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Share Name | Share Symbol | Market | Type | Share ISIN | Share Description |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Playtech Plc | LSE:PTEC | London | Ordinary Share | IM00B7S9G985 | ORD NPV |
Price Change | % Change | Share Price | Bid Price | Offer Price | High Price | Low Price | Open Price | Shares Traded | Last Trade | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
0.50 | 0.11% | 457.50 | 457.50 | 458.50 | 467.00 | 456.50 | 467.00 | 495,858 | 16:28:20 |
Industry Sector | Turnover | Profit | EPS - Basic | PE Ratio | Market Cap |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Prepackaged Software | 1.71B | 105.1M | 0.3458 | 16.69 | 1.75B |
Date | Subject | Author | Discuss |
---|---|---|---|
16/3/2018 11:00 | I was glancing through the major insti holdings to see if there was any unusual activity. Morgan Stanley trading a little, oscillating around 6% Rowe Price is the only interesting one - doubled its holding from 5% to over 10% on 1-March (reported via RNS on 6-March). It's not yet known where they got those ~150 million shares from. Prior to that, PAR Investments came out of nowhere to report 5% on 9-Feb Could someone be building support for a bid at these low levels? Or is it just a case of them recognising value. | nod | |
15/3/2018 13:29 | Can't see any reason for it and suspect it will bounce nicely | noujay | |
15/3/2018 11:51 | Surprising drop for some reason - still need more information | trentendboy | |
13/3/2018 14:52 | This is still opportunity territory for me, it's markedly undervalued at anything less then £8. IMO obviously. | noujay | |
08/3/2018 10:52 | Yes, me too. I've done a lot of google searches but can't find what behind this. I can't find who won the Poker Stars contract or did Poker stars take it in-house. Poker Stars lost many of their star poker players on contract renewal, so it may have been a PS money issue. I know diddly squat about Poker Stars these days. | nod | |
08/3/2018 10:21 | Interesting. Would like to know more on marvel and the poker stars issue | trentendboy | |
07/3/2018 21:07 | The problems in 2017 seem to be encapsulated in the following two paragraphs. The continuing anxiety may relate to these issues and whether they will result in further losses in business during 2018. There was very strong growth in some areas, such as mobile casino. "This performance was achieved despite 2017 being an unusual year for headwinds faced, with so many combining including currencyheadwinds as well as issues in H2 in Asia and the expected loss of Marvel, certain Mobenga contracts and the contract with Poker Starsfor Poker Strategy. At Adjusted EBITDA level, currency alone provided a 14m headwind with total EBITDA headwinds totalling 60m. As discussed above, the Sun Bingo contract generated a significant adjusted EBITDA loss due to the levels of minimum guaranteespayable to News UK. Playtech is in discussions with News UK following a thorough analysis of the issues encountered with the contract." | nod | |
07/3/2018 19:09 | Surprising selloffMust be something else | trentendboy | |
07/3/2018 18:39 | Thanks nod | noujay | |
07/3/2018 17:53 | Playtech supplies PPB with BGT Sports, Casino and as of this year Live Casino.PPB turnover up which is good for PTEC. | nod | |
07/3/2018 11:52 | this is normal market noise! | ricer93 | |
07/3/2018 11:07 | Is this down on PPBF results (not well received)? Do PTEC supply them? | noujay | |
07/3/2018 08:48 | Surely there should have been a corresponding RNS from whoever sold?? | argylerich | |
06/3/2018 19:50 | Interesting.Any Sagi selling is good news in terms of long term price action but he is good you have to give him that | trentendboy | |
06/3/2018 18:19 | T Rowe Price Associates Doubles Stake In Playtech to 10.21%Where have they got the shares from? Is it Sagi? | nod | |
06/3/2018 05:11 | This news article shows how complex the gaming business can be. I don't know how many companies are involved and six countries are mentioned. Playtech a key supplier.https://glo | nod | |
04/3/2018 09:23 | The established big players like PTEC and GVC are bound to be granted licences in regulated markets as they have all the systems in place for regulation and reporting to regulators. They have proven track records. The ones left standing will pick up the business of the culled operators. In countries where the State wants to monopolise the gambling market there will be only one or two preferred suppliers. However, in these countries its possible the unauthorised operators will continue as they are. | nod | |
04/3/2018 08:36 | Very interesting article.Who will be the winners and losers from the grey market collapse if indeed that is what happensGrey will be about for a while but smaller players will struggle I suspect.PTEC and GVC who now have scale should be left once it shakes out but how profitable is the question | trentendboy | |
04/3/2018 05:30 | Here's a recent update on Sweden, which has 1 January 2019 as R day. PTEC again well-placed to gain extra revenue as the unlicensed operators get culled. PTEC has three Swedish registered companies, Mobenga, Aristocrat, and Quickspin.http://egr | nod | |
04/3/2018 05:01 | The newly regulated Portugal and Poland are recent examples of where PTEC is very well-placed to win national contracts. In the case of Poland its an exclusive deal and also to provide services and marketing.https://ww | nod | |
03/3/2018 13:40 | regulation will prevent others entering the market and so playtech will take share with more regulation. all big business want regulation. | mozy123 | |
03/3/2018 06:52 | Only the big boys will have the resources and skills to navigate the highly regulated landscapeMargins may hold up better than predicted imo | trentendboy | |
03/3/2018 06:41 | Thats a very good point Nod. Clearly not all unregulated is a risk, just a compliance challenge (which Playtech are up to)if regulations come in. I guess Ptec will support license holders to comply when/where necessary. | shaker44 | |
03/3/2018 05:10 | In one of the news items it mentions that Playtech was founded in Estonia and launched its first casino product in 2001. At that time there was little or no online gambling regulation in most countries. It's not that unregulated markets are a bad thing - it's where every market started. Some are ahead of others in updating their laws. Some have done little. | nod |
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