The operator of the Las Vegas casino Caesars Palace has confirmed it is in “advanced discussions” about a possible £2.9bn takeover bid for the UK bookmaker William Hill.
Caesars Entertainment said it had offered 272p a share in cash after scrutinising the company’s books.
The US hotel and entertainment firm said the board of William Hill had indicated the “possible cash offer is at a price level that they would be minded to recommend to William Hill shareholders”.
Should a firm offer be made and receive the go-ahead from shareholders and anti-competition authorities, the deal would be expected to complete in the second half of next year, Caesars said.
Tom Reeg, the Caesars chief executive, said: “The opportunity to combine our land based-casinos, sports betting and online gaming in the US is a truly exciting prospect.
“William Hill’s sports betting expertise will complement Caesars’ current offering, enabling the combined group to better serve our customers in the fast-growing US sports betting and online market.”
William Hill declined to comment.
Shares in William Hill fell 12.9% to 272p in early trading on Monday after surging by more than 40% on Friday, when the gambling firm said it had received separate cash proposals from Caesars and the private-equity firm Apollo Management International, which is also in the running to buy the UK supermarket chain Asda from its US parent group, Walmart.
Caesars already has partnership deals with William Hill and its venues are run under the brands Caesars, Harrah’s, Horseshoe and Eldorado. It is best known for running the Caesars Palace hotel on the Las Vegas strip, famed for hosting performers such as Frank Sinatra, Judy Garland and Elton John, as well as top boxing matches.
Like its UK rivals, William Hill is expanding in the US market, where the supreme court reversed a decades-old ban on sports betting in 2018. It has been struggling in the UK, and recorded pretax losses in 2018 and 2019 after curbs on fixed-odds betting terminals were introduced.
William Hill has also been hit hard by the coronavirus pandemic, which forced bookmakers to close all their branches during the lockdown. The cancellation of big sports events around the world led to a collapse in betting activity.
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source https://cryptonews.wealthsharingsystems.com/2020/09/caesars-in-advanced-talks-on-2-9bn-william-hill-takeover-bid-business/
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