IS WPT ON THE SELLING BLOCK?
17 July 2009
Confidential data has been provided to third
parties, says CFO
The knowledgeable and well connected Wall Street Journal
columnist Brett Arends, writing in the publication
Marketwatch this week, poses the question "Is the World
Poker Tour up for sale?"
The indications would
appear to suggest it is, with CFO Tom Flahie revealing
that he had provided confidential data to third parties,
and CEO Steve Lipscomb confirming: "We've had
discussions with, and exchanged documents with, some
companies that have expressed an interest."
Arends examines the recent and troubled past of the
company, observing that it isn't hard to see why the WPT
would be in play. "Years of losses and missteps have
left it looking like an impulse purchase for a major
broadcaster or an online poker company," he writes
before noting a stock price at $1.25 for parent company
WPT Enterprises, giving it a value around $25 million.
"The company has about $18 million in net cash
sitting on its balance sheet. Flahie confirmed that
pretty much all of that would be available to an
acquirer. So the "enterprise value" -- the net cost --
would only be about $7 million or so at current prices,"
Arends comments.
Arends goes on to quote
Lipscomb, who says, when he talks to potential sponsors:
"The inevitable question when someone is about to pay
you $3 million, or $4 million, or $5 million, is (for
them) to look and say, 'Why don't I just buy your
company? Oftentimes the answer is: It's not for sale.
But of course everything is always for sale."
WPT is apparently doing somewhat better nowadays, which
may make it more attractive. It generated positive cash
flow last quarter for the first time in more than two
years, and Flahie says he's confident they will break
even, or better, for the year.
But, Arends
observes, it's a long decl,ine for a company that was
once valued at half a billion dollars and revolutionised
televised poker, playing a key role in creating the
poker boom of recent years. WPT launched the tour - a
series of high-stakes tournaments in various cities -
back in 2003. The key invention was the so-called "hole
cam," a camera that let TV viewers see the players'
hidden or "hole" cards during the betting, building
audience interest and excitement.
In 2005, at
its peak, the stock hit $26.
Arends reports that
critics diagnose the decline as too many copycats and a
company that never found a way to convert its brand name
into a reliable revenue stream. Even selling WPT-branded
products didn't work: Online casinos give away many of
the same things for free. Company mistakes didn't help -
from a failed venture in China to letting costs get out
of control. From 2004 to 2008 overhead trebled to $22
million while revenues, after a brief boom, fell
backwards. This in a world where the poker boom went
from strength to strength.
"The poker boom in
the U.S. isn't quite as manic as it was a few years ago.
But overseas it is still growing like Topsy," Arends
writes.
Lipscomb says the World Poker Tour is
now broadcast in more than 150 countries. In France, his
second biggest market, episodes sometimes get more
viewers than in the U.S., and the company has a strong
brand in a crowded field and much experience.
Arends concludes his article with a review of the legal
position in the United States, where some states may be
about to exercise their prerogative to legalise poker as
a generator of tax revenues, and Congressman Barney
Frank is working at the federal level on trying to
legalise online gambling in general in the USA (see
other InfoPowa reports). It poker achieves legalised
status, there are clearly some very positive
possibilities for companies in the business.
"Other countries are also taking a second look at
liberalizing online gambling laws," Arends comments.
"The big reason? Governments desperately need more
revenues -- and legalizing, regulating and taxing online
gambling may give them just that.
"There are
reasons to hope that things may look up for the World
Poker Tour after all."
Online Casino News Courtesy of
Infopowa
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