To: Rarebird who wrote (226) | 8/28/2021 4:10:42 AM | From: Glenn Petersen | | | Still early days. The ultimate promotional tie up:
ESPN Explores Sports-Betting Deal Worth at Least $3 Billion
Sports-media giant has held talks to license its brand to sportsbooks including Caesars Entertainment and DraftKings
By Cara Lombardo and Benjamin Mullin Wall Street Journal Aug. 27, 2021 2:46 pm ET
Walt Disney Co. DIS 2.03% ’s ESPN is seeking to license its brand to major sports-betting companies for at least $3 billion over several years, according to people familiar with the matter, aiming to capitalize on the fast-growing online gambling industry.
The sports-media giant has held talks with players that own major sportsbooks, including casino operator Caesars Entertainment Inc. CZR 4.25% and online gambling company DraftKings Inc., DKNG 3.72% the people said. ESPN has existing marketing partnerships with both companies.
On offer is the right for a suitor to use the ESPN name for branding purposes and potentially rename its sportsbook after the leading sports TV network in the U.S., the people said. A deal could come with an exclusive marketing commitment that would require the sports-betting firm to spend a certain amount of money advertising on ESPN’s platforms, one of the people said.
There is no guarantee ESPN will reach a deal. It remains to be seen whether gaming companies have an appetite to pay for the ESPN name when they are already investing to establish their existing brands.
ESPN has been cautious about entering the sports-betting arena. It has struck partnerships to integrate odds and betting-related content into some of its shows, and has podcasts and telecasts dedicated to gambling, i ncluding “Daily Wager.” But executives have said they want the company to avoid being directly involved in gambling transactions.
A brand-licensing deal would allow ESPN to profit from the boom in sports gambling without taking bets and making payouts to winners, which requires licenses in individual states.
Sports-betting is on track to generate revenue of about $4 billion in the U.S. in 2021, said Chris Grove, a gambling-industry analyst at research firm Eilers & Krejcik Gaming. The industry has grown since a 2018 Supreme Court decision cleared the way for states other than Nevada to legalize sports betting. Now, 32 states and the District of Columbia have legalized wagering on sports.
The major players in the online sports-betting industry include DraftKings, FanDuel and BetMGM. There has been a flurry of deals in the industry and investors have been piling into companies with the potential to be major players.
DraftKings went public last year through a transaction with a blank-check company and a merger with a small gambling-technology provider simultaneously. Penn National Gaming Inc. in early 2020 took a significant stake in closely held Barstool Sports Inc. in a deal that gave it exclusive rights to use the media company’s brand in its sports-betting products.
Caesars launched a new Caesars Sportsbook betting app this month after completing its acquisition of British sports-betting giant William Hill PLC for $4 billion.
In January, MGM Resorts International sought to buy British gambling company Entain PLC but was rebuffed and later backed away from the proposal. The two companies are partners in BetMGM.
ESPN has been the dominant sports-media player for decades and a growth engine for Disney, having profited handsomely off the growth of cable television. The erosion of the cable TV market, as consumers cut the cord and switch over to streaming, is pressuring ESPN along with all other major networks.
Disney has made a major push into the streaming market with its flagship direct-to-consumer streaming platform, Disney+, which Chief Executive Bob Chapek has said is the company’s top priority. The company has also pushed an ESPN+ streaming service, which carries some sporting events along with documentaries and other original programming.
The entertainment giant suffered in the pandemic last year, as movie theaters closed and its theme parks shut. Earlier this month Disney posted sales for the quarter ended July 3 of $17 billion, up 45% from the year-ago quarter. The results were helped by a strong rebound in visitors to its reopened parks, but were still below the $20.2 billion in revenue in the year-earlier period.
Disney+ subscriber numbers beat estimates, reaching 116 million, up from 103.6 million in the previous quarter. ESPN+ also surged, reporting nearly 15 million subscribers, up 75% from the same period last year.
Sports-betting companies have been pouring money into promotional campaigns for their brands.
For the first time, the National Football League is allowing sports-betting companies to buy ads during games this season, limiting ads to six spots a game, and only for seven authorized gambling companies. Those include the NFL’s three official sports-betting partners, Caesars, DraftKings and FanDuel. The NFL has also approved BetMGM, WynnBET, PointsBet and Fox Corp.’s Fox Bet for advertising.
Beyond ESPN, many other media companies have looked for ways to integrate sports wagering content onto their platforms or strike partnerships to enter the sector.
