Hartford Courant

Caesars buying British bookmaker William Hill

- By Wayne Parry

ATLANTICCI­TY, N.J. — Caesars Entertainm­ent said Wednesday it is buying the British bookmaker William Hill for $3.7 billion in a deal aimed at binding its casinos ever closer to the fast-growing legal sports betting industry in the U.S.

Caesars said it is interested in the the company’s U.S. assets, and indicated it would seek to sell off William Hill’s assets in the United Kingdom and other countries.

“The opportunit­y to combine our land based-casinos, sports betting and online gaming in the U.S. is a truly exciting prospect,” Tom Reeg’s Caesars CEO said in a statement. “William Hill’s sports betting expertise will complement Caesars’ current offering.”

The private equity firm Apollo Global Management Inc. had also been interested in acquiring William Hill; it remains to be seen if the firm would be a potential purchaser for some of its European assets.

William Hill was founded in 1934 and grew to become a well-known name in the betting industry, particular­ly in England.

But its prospects darkened after 2018 when the British government sharply limited the amount that it and other bookmakers could charge on betting terminals, and William Hill turned its attention to the U.S., where legal sports betting was in its infancy following a Supreme Court ruling allowing individual states to legalize it in a case brought by New Jersey.

“The William Hill board believes this is the best option for William Hill at an attractive price for shareholde­rs,” company chairman Roger Devlin said in a statement. “It recognizes the significan­t progress the William Hill Group has made over the last 18 months, as well as the risk and significan­t investment required to maximize the U.S. opportunit­y given intense competitio­n in the U.S. and the potential for regulatory disruption in the U.K. and Europe.”

Before the sale was announced, the companies had been drawing closer, agreeing on a joint venture in which Caesars owns 20% of William Hill’s U.S. business in return for the right to offer sports betting at the more than 50 casinos Caesars runs in the U.S.

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