Fantasy sports company DraftKings will go public after merging with Diamond Eagle Acquisition Corp. ($DEAC) and SBTech. When the bookmaker makes it official, the company will have a market cap of $3.3 billion and be listed on Nasdaq u.
DraftKings CEO Jason Robins said the company was looking to achieve three objectives: acquire SBTech, raise capital to fund launching in new states for sports betting, and go public. The deal got “all three of those objectives accomplished in one transaction,” he told Cheddar.
Diamond Eagle will change its name to DraftKings Inc. once the transaction closes, which is expected in the first half of 2020 and will create the first vertically integrated sports betting company. Through the merger with SBTech, which is a sports betting technology provider, and the already special purpose acquisition company Diamond Eagle Acquisition ($DEAC), DraftKings will become a publicly-traded company without undergoing a lenghthier, traditional IPO process.
According to the CEO, DraftKings uses a lot of its own homegrown technology, but he noted that "the one thing that’s not is the bets that are made and the systems and operations behind that.”
“We’re a tech company, we’re a product company and, for us, it’s absolutely critical to own and control that,” Robins said of SBTech.
Robins will lead the new DraftKings, and the company will remain headquartered in Boston, where it is one of the largest tech companies in the city, but will reincorporate in Nevada. The company was founded in 2012 and most recently had attempted to merge with its rival FanDuel, but the deal was abandoned after federal regulators sued.
Arguments at the Supreme Court have concluded for the day as the justices consider President Donald Trump's sweeping unilateral tariffs in a trillion-dollar test of executive power.
AI is reshaping investigations. Longeye CEO Guillaume Delepine shares how their AI workspace empowers law enforcement to uncover insights faster and smarter.
Stephen Kates, Financial Analyst at Bankrate, joins to discuss the Fed’s 25-basis-point rate cut, inflation risks, and what it all means for consumers and marke
Big tech earnings take center stage as investors digest results from Alphabet, Meta, Microsoft, Amazon, and Apple, with insights from Gil Luria of D.A. Davidson
Disney content has gone dark on YouTube TV, leaving subscribers of the Google-owned live streaming platform without access to major networks like ESPN and ABC. That’s because the companies have failed to reach a new licensing deal to keep Disney channels on YouTube TV. Depending on how long it lasts, the dispute could particularly impact coverage of U.S. college football matchups over the weekend — on top of other news and entertainment disruptions that have already arrived. In the meantime, YouTube TV subscribers who want to watch Disney channels could have little choice other than turning to the company’s own platforms, which come with their own price tags.