Fox Corp. has launched Fox Bet, looking to compete directly with DraftKings and FanDuel. The platform is powered by online sports-betting firm Stars Group, in which Fox owns a 4.99% stake.
CBS Sports last year struck a partnership deal with William Hill to use the gambling company’s data on its websites and in its programming. Earlier this year, internet TV provider FuboTV Inc. bought an online sportsbook, which it plans to integrate into its TV platform.
Sinclair Broadcast Group Inc., the largest owner of regional sports networks, has partnered with casino operator Bally’s Corp. The deal included rebranding the sports networks as Bally’s Sports and integrating gambling content on Sinclair platforms. Bally’s is paying Sinclair $88 million over 10 years for the naming rights.
—Katherine Sayre and Lillian Rizzo contributed to this article.
Write to Cara Lombardo at cara.lombardo@wsj.com and Benjamin Mullin at Benjamin.Mullin@wsj.com
Copyright ©2021 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. All Rights Reserved. 87990cbe856818d5eddac44c7b1cdeb8
Appeared in the August 28, 2021, print edition as 'ESPN Seeks $3 Billion Sports-Betting Tie-In.'
ESPN Explores Sports-Betting Deal Worth at Least $3 Billion - WSJ |
| DraftKings, Inc. / Online Gambling | Stock Discussion ForumsShare | RecommendKeepReplyMark as Last Read |
|
From: Glenn Petersen | 9/21/2021 10:34:02 AM | | | | DraftKings makes $20 billion offer for UK sports betting company Entain, sources say
PUBLISHED TUE, SEP 21 20219:46 AM EDT UPDATED 1 MIN AGO Hannah Miao @HANNAHMIAO_ CNBC.cpm KEY POINTS
-- DraftKings is making a $20 billion offer to acquire U.K. online sports betting company Entain, people familiar with the matter told CNBC’s David Faber.
-- On Monday, before news of the deal, the enterprise value of Entain was about 13.2 billion pounds, or $18 billion.
-- Entain rejected an all-stock offer from MGM Resorts earlier this year worth $11 billion at the time.

Omar Marques | LightRocket | Getty Images -------------------------------------
DraftKings is making a $20 billion offer to acquire U.K. online sports betting company Entain, people familiar with the matter told CNBC’s David Faber on Tuesday.
The offer is largely in DraftKings stock, along with cash, according to the sources.
Entain shares jumped more than 15% in London trading after the news.
On Monday, before news of the deal, the enterprise value of Entain was about 13.2 billion pounds, or $18 billion.
The U.K. gaming company rejected an all-stock offer from MGM Resorts earlier this year worth $11 billion at the time. Entain said the deal significantly undervalued the company.
MGM and Entain maintain an online sports betting partnership in the U.S. called BetMGM.
DraftKings and Entain spokespeople have not returned CNBC’s requests for comment.
Entain’s brands include U.K. poker and gambling companies Coral, Ladbrokes and PartyPoker.
DraftKings went public via a reverse merger with a special-purpose acquisition company in 2020. The online gaming giant operates fantasy sports contests and sports betting.
cnbc.com |
| DraftKings, Inc. / Online Gambling | Stock Discussion ForumsShare | RecommendKeepReplyMark as Last ReadRead Replies (2) |
|
To: Glenn Petersen who wrote (228) | 9/21/2021 11:32:36 AM | From: Glenn Petersen | | | More analysis:
WHAT WE KNOW ABOUT DRAFTKINGS’ REPORTED $20 BILLION BID FOR ENTAIN
Posted on September 21, 2021 by Brad Allen Legal Sports Report
This is a developing story and will be updated.
DraftKings has proposed a $20 billion takeover of Entain, the UK company confirmed Tuesday.
The bid was first reported by CNBC’s David Faber.
Entain said it had indeed received a “proposal” from DraftKings, to acquire it for cash and stock.
However it said there was “no certainty” a formal offer would be made.
“A further announcement will be made as and when appropriate,” Entain said in a statement. “Shareholders are urged to take no action at this time.”
What we know so far about DraftKings bid for EntainThe “roughly $20 billion” price tag marked around a 30% premium to Entain’s share price as of Tuesday morning.
The price also represented a circa 18x multiple on Entain’s trailing 12-month EBITDA.
What’s in it for DraftKings?
