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Playtech Shareholders Reject $2.8bn Aristocrat Takeover

Australian gaming firm Aristocrat needed approval from 75% Playtech shareholders, but less than 55% of votes were cast in favour of deal


Playtech
Playtech's share price rose 5% by 1348 GMT after the London-listed company said it was considering other approaches, without elaborating. Photo: Reuters.

 

Aristocrat Leisure‘s bid for gambling software company Playtech fell through on Wednesday after the British firm’s shareholders rejected the 2.1 billion pound ($2.84 billion) offer.

Australian gaming company Aristocrat had needed approval from 75% of Playtech shareholders at Wednesday’s meeting, but less than 55% of votes were cast in favour of the deal.

Playtech’s share price rose 5% after the London-listed company said it was considering other approaches, without elaborating.

Sky News reported on Wednesday that the British online gambling firm could receive a bid from TT Bond Partners, a Hong Kong-based investment firm.

TT Bond had advised on an earlier bid for Playtech from Gopher Investments, but Playtech’s board has granted a request to release TT Bond from restrictions preventing it from tabling a further offer, the report said.

Playtech declined to comment on the Sky News report, while TT Bond did not immediately respond.

 

Brisk Deals In Gaming Sector

Merger and acquisition business in the gambling sector has been brisk since the onset of the Covid-19 pandemic, with lockdowns boosting the popularity of online gambling.

Many of the takeover targets have been UK bookmakers, with suitors looking to acquire British expertise in the field. Ladbrokes-owner Entain has staved off two approaches from US rivals in the past year.

Playtech sparked interest from multiple players last year. It was approached by Hong Kong-based investor Gopher, its No.2 shareholder, and JKO Play consortium, led by former Formula One team boss Eddie Jordan.

JKO had planned to sell Playtech’s Italian business to Entain before Jordan withdrew in January, the Financial Times reported.

Analysts at brokerage Peel Hunt turned bullish on Playtech’s stock after the company pointed to other M&A proposals, upgrading it to “buy” from “add” and raising its price target to 700 pence, above Aristocrat’s offer of 680 pence per share.

 

‘Blocking Stake’

“The emergence of a certain group of shareholders who built a blocking stake while refusing to engage with either ourselves or Playtech materially impacted the prospects for the success of our offer,” Aristocrat chief executive Trevor Croker said in a statement before the voting results were announced.

Aristocrat, which will not be able to make another Playtech bid for six months under UK takeover rules, said that most of the dissenting shareholders took stakes in the company after its offer was announced in October.

It had previously asked Britain’s takeover regulator to rule whether a group of Asian investors who bought large stakes were acting as a concert party in a potential breach of takeover rules, Sky News reported in December.

Among investors that took stakes in Playtech after the offer announcement are Hong Kong-based Paul Suen, part owner of English soccer club Birmingham City, and Stanley Choi, regulatory filings show.

The two are among Playtech’s top 10 shareholders. They could not be reached for immediate comment.

 

  • Reuters with additional editing by Sean O’Meara

 

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Sean O'Meara

Sean O'Meara is an Editor at Asia Financial. He has been a newspaper man for more than 30 years, working at local, regional and national titles in the UK as a writer, sub-editor, page designer and print editor. A football, cricket and rugby fan, he has a particular interest in sports finance.

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