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PointsBet Shares Soar After AU$94m Cash Injection From US Finance Giant

  • Finance firm SIG has purchased 12.76% of PointsBet shares for AU$94m (US$65.4m)
  • SIG believes the partnership will create an advantage within online, in-game sports betting
  • The SIG founder highlighted PointsBet’s experience in the Aussie sports betting market
  • PointsBet markets and in-play prices will get a boost through SIG’s sports trading arm Nellie

 

Australian money in air
After a multi-year search for a US sports betting partner, trading giant SIG’s cash injection of AU$94m (US$65.4m) into PointsBet means it has at last found its match. [Image: Shutterstock.com]

Focus on in-game

Shares in Australian-based PointsBet soared by 19% to close at AU$2.55 (US$1.78) following the news that US trading giant Susquehanna International Group (SIG) had injected AU$94m (US$65.4m) into the sportsbook operator.

purchased 12.76% of PointsBet shares

According to the Sydney Morning Herald, SIG announced it had purchased 12.76% of PointsBet shares on Monday. PointsBet Communications took to Twitter with news of the deal and to thank SIG co-founder Jeff Yass:

The deal gives SIG the opportunity to leverage its technological expertise within the in-game wagering segment of US digital sports betting, where Yass believes his firm has an advantage. He said that the technology and the mathematics are “almost exactly the same for sports betting as it is for options trading.”

Synergies at play

According to the SIG co-founder, the firm plans to leverage its options trading know-how to work with PointsBet on growing its in-game sports betting offering. Yass said both firms have agreed that this should be the focus moving forwards.

no one really has the expertise”

“There is really very little in-game betting in the United States because no one really has the expertise,” Yass said, firmly establishing his firm’s sports betting vision. He outlined the long and careful process behind SIG’s investment into US sports betting, suggesting that the firm had “scoured the earth […] several years” for a suitable partner.

Yass also highlighted PointsBet’s experience in the Aussie sports betting industry, and how the firm considered itself a bookmaking operation as opposed to a marketing team.

According to Yass, the deal with PointsBet received a little nudge over the finish line by his family. He said: “My kids who are in the business told me that PointsBet has the best site, and they seem to be smart and they seem to be thinking the way we did.”

Future vision

As part of the deal, PointsBet will get European operation access to SIG’s sports trading arm, Nellie Analytics, which is active on global sports betting exchanges. PointsBet CEO Sam Swanell believes Nellie can boost the sportsbook’s appeal via “more accurate prices and sharper risk management.”

The combination of Nellie with PointsBet will give the sportsbook “more betting markets, in-play prices, faster bid placement, and, ultimately, higher wagering limits,” Swanell claimed.

According to the Morning Herald, PointsBet chairman Brett Paton said his firm was “delighted to pair up with a visionary investor which has committed ongoing support and is eminently qualified in analytical trading in financial markets, and now in sports.”

PointsBet Canada was recently one of the first sportsbook operators fined for infractions in Ontario’s fledgling sports betting market. The sportsbook received a CA$30,000 (US$23,415) fine in relation to erecting posters featuring an inducement for people to play for free.

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