As Faber noted, it makes sense for DraftKings to acquire aggressively with its stock so richly valued.
It could also potentially benefit from valuation arbitrage. That is, Entain’s revenues might command a higher multiple on the US stock market than in the UK.
Online gambling expertise
DK also gains access to the online gambling expertise embedded in the Entain business.
That experience is arguably one of the key edges BetMGM and FanDuel currently have over DraftKings.
Entain, while known for sporting brands like Ladbrokes and Coral, is now more of an online casino leader, according to Eilers & Krejcik analyst Alun Bowden.
DraftKings could certainly use more of that expertise in-house, even after acquiring Golden Nugget Online Gaming.
What happens to BetMGM?
Entain owns half of BetMGM, alongside MGM. It also provides the online betting and gaming technology to the joint venture.
Would MGM allow a key rival to own half of its US sports betting business. Or could it buy out BetMGM?
That might make sense if DraftKings is simply after the Entain revenues and talent rather than the technology. DraftKings already own proprietary sports betting tech.
In that case, DraftKings could take a leaf out of the Caesars/William Hill playbook and sell off some assets it does not want. Entain is a sprawling operation with gambling licenses in 27 countries, and 24,000 staff across five continents.
Defensive acquisition?
Eilers & Krejcik analyst Chris Grove suggested DraftKings was making a defensive play.
“[This] feels like a blocker bet,” Grove wrote. “Tons of value destruction if you’re DK. But you probably get a nice rebate selling the JV interest back to MGM. Regardless of what anything thinks, you have to admire the sheer audacity and the fact that DK is in the position to make this offer at all.”
Recall, MGM tried to buy Entain earlier this year for around $11 billion, but Entain said that bid “dramatically undervalued” it.
It has been proven spectacularly correct.
How the market reacted
Entain’s share price was last up 16.6% to 2,240p. That’s a fraction below the reported 2,500p offer price.
DraftKings stock was down 4% to $54.64.
Representatives from DraftKings had not returned requests for comment at time of writing.
What We Know About DraftKings' Reported $20 Billion Bid For Entain (legalsportsreport.com) |
| DraftKings, Inc. / Online Gambling | Stock Discussion ForumsShare | RecommendKeepReplyMark as Last ReadRead Replies (1) |
|
From: Glenn Petersen | 9/22/2021 7:54:00 AM | | | | FanDuel Parlays Fantasy Sports Into a $1.9 Billion Betting Boom
The company has converted a rabid fantasy fan base into a lucrative clientele for its U.S. sports-betting business.
By Christopher Palmen Bloomberg September 21, 2021, 5:00 AM CDT Photographer: Shawn Michael Jones for Bloomberg Businessweek ------------------------
Greg Bunnell has played fantasy football since he was a teenager. So when Indiana legalized sports betting two years ago, the 39-year-old project manager seamlessly switched from plotting his next player transfer to setting himself up to bet—all within the FanDuel app. Bunnell, who says he plans to wager as much as $100 a weekend, is one of a record 45 million Americans expected to legally bet on professional football this season, a 36% increase from last year. Thirty states are set to allow such wagering by the Super Bowl’s coin toss in February, following a U.S. Supreme Court decision three years ago to strike down a federal ban on sports betting.
FanDuel Group Inc. has emerged as the top business in this new market, nabbing a 42% share of U.S. sports wagers in June, up from 35% only two months earlier, according to estimates from research company Eilers & Krejcik Gaming LLC. It’s a meteoric rise for FanDuel, whose nearest competitor, DraftKings Inc., has a 23% share of the market. The two were neck and neck in the business of daily fantasy sports contests before FanDuel was acquired only a week after the court ruling by an Irish bookmaker in Dublin, now known as Flutter Entertainment Plc.
“We’ve got momentum, and we have a huge amount of revenue,” says Peter Jackson, Flutter’s chief executive officer. “A lot of other people are almost in startup mode.” Flutter, whose name is British slang for a bet, was formed after the merger of Paddy Power and Betfair, two of the U.K.’s largest betting brands. It owns 600 betting shops in Ireland and the U.K. and offers online wagering in many countries. Jackson, 45, had been CEO for just months when he pounced on FanDuel, spotting an opportunity to grab a piece of the nascent American market. The Cambridge-educated engineer bought a majority stake for $158 million in cash plus the contribution of Flutter’s U.S. assets, which included the horse betting business TVG.
