Scottish Daily Mail

Investors scupper £2bn Playtech deal

Gambling firm set for break-up after bid is snubbed

- By Calum Muirhead

THE future of gambling software group Playtech has been thrown into doubt after investors rejected a takeover bid from Australian suitors.

Just 54pc of shareholde­rs voted in favour of the £2.1bn offer by Aristocrat Leisure at a meeting yesterday, well below the 75pc needed for the deal to pass.

As a result, the 680p-per-share offer has lapsed.

The outcome followed a warning from Playtech earlier in the day that the takeover was unlikely to be approved.

The business, which develops software for online casinos and betting websites, was founded in 1999 by Israeli tech/property billionair­e Teddy Sagi.

It is considered by some to be a hidden gem inside the UK’s gambling sector, with giants including William Hill and Bet 365 among its customers.

With Aristocrat’s bid now dead in the water, Playtech is facing an uncertain future, with rumours swirling that another bidder could emerge or that the group will be broken up.

Firms thought to be interested include Hong Kong-based investment group TT Bond Partners, which advised on a previous bid for Playtech.

It has been released from restrictio­ns stopping it making an offer, clearing the way for a fresh approach in the coming days, Sky News reported late last night.

Another potential suitor is thought to be Ladbrokes owner Entain, as well as the previous Playtech bidders who may decide instead to bite off pieces of the company instead.

Speculatio­n was fuelled after the firm said it was ‘actively considerin­g’ other options if the takeover fell through and that it had already received ‘attractive’ proposals from third parties.

The debacle raises questions about the next move for a group of Asia-based investors who built up large stakes following the announceme­nt of Aristocrat’s bid in October last year.

The cohort, who own around 28pc of Playtech’s shares, include billionair­e heiress Karen Lo, Birmingham City Football Club owner Paul Suen and profession­al poker player Stanley Choi, as well as gaming tycoon Tang Hao.

While how each shareholde­r voted on the offer was not disclosed, it was previously speculated that they may have moved to block the takeover, potentiall­y with an eye to picking up parts of the business themselves.

The rejection follows a threeway takeover tussle over the company, which pitted Aristocrat against Playtech’s second-largest investor, Hong Kong-based Gopher Investment­s, and former Formula One motor racing team manager Eddie Jordan. Gopher quickly dropped out in mid-November and was followed out the door by Jordan’s consortium, JKO Play, in January.

Jordan planned to offer 750p a share for Playtech, valuing it at around £3bn. That was scrapped amid fears the Asia-based investors could block bids.

Despite the vote, Playtech’s shares rose 1.4pc, or 8p, to 585p. This was 14pc lower than the offer price but still 36pc higher than the stock’s value before Aristocrat’s bid was tabled.

Playtech boss Mor Weizer said it remained ‘in a strong position’ , and expected profits for 2021 to be ahead of previous forecasts.

Broker Peel Hunt upgraded the stock to ‘buy’ from ‘add’ and increased its target to 700p from 680p, above Aristocrat’s offer.

 ?? ??
 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom