Entain Agrees to Pay £585m for Turkey Sportsbook Violations

  • Entain announced in August it was setting aside £585m to cover itself for a bribery probe
  • Probe began after the Sunday Times made allegations about the 2017 sale of Sportingbet
  • After a UK court gives its final approval, Entain will pay the fine in four installments
Entain logo on a billboard
Entain’s legacy headaches over its former Turkish business are ending after it agreed to a £585m ($743m) fine. [Image: Shutterstock.com]

Entain guesses right

Global iGaming giant Entain was on the money earlier this year when it set aside £585m ($743m) for historical violations in Turkey under its since-rebranded GVC business.

£585m in settlement relating to business deals between GVC and its Turkish subsidiary

On Friday, Entain agreed a deal “in principle” with the England and Wales’ Crown Prosecution Service, (CPS), to pay the £585m in settlement relating to business deals between GVC and its Turkish subsidiary Sportingbet. The company will pony up the sum following His Majesty’s Revenue and Customs (HMRC)’s investigation into GVC’s breaches of Section 7 of the Bribery Act 2010.

Sky News reports the Ladbrokes and Coral owner will also donate £20m ($25m) to charity and will give the HMRC £10m ($12.6m) to cover the costs of its investigation.

Slate wiped clean

According to Sky, HMRC was investigating suppliers and ex-employees of Entain when it was still GVC and under the leadership of Kenny Alexander. The news channel stated HMRC was particularly focused on Entain’s legacy business’ alleged failure to implement “adequate bribery prevention measures.”

In August when Entain first announced it was setting aside the £585m its chairman, Barry Gibson, said the group “has changed immeasurably since these events took place.”

The events Gibson was referring to began when a Sunday Times article in 2019 made allegations about the sale of the company’s Turkish business Sportingbet in 2017.

In 2018, with Alexander still at the helm, GVC acquired Ladbrokes Coral for £3.2bn ($4.06bn). Ladbrokes’ 3,700 UK brick-and-mortar betting shops, plus GVC brands PartyPoker and PartyCasino, gave Entain the foundation upon which it built its successful iGaming empire.

In a statement released on November 24, Entain cited Gibson affirming his firm’s commitment towards operating in regulated markets only. Gibson added Entain is “now widely recognised as a best-in-class, responsible operator with the highest levels of corporate governance.”

Wrapping up

Entain reported that while preliminary judicial approval had been reached regarding its legacy business penalty, final approval would be sought via Crown Court at Southwark on December 5.

Once the court delivers its final approval, Entain stated, the fine will be paid out in installments over four years. Entain added that it had “co-operated extensively with HMRC and the CPS” and that it will continue to do so.

Entain’s shares were trading down around 2% on Friday but climbed following news of the agreed penalty.

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