National Lottery operator Allwyn to merge with Greece’s OPAP; European markets lifted as US tariff fears ease – business live | Business

National Lottery operator Allwyn to merge with Greece’s OPAP in £14bn deal

The National Lottery operator Allwyn is to merge with Greece’s leading gambling company OPAP to create a global listed gaming giant worth about €16bn (£13.9bn).

Allwyn, which owns a near-52% controlling stake in Athens-headquartered OPAP, has agreed an all-share tie-up with OPAP that will see the combined group renamed Allwyn.

It will give Allwyn a presence on the stock market, with plans to retain OPAP’s Athens listing for the merged group, and to launch an additional stock market listing in either London or New York.

For many years OPAP was a state-owned gambling monopoly. The company holds the exclusive rights to run lotteries and sports betting in Greece.

In 2022, Camelot lost the licence to run the lottery in the UK to rival Allwyn. The billionaire media mogul Richard Desmond had also been bidding for the contract, and is suing the gambling regulator in a bitter dispute that opened at the high court last Thursday. He has brought a £1.3bn damages claim against the Gambling Commission.

Last year, the Guardian revealed that Allwyn was borrowing millions from Kremlin-owned banks when it won the UK’s largest public-sector contract. Allwyn is ultimately owned by the Czech billionaire Karel Komárek.

A National Lottery sign. Photograph: Andrew Milligan/PA
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Nobel prize for economics goes to Joel Mokyr, Philippe Aghion and Peter Howitt

This year’s Nobel prize for economics is about creation and destruction.

It has gone to Joel Mokyr, economics professor at Northwestern University, the French economist Philippe Aghion and Peter Howitt, economics professor at Brown University in Rhode Island.

The Sveriges Riksbank prize in economic aciences in memory of Alfred Nobel was awarded “for having explained innovation-driven economic growth,” with one half to Mokyr “for having identified the prerequisites for sustained growth through technological progress” and the other half jointly to Aghion and Howitt “for the theory of sustained growth through creative destruction.”

Mokyr is a Dutch-born American-Israeli economic historian, professor of economics and history and the Robert H. Strotz Professor of Arts and Sciences at Northwestern University.

Aghion is a professor at the Collège de France, at INSEAD, at the London School of Economics, and at the Paris School of Economics.

Howitt is a Canadian economist.

The Riksbank said:

Joel Mokyr used historical observations to identify the factors necessary for sustained growth based on technological innovations, Philippe Aghion and Peter Howitt have produced a mathematical model of creative destruction, an endless process in which new and better products replace the old. With the understanding of the mechanisms of creative destruction provided by the laureates and the follow up research, we have a better chance to make sure growth can continue and be guided in the direction that benefits humankind.

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