In a statement, Flutter said the decision followed a comprehensive review of its listing arrangements.
Investors were informed: “As part of the review of its listing structures, the Company carefully considered, among other things, the level of trading activity in its shares on the LSE as well as the additional cost, and regulatory and administrative obligations arising from retaining the LSE listing, and concluded that it is in the best interests of the Company and its shareholders to proceed with the LSE Delisting.”
Flutter vs all elements
The decision comes at a pivotal stage for Flutter’s US ambitions. While the company remains the dominant force in North American online betting through FanDuel, its share price has slumped by 50% through the closing period of 2025 and the opening months of 2026.
City analysts continue to question profitability concerns of the Flutter portfolio, the sustainability of FanDuel’s market leadership in US sportsbooks, and the emergence of prediction markets as a new competitive threat.
The rise of PM competitors such as Kalshi and Polymarket has attracted multi-billion-dollar backing from VC funds, creating the grounds for speculative and disruptive valuations against traditional gambling businesses such as Flutter.
Despite visible concerns, Flutter continues to project strong top-line growth. Following its first-quarter results, the group updated its full-year 2026 guidance to forecast revenue of approximately $18.3bn and adjusted EBITDA of $2.87bn at the midpoint, representing year-on-year growth of 12% and 1% respectively.
Attention now turns to whether Flutter can reignite FanDuel’s performance under the leadership of newly appointed US CEO Christian Genetski. Investors are closely monitoring the brand’s sportsbook margins, customer acquisition trends and response to increasing competition from both established operators and emerging prediction market platforms.
Beyond North America, Flutter faces a series of strategic integration and regulatory challenges.
In Italy, the group continues the complex integration of its twin assets, Sisal and SNAI, while in the UK management must navigate the industry’s transition to the new 40% Remote Gaming Duty regime, one of the most significant tax changes faced by the sector in recent years.
The group is also seeing changes in its investor profiles. Cayman Islands-based American billionaire Ken Dart has become the biggest stakeholder in the company by gradually increasing his voting rights over the past year or so, now controlling 27%.
Meanwhile, a special resolution proposed by Flutter’s board to create ‘blank check preferred stocks’ – a form of stock often used to prevent buyout attempts – failed to secure the required number of votes during a recent shareholder vote.
Other notable moves around shares included London-based Parvus Asset Parvus Asset Management increasing its share 10%, the Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce increasing its share to 5.3%, and BlackRock increasing its shareholding over the 5% reporting threshold.
The company noted that its ordinary shares will continue to trade on the NYSE under the FLUT ticker following the delisting and that it has issued guidance to shareholders on the steps required to manage their holdings after Flutter exits the London market.
Another ship leaves the LSE
The move marks the loss of another major gambling PLC from the London Stock Exchange and further erodes the City’s standing as a global hub for publicly listed betting and gaming companies.
Flutter’s departure follows the agreed £243m acquisition of evoke by Bally’s Intralot, which will also result in evoke being removed from the London market – subject to the required approvals.
Once home to many of the world’s largest gambling businesses, London will no longer host a globally significant gambling PLC of Flutter’s scale.
The delisting also reflects a broader challenge facing UK capital markets.
Between 2020 and 2026, more than 400 companies either left the London Stock Exchange or shifted their primary listings elsewhere, a trend that became a prominent economic concern during the premierships of both Rishi Sunak and Keir Starmer.
Dingnews.com 12/06/2026