Founded in 2009 by five friends who knew next to nothing about American football, FanDuel helped pioneer the business of daily fantasy sports, where contestants pick a dream lineup of real players and compete to win a pot of money based on their team’s performance in a single day or week, rather than over an entire season.

Customers place bets through FanDuel during Super Bowl LIII on Feb. 3, 2019, in East Rutherford, N.J. Photographer: Eduardo Munoz/Reuters ----------------------------
The company’s millions of fantasy sports customers turned into a gold mine after it began offering more traditional sports bets, such as, say, whether the Tampa Bay Buccaneers will beat the Los Angeles Rams on Sunday. About 40% of FanDuel’s sports-betting customers come from its daily fantasy business, a database that now includes 13 million names.
Soon after the acquisition and court ruling, Flutter tapped connections in horse racing to open a FanDuel sportsbook at New Jersey’s Meadowlands Racetrack in July 2018. That position, in the heavily populated northern part of the state, gave the company a significant advantage, as New Jersey took an early lead fostering the new era of sports wagers.
Flutter’s experience with online betting overseas also gave it a leg up. FanDuel was able to introduce products such as same-game parlays, which allow customers to bet on multiple teams or events—whether the Patriots will win the game and if rookie quarterback Mac Jones will score the first touchdown, for example. These wagers proved particularly popular in Australia, where Flutter developed the product, and more than half of FanDuel’s customers used the product last football season.
Such bets are harder to win, meaning the company keeps a larger chunk of wagers and can out-earn rivals, says James Kilsby, a vice president at research company Vixio GamblingCompliance. “You’re betting on two contingencies,” he says. “That’s really helped to grow its market share.” Customers like these bets because the potential payoff is greater, and rivals are now introducing their own expanded selections of parlays after a slower start. FanDuel and other companies attempt to manage their risk by balancing bets on a certain outcome with bets against that outcome.

FanDuel’s U.K. offices in Edinburgh. Photographer: Chris Ratcliffe/Bloomberg ------------------------------------
Flutter’s U.S. revenue, mostly from FanDuel, is expected to more than double, to $1.9 billion, this year, according to analysts’ estimates compiled by Bloomberg. The higher the revenue, the more the company can spend on marketing to acquire customers, Jackson says. He projects that the U.S. business will be profitable by 2023. The FanDuel brand will be a frequent sight on TV this football season. The company hired Wieden+Kennedy, the ad agency behind Nike Inc.’s “Just Do It” campaign, and has rolled out a series of commercials featuring golfer Jordan Spieth. Flutter spent $300 million marketing the FanDuel brand in the first half of this year, more than in all of 2020.
Still, FanDuel’s success has come with some acrimony. The company’s founders and some employees have sued FanDuel and several of its early financial backers, claiming they got cheated when those investors sold FanDuel to Flutter. FanDuel says the suit is without merit. Fox Corp. is in arbitration with Flutter about how to fairly value FanDuel, after acquiring an option to buy 18.6% of the business when Flutter bought Fox’s betting partner, Stars Group.
In spite of all that, Jackson, who cheers for his hometown Leeds United Football Club, isn’t above trash-talking his competitors. “We’re operating in a completely different level to anyone else in the U.S.,” he says. BOTTOM LINE - FanDuel has parlayed its fantasy fan base into a lucrative clientele for its sports-betting business, thanks to a canny acquisition by a storied Irish bookmaker.
How FanDuel Gained More Fantasy Sports Gamblers Than DraftKings (DKNG) - Bloomberg |
| DraftKings, Inc. / Online Gambling | Stock Discussion ForumsShare | RecommendKeepReplyMark as Last Read |
|
From: Glenn Petersen | 9/23/2021 4:39:58 AM | | | | DISNEY CEO: ESPN READY TO TAKE ‘MAJOR STEPS’ ON SPORTS BETTING
Posted on September 22, 2021 by Brad Allen Legal Sports Report
It is no secret that ESPN is kicking the tires on sports betting.
Media outlets like the Wall Street Journal and Front Office Sports have speculated about the company’s plans for the sector, whether that be a licensing deal or M&A.
But the company itself has been relatively tight-lipped on its plans — that is, until Disney CEO Bob Chapek clarified a few things at an investor conference Tuesday.
How does ESPN get into sports betting?
Goldman Sachs analyst Bret Feldman asked Chapek about ESPN’s plans for US sports betting.
