PartyGaming
Considering Empire Poker Purchase
PartyGaming, operator of online poker giant, Party Poker,
have announced that it is considering buying former partner/rival,
Empire Poker. Empire used to be a “skin” of Party
Poker, meaning that a customer could signup to play at Empire,
but it would actually be playing on a bigger network, comprised
of Party, Empire, and other skin rooms. Party Poker supplied
the virtual tables, Empire supplied the customers (of course,
people could sign up directly with Party Poker, instead).
At the tables, you could be playing with Empire or Party customers,
but you would never know the difference. All the while, Party
made money from every customer, regardless of whether or not
they signed up directly or through a skin, and Empire received
a cut of the revenue from the players that it actually acquired
itself.
This helped Party Poker become the largest poker room on
the internet. The problem was, the skin sites began offering
better and better incentives to attract customers, resulting
in customers signing up with the skins instead of with Party
Poker. While the skins still helped Party, Party wanted the
customers all to itself.
So, in October, Party Poker cut off all the skins, severely
reducing their customer base. Because the more serious players
tended to play through the skin sites because of the incentives,
they found themselves at tables with higher concentrations
of skilled players, which is a decidedly unprofitable situation
for any poker player.
Because of the loss of players, Empire warned that its financial
results would not be as strong as previously expected, causing
its stock price to tumble. On top of that, Sportingbet, owner
of rival Paradise Poker, had been looking to buy Empire Poker
in September, but was essentially blocked because Empire’s
contracts with Party were too strong. All of this, plus PartyGaming’s
comments about an industry slowdown, has resulted in Empire
shares at a level 60 percent lower than they were just two
months ago.
Now Empire is entirely affordable for PartyGaming to purchase.
Reports are placing a 140p price per share on the buyout,
half of what Sportingbet was offering. Funny how that works,
huh?
Keep in mind that the split from the skins also hurt Party’s
customer base, taking it from the far and away leader in the
internet poker space to virtually in a dead heat with PokerStars.
This purchase would not only add about $100 million in assets
to PartyGaming, but inject its table with thousands of players
once again.
Of the potential buyout, PartyGaming has said:
"Any offer proposal would depend upon, in particular,
PartyGaming being satisfied as to a number of material pre-conditions,
including due diligence and the prospects for Empire's business."
Hopefully for Empire, this will work out. If Party’s
due diligence results in the company not wanting to purchase
Empire, that would not bode will for its share price.
Empire Online’s (EOL.L) shares were up 4.15 percent
on the news, while PartyGaming’s (PRTY.L) were up one
quarter of a percent. |