Penn Acquisition Rumor Adds Latest Question to ESPN BET’s Future (2024)

If rumored deal is made, ESPN BET’s fate would remain a major question. Would another company spend, presumably, several hundred million dollars to acquire it?

Penn Acquisition Rumor Adds Latest Question to ESPN BET’s Future (1)

Ryan Butler • Senior News Analyst

Jun 24, 2024 • 16:00 ET • 4 min read

Reports that Boyd Gaming has considered acquiring Penn Entertainment could shake up the national corporate gaming landscape. It could further jeopardize the future of the multi-billion dollar ESPN BET Investment.

News broke June 21 that Boyd, one of the nation’s larger brick-and-mortar casino operators, has considered acquiring Penn Entertainment. Penn, the largest operator with more than 40 properties, is better known to many Americans as the driver behind ESPN BET.

The deal faces major financial, logistical, and legal complications, the most significant being Boyd’s smaller market value. Though the deal could make sense economically, allowing the two companies to increase synergies and combine their respective player databases, it appears a long shot.

Still, if completed, Boyd’s ownership stake in U.S. market leader FanDuel could potentially threaten the long-term future of Penn’s sports betting platforms. This in turn jeopardizes one of the most heavily invested sportsbooks in the country and one of the few remaining legal wagering options that has hopes to compete with the market leaders.

Background

Boyd and Penn had similar business models as of the May 2018 Supreme Court decision that struck down the federal sports wagering ban. Though Penn operated nearly twice as many properties, both focused on managing smaller, regional casinos.

Sparked by the Court’s decision - and galvanized by the COVID-19 pandemic that shut down every commercial casino nationwide - Penn began investing hundreds of millions of dollars in an online casino and, more notably, sports betting platforms.

Beginning in 2020, Penn spent several more than $500 million to acquire Barstool Sports to use as the branding for its online gaming offerings. It spent another $2.1 billion to acquire Canada-based sports media company theScore and its proprietary sports betting platform.

By 2023, the sportsbook had low single-digit national market share and Penn has sold all Barstool properties back to founder Dave Portnoy for $1. It then doubled down on branded partnerships, this time on a 10-year, $1.5 billion deal with ESPN, the biggest name in American sports media.

Since the re-launch of Penn’s sportsbook under the ESPN brand, the new ESPN BET has still not come close to the roughly 35% market share of both DraftKings and FanDuel – or even the nearly 20% target company officials announced ahead of the deal. Penn officials, including deal architect Jay Snowden, remain publicly bullish. Major questions remain, underscored by a May investor letter asking for Penn to divest itself of its money-losing digital gaming arm.

Meanwhile, Boyd has focused on its core brick-and-mortar properties. Its Boyd-branded online sportsbook is only available in Nevada. The company has been more than content to cultivate its 5% ownership stake in the highest-grossing sportsbook in the country.

Future of ESPN BET

Boyd’s rumored Penn acquisition would require the new company to divest some of its assets, almost assuredly including in states such as Louisiana, Missouri, and Indiana where they both operate casinos. It could also, by regulatory or financial pressures, lead it to let go of ESPN BET.

Boyd could take sportsbooks in more than a dozen Penn casinos and rebrand them under the FanDuel name. The company already did so at its Fremont Hotel & Casino in downtown Las Vegas.

It could also, potentially, look to let go of ESPN BET entirely.

The sportsbook has cost billions of dollars and has yet to show a long-term path to profitability. With DraftKings and FanDuel effectively a national duopoly, and most remaining market share split between just a handful of major operators, the new Boyd may be content to focus on branding its online and retail sports betting properties under FanDuel, one of the most successful names in U.S. gaming.

Boyd also wouldn’t have the burden of the financial (and psychological) investments in Barstool/ESPN BET and could be more willing to let it go – especially after it would have had to undertake a massive financial investment in the Penn acquisition.

In this scenario, ESPN BET’s fate remains a major question. Would another company spend, presumably, several hundred million dollars to acquire it?

DraftKings and FanDuel have already spent hundreds of millions investing in their own brands. The No. 3 and No. 4 sportsbooks by marketshare, BetMGM and Caesars, have likewise spent heavily, focusing their offerings around their respective casino operator parent companies.

The next tier of operators could have interest, but those, too, seem like long-shot bets.

Fanatics acquired PointsBet and is looking to revolve its online platform around its eponymous sports merchandise company. bet365, a major name in international gaming, is still a relative unknown in the U.S., but it appears the company is content with its current offerings. Hard Rock seems poised to follow the aforementioned major casino brands and use its own branding for its digital gaming offerings.

Notably, all these operators have their own proprietary sportsbook software, one of the major assets of the ESPN sportsbook.

The remaining smaller operators could be interested in taking on the branding of the “Worldwide Leader in Sports,” but they financially may be unable to do so.

Time for a smaller operator to make such a deal may also be running low.

Tipico, a European leader with high hopes for the U.S., announced Monday its American assets were being acquired by BetMGM. This follows of WynnBet, TwinSpires, 888 and nearly a dozen other companies that have all either been acquired or shut down. More than six years after the opening of nationwide U.S. sports betting, it appears increasingly certain the industry will be dominated by a handful of major operators.

This reality makes it harder to imagine any non-gaming company looking to jump into the industry. It seems that a company with such ambitions would have done so before national market share became ensnared by the small group of market leaders.