Specifically, Feldman asked whether ESPN might just license its name to an operator, as the WSJ reported, or go further and “embed [betting] into the ESPN business model.”
Chapek suggested the answer was somewhere in-between.
“There’s a long way between embedded into the ESPN business model and licensing the name out,” he said.
“Let’s just say our fans are really interested in sports betting. Let’s say our partners in the leagues are interested in sports betting, so we’re interested in sports betting. Strategically, sports betting gives us the ability to appeal to a much younger sports fan who has a very strong affinity for those sports. So it’s definitely a place we want to be.”
Chapek added that the company was getting “more and more aggressive” in pursuing sports betting partnerships.
“It is not something that we would do necessarily solo in the gambling area,” Chapek said.
0ho will partner with ESPN?
ESPN has been linked with Rush Street Interactive as a potential betting partner by both the Action Network and analyst firm Eilers & Krejcik.
Eilers said in a recent note:
“There’s logic to a [deal between the two]. BetRivers has struggled to make a dent in markets where it doesn’t have a big retail casino gaming presence and ESPNBet would surely change that.”
However, a partnership between those two would still be missing the all-important sportsbook technology piece.
Chapek did not give specifics on partners but added that ESPN was “starting to take some pretty big steps along that way.”
How would ESPN Sportsbook fare?
As LSR noted back in July, there is no guarantee an ESPN Sportsbook would be a success.
The company has a hugely valuable brand and customer database. But those users do not already have funded wallets like those at FanDuel and DraftKings.
The jury is still out on the media/operator model in general. Companies like theScore and Fox Bet have delivered somewhat underwhelming returns to date.
ESPN Is Ready For 'Major Steps' On Sports Betting: Disney CEO (legalsportsreport.com) |
| DraftKings, Inc. / Online Gambling | Stock Discussion ForumsShare | RecommendKeepReplyMark as Last Read |
|
To: Glenn Petersen who wrote (228) | 10/13/2021 4:21:36 AM | From: Glenn Petersen | | | DOES BETMGM GROWTH CHANGE CALCULUS FOR ENTAIN DEAL WITH DRAFTKINGS?
Posted on October 12, 2021 by Brad Allen Legal Sports Report
BetMGM is at the center of the three-way M&A tussle between DraftKings, Entain and MGM Resorts.
While that situation is being untangled, the joint venture keeps on proving its worth.
BetMGM delivered Q3 revenues of more than $200 million, according to Entain’s Q3 results. That was good for a? 26% share of markets where BetMGM is live, up from 24% in Q2.
For comparison, DraftKings expects to generate around $230 million in total Q3 revenues.
BetMGM a top contender?
Entain’s CEO sees evidence of BetMGM approaching top status.
“Just looking at the month of August in isolation, we can see that BetMGM is now number one in the markets in which we operate,” said Entain CEO Jette Nygaard-Andersen.
“And we can see we are clearly starting to challenge for the number one market position nationwide.”
Igaming powered BetMGM growth
It’s important to note BetMGM’s total share is boosted by online casino. It is the largest igaming operator across the US with a 32% share.
That edge is especially inflated in Q3 thanks to the relative lack of sports. BetMGM is still third in sports betting revenues per state-by-state data.
Michigan is perhaps reflective of the overall picture. BetMGM had a 40% share of online gaming revenues, and a 23% share of online sports betting handle in August.
That was third behind DraftKings and FanDuel. BetMGM was also heavy on marketing spend.
Other notes from Entain call
-- Arizona sports betting is already BetMGM’s largest state in term of active players. That is likely buoyed by citizens from other states crossing the border to bet.
-- The initial bonusing frenzy around the start of the NFL season has calmed down. “We see the promotional environment normalizing,” Nygaard-Andersen said. “And as we always say, the best products will be the winners.
-- ”She said lifetime player values were still “looking good.”
-- No news on DraftKings bid
-- The CEO also refused to take any questions on DraftKings’ $22 billion bid for Entain.
“As flagged, we are now carefully considering the proposal,” Nygaard-Andersen said. “That includes a number of matters, including structure and value and then we’ll come back to the market as and when appropriate.”
A key part of those negotiations will be the fate of BetMGM. MGM has said it wants full control of the JV and can kill the takeover if it doesn’t get it.
Analysts at Regulus Partners said Entain might be wise to sell its share to MGM now while business is booming and the relationship is “amicable.”
Shore Capital pegged BetMGM at around an $11 billion valuation.
