The completed purchase of Legend by Genius Sports reshapes the sports data and media stack — and raises pointed questions about where the next round of consolidation leads.
Ricky Sandler's departure from Entain's board — as Eminence Capital winds down — removes one of the few activist voices holding management accountable at a critical inflection point for the operator.
MGM Resorts' first-quarter results show digital and Macau carrying the load while Las Vegas barely budges — a signal that the Strip's post-pandemic earnings engine may be cooling faster than the headline numbers suggest.
With the Legend deal closed, Genius Sports is positioning itself as the sole vertically integrated sports data-to-media company — a structural shift that carries significant implications for operators, broadcasters, and regulators alike.
The Malta-based operator is folding a Danish-licensed casino into a portfolio already built on Northern European compliance. The pattern behind the deal matters more than the deal itself.
The completion of Genius Sports' acquisition of Legend redraws the boundary between data infrastructure and sports media ownership — and raises pointed questions for regulators in multiple jurisdictions.
The completed acquisition of Legend by Genius Sports marks one of the largest sports media-data transactions in recent memory, and it raises pointed questions about where vertical integration goes from here.
Ricky Sandler's departure removes the only remaining activist presence from Entain's boardroom at a moment when the company still faces unresolved strategic and governance questions.
Evoke's 149% surge in full-year losses is more than a company-specific stumble — it reflects structural pressures that are quietly destabilizing the middle tier of the European gambling market.
A flurry of deals closing in the first week of May signals that operators and suppliers are consolidating around data, content, and regulated market access — not just scale for its own sake.
When three of RSI's most senior executives move to liquidate up to $299 million in shares simultaneously, the instinct is to read alarm into the numbers. The reality is more instructive than that.
The newly independent SpinCore Group's first quarterly results flag mounting pressure in the Netherlands — a cautionary signal for operators still calibrating their exposure to tightly regulated European markets.
Flutter's Q1 2026 results show Brazil and Italy absorbing the slack as the US market matures — a geographic pivot that carries real implications for how operators allocate capital over the next three years.
The completed purchase of Legend gives Genius Sports a vertically integrated stack that few rivals can match — and raises pointed questions about data pricing leverage across the sportsbook supply chain.
The deal consolidates two of the most significant data and technology layers in regulated sports betting — and signals where supplier-side power is quietly concentrating.
When a company's three most senior executives sell shares simultaneously while the board buys them back, the story is rarely simple. What the Rush Street Interactive transaction reveals about operator confidence in a maturing US market.
Three of RSI's most senior executives are liquidating significant equity stakes simultaneously — a move that warrants closer reading than the accompanying share repurchase programme might suggest.
The completion of Genius Sports' acquisition of Legend marks the largest data-and-technology consolidation play in recent memory — and it raises pointed questions about supplier concentration in a market that regulators are watching more closely than ever.
Three of RSI's most senior executives are offloading 10 million shares simultaneously — even as the company authorises a $100 million repurchase. The optics demand scrutiny.