France to sell 50 pct of lottery group through IPO
The government wants to sell half of the stake in the national lottery company through an initial public offering.
France.- The French government wants to sell a 50 per cent stake of the national lottery company Francaise des Jeux (FDJ) through a stock market listing. The Journal du Dimanche reported that the measure is set to raise money to fund finance innovation.
Earlier this month it was reported that the government wanted to sell part of the company, but it wasn’t disclosed how much would be given away. The French State holds 72 per cent of the FDJ, while the rest of the capital is held by small shareholders, such as the “Gueules cassés”, an association of veterans with 9.2 per cent, or the employees of the company (5 per cent).
The government announced its plans to sell US$12.2 billion worth of stakes in state-owned companies in order to generate money to fund finance innovation, one of the pillars of President Emmanuel Macron’s election. The lottery company has been in the spotlight as one of the principal candidates to be privatised.
The state, which would still retain a 35 per cent stake in the company, decided to open the sale up to the public through a market flotation in order to finalise the sell in the first months of 2019.
Francaise des Jeux is currently the second-biggest lottery in Europe after Italy’s Lottomatica. The state also enjoys the monopoly on lottery games and scratch games, and it appears that it intends to keep it that way because at least 3.1 billion of the 14.3 billion euros spent by players ended up in the coffers of the state.