Oman Daily Observer

FanDuel and DraftKings scrap troubled merger

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WASHINGTON: Daily fantasy sports companies FanDuel and DraftKings scrapped a plan to merge on Thursday following a legal challenge by US antitrust enforcers.

The US Federal Trade Commission said in June that it would seek to stop the deal because the combined company would control more than 90 per cent of the US market for paid daily fantasy sports contests.

“We have determined that it is in the best interest of our shareholde­rs, customers, employees and partners to terminate the merger agreement and move forward as an independen­t company,” FanDuel CEO Nigel Eccles said in a statement.

DraftKings put out a similar statement. ”We appreciate the continued loyalty of our players — it is you, our customers who have made this all possible — and we look forward to kicking off what is going to be our best NFL season yet!” DraftKings CEO Jason Robins said in a statement.

The lawsuit by the trade commission was just the latest setback for the two companies, which have faced regulatory challenges in several states.

They announced the deal in November as a merger of equals.

Financial terms of the merger were not disclosed. Each of the companies had been valued at more than $1 billion before New York Attorney General Eric Schneiderm­an and other authoritie­s began a crackdown on the industry in 2015.

The tie-up was aimed at reducing costs as both companies separately fund legal defences and lobby for legislatio­n to authorize fantasy sports in states that have declared it illegal.

Without a merger, the companies will have to go back to outspendin­g each other to win customers.

The companies have a history of aggressive advertisin­g as they battled for market share. But they cut ad spending significan­tly in 2016 and said a combined company could again expand spending on advertisin­g to attract new customers. — Reuters

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