Bookmakers Ladbrokes and Gala Coral
may have to shed hundreds of stores if their proposed merger is to go
ahead, the competition watchdog has said.
The Competition and
Markets Authority said a merger of the UK's second and third largest
bookmakers may restrict competition on the High Street.
About 350 to 400 shops may have to be sold "for the merger to be conditionally cleared", the CMA said.
The CMA has given until 13 June for responses to its provisional findings.
Ladbrokes
operates 2,154 betting shops in Great Britain and 77 in Northern
Ireland, while Gala Coral operates about 1,850 betting shops in Great
Britain.
The combined group would make it bigger than current market leader William Hill.
Martin
Cave, who is chairing the CMA's inquiry, said: "We've provisionally
found that the merger between two of the largest bookmakers in the
country may be expected to reduce competition and choice for customers
in a large number of local areas.
"Although online betting has
grown substantially in recent years, the evidence we've seen confirms
that a large number of customers still choose to bet in shops - and many
would continue to do so after the merger.
"For
these customers, competition comes from the choice of shops in their
local area and it's they who could lose out from any reduction of
competition and choice."
The CMA said it was aiming to publish its final report by the end of July.
Ladbrokes said: "This is a significant step and our focus now will be on agreeing the shop disposals to satisfy the CMA." Ladbrokes shares jumped more than 10% at the start of trading on Friday.
Gala
Coral said it noted that the CMA was "provisionally minded to clear the
proposed merger" and that it would continue to work with the regulator
on ways to achieve final clearance.
Analysts say the merged company will still have a dominant position even if many shops have to be sold.
"We
expect substantial cost saving will be possible because there will be
vast areas of overlap and unnecessary duplication of functions across
the combined business," said Steve Clayton, head of equity research at
Hargreaves Lansdown.
Ladbrokes agreed the terms of a £2.3bn
all-share merger with Coral in July, and the company's shareholders
backed the deal in November.
Gala Coral has been owned by a group
of private equity firms, including Apollo Global Management, Cerberus
Capital Management, Anchorage Capital Partners and Park Square Capital,
since 2010, when it collapsed under £2.5bn of debt.
Under the
terms of the deal, those private equity owners will own 48.25% of the
new company's shares, with the remainder being held by Ladbrokes
shareholders.
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