The Scottish Mail on Sunday

Odds are looking good as gambling firm mulls sale

- Contributo­r: William Turvill jamie.nimmo @mailonsund­ay.co.uk Edited by Jamie Nimmo

THE three words ‘formal sale process’ set alarm bells ringing for shareholde­rs. And rightly so. It usually means it’s all going wrong and the company has launched a fire sale.

GAN, the internet gambling software firm that has a tie-up with Paddy Power Betfair in America, said those dreaded words on Friday and it sent shareholde­rs into a selling frenzy.

The company said it was looking at all its options, including a sale, a move to a US stock exchange or finding a strategic investor (another betting company).

The Aim-listed shares plunged as much as 17 per cent on the day – to as little as 40p – before clawing back some of the losses to finish 4 per cent lower at 49p.

But it might not be all doom and gloom for shareholde­rs.

My moles in the City tell me that Dermot Smurfit Jr, GAN’s chief executive and a member of the wealthy Smurfit family, is holding out for bids of around £1 a share, valuing the company at £80 million – virtually double Friday’s closing price.

That certainly wouldn’t be a bad deal for shareholde­rs at all.

IT’S crunch time for Metals Exploratio­n, the Philippine­s gold miner controlled by Nick Candy, the property tycoon known for his penchant for gold decor in his Knightsbri­dge apartments.

Candy will be working through the weekend with the Aim-listed company’s lenders to secure an agreement by Monday to delay debt repayments it is unable to meet. Without a deal, £34million would be due immediatel­y, which would force the company under.

An announceme­nt will be made ‘no later than’ 7am tomorrow, the company says.

So long-suffering shareholde­rs won’t have long to discover its fate.

BOSSES old and new of trendy clothes brand Superdry risk losing their cool this week as they prepare for a heated shareholde­r meeting.

Investors are due to vote on Tuesday on whether founder Julian Dunkerton – an outspoken backer of the Remain campaign – should be reinstated to the board.

As part of his ‘Save Superdry’ bid, Dunkerton, who was chief executive until 2015 and left the firm last year, wants to install Boohoo chairman Peter Williams as a nonexecuti­ve director. Dunkerton’s City support is building – but will he get the votes he needs to be home and dry?

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