
William Hill shares increase as financier declines merger plan

Shares in William Hill have increased after the betting business's biggest shareholder stated it would oppose any merger handle Canada's Amaya.

Last weekend William Hill said it remained in speak with merge with Amaya, which owns poker sites Full Tilt and PokerStars, in a potential ₤ 4.5 bn deal.

But Parvus Asset Management said the merger had "minimal strategic reasoning" and would "damage shareholder value".

Shares in William Hill - a FTSE 250 member - closed up 5% at 314.1 p.
Parvus said the wagering firm should think about other all options to maximise shareholder returns, including a possible sale.

Ralph Topping, who stepped down in 2014 after 8 years as chief executive of William Hill, stated he "completely supported" Parvus.
"When this promotion code deal was announced I was left scratching my head," he informed the Financial Times, external. Both [Amaya and William Hill] have a lot to sort out in their own service. I'm very anxious on the future of William Hill."
Also on the FTSE 250, shares in Man Group jumped 13.7% after the world's greatest listed hedge fund stated it was buying financial investment manager Aalto, which manages residential or commercial property possessions worth $1.7 bn.
Man Group likewise reported a 6% rise in the value of funds under management throughout the yohaig code 3 months to September and stated it prepared a $100m share buyback.
The blue-chip FTSE 100 index rose 35.81 indicate 7,013.55. Tesco was the greatest riser, up 4.41% to 203.7 p. The grocery store stated on Thursday night that it had solved its prices row with supplier Unilever. Shares in Unilever were down 0.5%.

On the currency markets, the pound was trading at $1.2185, down 0.56%, against the dollar.

Against the euro it was flat at EUR1.1083.
William Hill in ₤ 4.5 bn merger talks
9 October 2016