Disney-parent ESPN taking control of its branded sportsbook could be a solution. But the branding deal with Penn was itself a watershed moment in a company that had largely avoided gaming and cultivated a “family-friendly” image. It would seem running a sportsbook – especially one that has so far lost significant money at a time when Disney is facing unparalleled investor scrutiny over its losses in other areas of the company – may be too much for management to take on.

Bottom line

It seems unlikely a Boyd-Penn deal will happen any time soon – if at all. Disney would have a say in any such deal involving ESPN BET, further complicating any such move.

Still, the rumored merger reiterates the pressures facing Penn and especially ESPN BET and could be another threat to its existence entirely.

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Penn Acquisition Rumor Adds Latest Question to ESPN BET’s Future (2024)

FAQs

Where will an ESPN BET be legal? ›

Legal states include Arizona, Colorado, Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Kentucky, Louisiana, Maryland, Massachusetts, Michigan, New Jersey, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Tennessee, Virginia, and West Virginia. You can use the ESPN BET promo code ROTO to claim an exclusive bonus bets welcome bonus today.

What is the Penn National ESPN deal? ›

On August 8, 2023, ESPN announced a ten-year, $2 billion agreement with PENN Entertainment to launch ESPN BET, an ESPN-branded sportsbook that will grant access to online sports betting in the sixteen legalized betting states where PENN Entertainment is licensed.

Who owns ESPN BET? ›

ESPN BET is a newly-branded online sportsbook operated by PENN Entertainment that combines ESPN's industry-leading brand and multiplatform reach with PENN Entertainment's proprietary in-house technology and deep sportsbook operational expertise.

What sportsbook does ESPN use? ›

Owned by PENN Entertainment, ESPN BET is the rebranded version of Barstool Sportsbook, so existing Barstool patrons may already be familiar with the app. While ESPN BET is inferior to DraftKings, FanDuel, BetMGM, Caesars and Bet365, it is worth learning about some of the platform's pros and cons.

What are the new states for ESPN BET? ›

Subject to final approvals, ESPN BET is available in the following 18 states upon launch: Arizona, Colorado, Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Kentucky, Louisiana, Maryland, Massachusetts, Michigan, New Jersey, North Carolina, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Tennessee, Virginia, and West Virginia.

Is ESPN BET safe? ›

License and security - ESPN Bet is secure and legit

As a result, the same high-end security and responsible gaming features arecarried over to the ESPN Bet platform. In terms of licensing, the sportsbook has gone live in 17 states, including Arizona, Indiana, Louisiana and Kentucky.

How much does Penn pay ESPN? ›

The rebrand will include a mobile app, website, mobile website and mutually agreed upon retail locations. Penn agreed to pay ESPN $1.5 billion in cash over 10 years, as well as grant ESPN $500 million of warrants to purchase approximately 31.8 million common shares of Penn.

How much did ESPN pay for the ESPN BET? ›

Now brace yourself for ESPN Bet, a rebranding of an existing sports-betting app owned by Penn Entertainment, which is paying $1.5 billion plus other considerations for exclusive rights to the ESPN name. The deal, announced Tuesday, could take Walt Disney Co.

Is ESPN doing well? ›

ESPN maintained its viewership year-over-year in primetime in both overall viewership and persons 18-49. Across ESPN networks, the company increased its already industry-leading share of sports viewership, finishing this year at 31.5%. This marks an increase over the previous two fiscal years.

Who owns 80% of ESPN? ›

ESPN (an abbreviation of its original name, the Entertainment and Sports Programming Network) is an American international basic cable sports channel owned by The Walt Disney Company (80% and operational control) and Hearst Communications (20%) through the joint venture ESPN Inc.

Who bought out ESPN? ›

ESPN Inc. is an American multinational sports media conglomerate majority-owned by the Walt Disney Company, with Hearst Communications as an equity stakeholder. ESPN Inc.

Is barstool now ESPN BET? ›

Barstool Sportsbook shut its doors when it was rebranded to ESPN BET on November 14, 2023. Most recently, online sports betting became 100% legal and live in North Carolina.

Will ESPN BET have a casino? ›

Is online casino available? Yes, online casino is available under PENN Entertainment's Hollywood Casino brand. The experience is accessible within ESPN BET via mobile and web in Michigan, New Jersey, Pennsylvania and West Virginia.

Is ESPN BET legal? ›

As for other big states like California and Texas, online sports betting is currently illegal and not regulated there as of yet. Florida recently went live with online sports betting, but exclusively through the Hard Rock Bet sportsbook so it may take some time before ESPN BET finds itself in the Sunshine State.

Will ESPN BET come to New York? ›

Penn's ESPN Bet subsidiary will begin operations in New York in 2024 as WynnBet divests from the state.

Is an ESPN BET allowed in Florida? ›

Florida and ESPN Bet

Currently, Florida is not among the states where ESPN Bet is legal. This means, in Florida, placing bets via ESPN Bet is not allowed. Each state has distinct sports betting laws, and Florida has its regulations. However, in Florida, you can still access your ESPN Bet account.

Is ESPN BET legal in Oklahoma? ›

As mentioned above, sports betting isn't legal in Oklahoma, so the state doesn't have a legal sports betting age yet.

Is ESPN BET legal in Michigan? ›

Yes, ESPN Bet Michigan is a legit, legal sportsbook. Legal sports betting in Michigan has existed for several years now, and Barstool Sportsbook Michigan was a sportsbook that was fully licensed and regulated in the state.

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