Simon Goodley, guardian.co.uk, Tuesday 14 December 2010 19.44 GMT
Betfair's shares plunge to almost 25% less than float price as online betting exchange's maiden results disappoint.
Betfair, the recently floated online betting exchange, saw its shares slump by 16% today after lacklustre figures spooked investors who had bought into the company's bullish growth story.
Shares in the gambling group closed down 191p at 990p, meaning investors have lost almost a quarter of their stakes since the company was floated by investment banks Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley for £13.00 in October.
Brokers at Liberum Capital immediately advised investors to dump Betfair shares. Analyst Richard Taylor wrote: "The company has generated revenue growth of just 1.6% in the second quarter. This reflects weakness in poker and horse racing, with the higher value customers reducing spend per head … The company has not disclosed growth figures for the third quarter to date, which may invite suspicion given we are now halfway through the quarter." (
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Nils Pratley, guardian.co.uk, Tuesday 14 December 2010 20.30 GMT
It turns out that the really duff float of the year from Goldman Sachs wasn't Ocado (shares down 11%) but Betfair, which stands 24% behind the starting line after today's weak first-half update. In terms of trading results, Ocado has at least produced what was expected of it –the scepticism relates instead to the valuation of a loss-making business. By contrast, investors in Betfair have a disappointing number to point at – growth of just 1.6% in the core betting exchange in the second-quarter of the financial year.
Some high-rolling poker players have disappeared; horse-racing is declining in popularity; and gamblers are risking less when budgets are tight. These are minor complaints: it's just that there is a lot of them.
The risks were covered in the prospectus, of course, but suddenly Betfair doesn't look like the reliable, all-conquering powerhouse its fans thought it was. It looks vulnerable to the ebbs and flows that affect all gambling stocks. And it looks as if the shares, £13 at flotation, were priced for perfection. ([URL="http://www.guardian.co.uk/business/2010/dec/14/goldmansachs-banking?INTCMP=SRCH]more[/URL])