Does BetMGM Growth Change Calculus For Entain Deal With DraftKings? (legalsportsreport.com) |
| DraftKings, Inc. / Online Gambling | Stock Discussion ForumsShare | RecommendKeepReplyMark as Last ReadRead Replies (1) |
|
To: Glenn Petersen who wrote (232) | 10/13/2021 10:17:35 AM | From: Glenn Petersen | | | DraftKings stock jumps after deal with NHL to be an official sports betting, fantasy partner
Published: Oct. 13, 2021 at 9:47 a.m. ET By Tomi Kilgore MarketWatch
Shares of DraftKings Inc. DKNG, 1.68% rallied 2.4% in morning trading Wednesday, after the digital sports entertainment and gaming company announced a deal with the National Hockey League to be an official sports betting, daily fantasy sports and iGaming partner. In addition, DraftKings also announced a deal with Turner Sports, including Bleacher Report, to be the exclusive sportsbook and daily fantasy sports provider for their NHL coverage. "The NHL has some of the most passionate fans in all of sports and we are delighted to be working with the league once again, while developing a rich and engaging viewership and content experience that matches this fanbases' enthusiasm through our deal with Turner," said DraftKings Chief Executive Jason Robins. The stock has tacked on 5.0% over the past three months, while the S&P 500 SPX, -0.41% has slipped 0.3%.
DraftKings stock jumps after deal with NHL to be an official sports betting, fantasy partner - MarketWatch |
| DraftKings, Inc. / Online Gambling | Stock Discussion ForumsShare | RecommendKeepReplyMark as Last Read |
|
From: Glenn Petersen | 10/24/2021 6:49:47 AM | | | | OT, but interesting:
Kalshi: Kalshi
Trade on what matters to you
Kalshi enables you to trade directly on the outcome of events. We've built a new financial exchange for you to trade on your opinion and hedge everyday risks. -----------------------------
This Sequoia- and Henry Kravis-backed prediction market wants to turn opinions into money
Connie Loizos @cookie TechCrunch 11:21 PM CDT•August 30, 2021
More than 15 years ago, the Philadelphia Stock Exchange, which was acquired by Nasdaq in 2008, and another since-sold exchange called HedgeStreet, both announced they intended to offer something called event contracts to investors. The idea was to allow people to bet “yes” or “no” on questions about future events that were structured as all-or-nothing options, and to pay a fixed amount when an outcome either occurred or did not.
At the time, it was a novel but controversial idea; it also failed to generate enough interest from investors to succeed. Now, Kalshi, a young, New York-based, 33-person startup is testing the waters anew and it’s doing so with the help of some heavyweight investors that include Sequoia Capital, Henry Kravis, Charles Schwab and SV Angel that have collectively provided the company with $36 million in funding to date.
Their enthusiasm ties in part to a major hurdle that Kalshi — founded by former MIT classmates and researchers Tarek Mansour and Luana Lopes Lara — overcame last year by winning approval from the Commodity Futures Trading Commission to run a derivatives exchange.
Mansour says Kalshi’s small team worked closely with the agency at every turn to ensure it would pass muster. “This was quite the process, as the more problems you face, the more problems emerge,” he says now of the endeavor. (Bringing aboard a former head of clearing at the CFTC as Kalshi’s head of regulation definitely helped, he says.)
Kalshi is also emerging during a time when people are consuming more, and sometimes narrower, news stories through their social media feeds and elsewhere.
That matters, suggests Lopes Lara, because the “contracts are pretty much tied to news and things that are going on in the world and relevant in the world right now.” Indeed, though a tie-up with a social media platform would probably be ideal, one way the startup is getting in front of information junkies is advertising on the question-and-answer site Quora. (Other, more “partnership-based” tie-ups are coming, add the founders.)
Kalshi’s mission in the meantime is to prove it can entice a new generation of traders — both retail and institutional, accredited and unaccredited — to bet on all kinds of possible outcomes, like whether Turkey will join the European Union by June of next year, which is one contract on the platform currently.
Kalshi — which has a clearinghouse partner that holds the funds from all users to ensure that every contract is collateralized — is seeing some traction. Since launching in late spring, the platform has attracted 4,000 users who have agreed to its “yes” or “no” contracts and that pay either 100% if an investor bets correctly and zilch if the investor bets wrong. It’s a respectable but conservative amount of users.
