of these talks are successful - such
as those with Italy’s Gioco Digitale - some end without
any result.”
Europe’s online gambling market is
the world’s largest, at $8.7 billion in 2009, Barclays
Capital analysts said in a recent research report which
claimed that no single European gambling operator
currently has a dominant position.
The reseach
found that among publicly listed operators, Bwin has the
largest European market share by revenue with 8 percent,
followed by PartyGaming with 6.3 percent and William
Hill plc, the U.K.’s second-largest bookmaker, with 4.5
percent.
“The low combined market share of the
top European operators illustrates how fragmented the
industry is, and that consolidation will likely take
place in order for companies to remain competitive,”
Barclays Capital wrote in the note.
Governments
in Europe are relaxing prohibitions on online gambling
through foreign companies to bring currently illegal
activities under the umbrella of taxation and
regulation. Online gambling that is considered illegal,
or not under the purview of local laws, is estimated at
about Euro 3 billion, according to Simon Holliday,
director of H2 Gambling Capital, a Manchester-based
market research firm.
Online Casino News Courtesy of
Infopowa
More news here.
Top of page |
Home |
News |
Forum |
Webcast |
Vortran |
Accredited Casinos |
Evil Ones |
Pitch a Bitch |
Online Gambling Resources |
Poker
|