BlackRock Bets on Flutter as London Exit Looms and FanDuel Loses Its CEO

BlackRock increased its Flutter Entertainment stake to 5.12% as the company ousted FanDuel CEO Amy Howe, disclosed a formal London Stock Exchange listing review, and committed $300 million to its FanDuel Predicts platform.
Three things happened at Flutter Entertainment in the space of a week. The company ousted its FanDuel CEO. It disclosed a formal review of its London Stock Exchange listing with an outcome due by the end of June. And BlackRock, the world’s largest asset manager, increased its stake to 5.12%, crossing the disclosure threshold that signals meaningful institutional conviction.
None of these events are unrelated, and reading them together tells a cleaner story than any of them does individually.
The London Question
Flutter has only been dual-listed since January 2024. The London connection was already weakened months later, when the group shifted its primary listing to New York and left the FTSE 100 behind. That decision was framed around the expanding weight of the U.S. market. Now the question is whether London has any practical role left at all.
In its Q1 2026 results on May 6, Flutter disclosed a formal review of its remaining LSE ordinary shares listing and promised shareholders an update by the end of June. The U.S. generated $1.76 billion in Q1 revenue, approximately 41% of group revenue. No other market comes close. What was once a UK and Ireland betting group built on Paddy Power and Betfair is now, in revenue terms, a U.S. business with significant international operations attached.
BlackRock’s enlarged position above the 5% threshold joins a register that already reflects Flutter’s increasingly American center of gravity, including Vanguard, Capital Group, and U.S. businessman Kenneth Dart among its prominent transatlantic investors. An exit from London would concentrate the shareholder base further in the direction it has already been moving, giving Flutter a cleaner U.S. equity story without the friction of maintaining two listing regimes, two sets of regulatory obligations, and two investor relations narratives simultaneously.
The FanDuel Problem
Amy Howe’s departure is the part of this story that carries the most operational weight. Howe led FanDuel for nearly five years and built it into the largest U.S. sportsbook by market share. She was the first woman to steer a major U.S. sportsbook operator. Reports indicated she was forced out. She will receive $4.37 million in severance, equivalent to 24 months of salary and bonus.
Flutter shares have fallen almost 60% over the last year as investors have sold off gaming stocks amid the sudden competition from prediction markets and concerns about consumer spending. Against that backdrop, Flutter CEO Peter Jackson told the J.P. Morgan Gaming Forum this week that FanDuel needs to get its mojo back. “We know we didn’t operate as effectively as we should have done,” Jackson said. “There’s a bunch of organizational changes that we’ve made, which I think really will sharpen our focus on execution and delivery, which ultimately has been one of our challenges.”
The organizational changes Jackson is describing are substantial. Christian Genetski, previously FanDuel’s President, has assumed the CEO role. Dan Taylor, previously CEO of Flutter’s international division, has been elevated to the newly created role of President of Flutter Entertainment, giving him oversight of both the FanDuel business and Flutter’s international operations. That structural change effectively flattens the distance between Flutter’s global headquarters and its U.S. subsidiary, giving the parent company more direct visibility into FanDuel’s operational decisions.
What the Numbers Say
Flutter reported Q1 2026 revenue of more than $4.3 billion, up 17% year-over-year, with 31% growth in betting handle during the quarter. But the company lowered its full-year revenue guidance to $18.3 billion from $18.4 billion and trimmed its EBITDA guidance to $ 2.865 billion from $ 2.97 billion. Net income fell 38% to $209 million, weighed down by tax changes in certain U.S. markets and new launch costs in Arkansas.
Flutter CEO Peter Jackson told CNBC he wants to invest $300 million in FanDuel Predicts, the company’s in-house prediction markets platform, “and that takes our numbers down for 2026.” That is a meaningful admission: Flutter is accepting near-term earnings pressure to build the product line its investors and competitors have made unavoidable. DraftKings and FanDuel both left the AGA over the question of prediction markets. FanDuel Predicts launched in December. The $300 million investment figure tells you how seriously Jackson is treating the threat.
What BlackRock Is Actually Buying
BlackRock’s decision to increase its position above the 5% threshold adds weight to Flutter’s growing American investor base at a pivotal moment. The world’s largest asset manager does not cross disclosure thresholds by accident. The timing, simultaneous with the LSE review and the FanDuel leadership change, suggests BlackRock is buying a specific thesis: that Flutter is in the process of becoming something more legible to U.S. institutional investors than it has been, and that the current share price, down 60% from its peak, represents a reasonable entry point for that thesis.
Flutter’s $5 billion share buyback program is running concurrently, with shares repurchased regularly since its announcement. A company buying its own stock at a 60% discount to its peak while simultaneously attracting BlackRock’s increased position is making a clear statement about where management believes the business’s intrinsic value lies relative to the current market price.
The harder question is whether the operational fixes Jackson is describing are sufficient to rebuild FanDuel’s competitive position against a prediction-market ecosystem that is growing at over 100% annually and targeting the same customers. FanDuel holds 39% of the U.S. sportsbook market. That position is durable for now. Whether it remains durable as Kalshi, Robinhood, and FanDuel Predicts compete for the same mobile-first, sports-engaged user depends on execution improvements that the leadership change was designed to accelerate.
Flutter has decided what it is: an American company with international assets, competing for the future of U.S. digital gambling from a primary listing on the New York Stock Exchange. The London listing review is the last formal acknowledgment of a transformation that was already complete in everything that mattered.
Colin Lynch is a sports betting, iGaming, and prediction markets journalist covering the intersection of sports, wagering, and regulation across the global gambling industry. Colin Lynch is a veteran gambling industry journalist with more than a decade of experience covering the rapidly evolving sports betting...
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