The founders suggest things will begin to pick up at a faster clip this fall, given that Kalshi has a “few avenues for acquiring users and growing our user base,” says Mansour.
One if these is the consumer product that people have so far been experimenting with and which is available to anyone who wants to enter into a contract at its website.
More impactful, potentially, Kalshi also has “a few brokers that we’re going to partner with … to allow people to trade event contracts the same way they trade stocks, or commodities, or options on their preferred brokerage app,” says Mansour, adding that “by brokers, I mean the Fidelities and Charles Schwabs of the world.”
Adds Lopes Lara, “People who use Robinhood or Coinbase or other brokers are our first target, given how much they already understand about investing and are interested in these types of questions and event-based thinking for their investments.”
What interested parties should know not to expect are event contracts around sports outcomes (“That’s very much like gambling, and we don’t [facilitate] that,” says Lopes Lara.)
Owing to federal regulations, certain other areas are also very much off limits, including events contracts tied to geopolitical events, like whether a war will breakout, and most contracts regarding people in political positions of power are also not allowed. (For example, though users might be tempted to bet on whether California Governor Gavin Newsom will be recalled in September, they’d have to drum up that action elsewhere.)
As for what happens if Kalshi takes off and other brokerages or other large financial institutions attempt to create their own event contract offerings, Mansour insists that it wouldn’t be so easy for them. “A lot of the work that we’ve done over the last two-and-a-half years is [intellectual property]. Every single detail of operations was built for event contracts. It would take a bit of time — especially for some of these bigger institutions — to really get into the space.”
Other investors in Kalshi include Y Combinator and Tinder co-founder Justin Mateen.
Alfred Lin of Sequoia Capital sits on the company’s board.
This Sequoia- and Henry Kravis-backed prediction market wants to turn opinions into money | TechCrunch |
| DraftKings, Inc. / Online Gambling | Stock Discussion ForumsShare | RecommendKeepReplyMark as Last Read |
|
To: Glenn Petersen who wrote (229) | 10/27/2021 6:45:04 AM | From: Glenn Petersen | | | NO DEAL FOR DRAFTKINGS AND ENTAIN AS TALKS TERMINATED
Posted on October 26, 2021 by Brad Allen Legal Sports Report
DraftKings will not be buying international gaming company Entain.
DraftKings issued a statement Tuesday morning saying it would not make a firm takeover offer following “further discussions” with Entain.
The Nasdaq-listed operator said it was confident in its outlook without the deal.
A statement read: “Based on our vertically-integrated technology stack, best-in-class product and technology capabilities and leading brand, we are highly confident in our ability to maintain a leadership position and achieve our long-term growth plans in the rapidly growing North America market.”
How the market reacted to DraftKings/Entain news
DraftKings stock was last up 8% in pre-market trading to $50.40 on the news.
The stock had fallen more than 20% from when the deal was first reported.
Some of that downturn could be attributed to dilution risk. If DraftKings issued vast amounts of new stock to pay Entain shareholders, existing shares would therefore be worth less.
Jefferies said in a note the decision was positive for $DKNG stock. But it also posed some lingering questions about its SBTech technology \ On the flip side, Entain shares were down 11% on the London Stock Exchange on Tuesday.
Under UK takeover rules, DraftKings cannot revisit the talks for at least six months.
Enter MGM?
Getting the $22 billion deal over the line always looked like an uphill battle thanks to Entain’s 50% stake in BetMGM.
Co-owner MGM Resorts had warned it would kill the deal unless it obtained full control over BetMGM, including the Entain technology that powered it.
However, DraftKings was presumably reluctant to hand that control and technology over to a key rival.
MGM could theoretically now make a renewed bid to buy out BetMGM or Entain. The casino giant already tried to buy Entain earlier this year, albeit at around half the price of the DraftKings bid.
Extra time to no avail
Entain and DraftKings were given extra time to hammer out details of their deal earlier in October.
The UK company made clear in that release it was quite happy to continue without a takeover.
Entain added in a statement on Tuesday:
“The Board strongly believes in the future prospects of Entain, underpinned by its leading market positions, world-class management team and industry-leading proprietary technology.
“The Board is confident in Entain’s ability to continue to deliver material value for its shareholders going forward.”
No Deal For DraftKings And Entain As Talks Terminated (legalsportsreport.com) |
| DraftKings, Inc. / Online Gambling | Stock Discussion ForumsShare | RecommendKeepReplyMark as Last Read |
|
| |