SHARES IN U.S. COMPANY HIT HARD BY UIGEA ACTION
30 March 2007
Electronic Clearing has to cope with a diving
share price in addition to a DoJ payment
Shares in the US company Electronic Clearing House Inc.
plunged the most in almost 15 years this week after the
company revealed it is to hand over a substantial part
of its profits following a US government probe into
online gaming. This resulted in a withdrawal from
purchase of the company by Intuit Inc.which apparently
spooked investors.
Electronic Clearing will turn over $2.3 million in
earnings to the U.S. government from its Internet
e-wallet business, which collected payments to online
gambling sites, the Camarillo, California-based company
said in a statement. The penalty flows from the U.S.
Unlawful Internet Gaming Enforcement Act enacted last
October, which criminalises financial transactions with
online gambling sites.
Late last year Intuit, maker of TurboTax software, had
agreed to pay $142 million, or $18.75 a share for
Electronic Clearing, a 25 percent premium to the share
price that day. Intuit wanted the company in order to
expand its online banking services to businesses.
Electronic Clearing Chief Executive Officer Joel Barry
said the company is open to other acquisition talks.
"That's not a mess Intuit wants to get into,'' said John
Kraft, an analyst at D.A. Davidson & Co. in Portland,
Oregon. After the company in October said it would exit
the Internet wallet business, "...my sense was these
guys were on the up and up, squeaky clean.''
Electronic Clearing shares on the Nasdaq dropped $6.40,
or 34 percent, to $12.21 this week in their biggest
decline since July 1992. The stock has fallen 2.8
percent in the past 12 months.
Shares of Intuit, based in Mountain View, California,
rose 18 cents to $27.55 in Nasdaq trading and have
climbed 6 percent in the past year. Electronic Clearing
is "fundamentally sound'' and will announce
first-quarter results in May, Barry said.
Barry declined to comment on the federal investigation,
which seems to have been settled by the payment, saying
only that it was in the company's best interest to
cooperate with the government. Near-term results will be
hurt by the payment and by expected
investigation-related expenses, the company said in the
statement.
Intuit spokewoman Holly Perez declined to comment.
Electronic Clearing and Intuit released each other from
all claims related to the acquisition, according to
separate statements. A non-prosecution agreement with
authorities is expected soon, Electronic Clearing said
in its statement.
Back in October, Electronic Clearing intimated that less
than 10 percent of its sales were related to online
gambling, which it would stop servicing as a result of
the UIGEA.
Online Casino News courtesy of InfoPowa
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