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WPT Targets Asia s 1 2 Billion Mobile Gamers with Unique Spring Festival

WPT Targets Asia’s 1.2 Billion Mobile Gamers with Unique Spring Festival 3 Min read The World Poker Tour is breaking new ground in more ways than one, thanks to a new partnership with Poker King. Tom Dwan and Phil Ivey will be among the celebrities playing the mobile-only WPT Spring Festival on Poker King. (Image: Kakuchopurei) Poker King made headlines last year when it recruited Tom Dwan and Phil Ivey to peddle its wares. Now, with its mobile poker app gaining momentum in Asia, it’s linked up with the WPT for a unique tournament series. The WPT Spring Festival will run between Feb. 11 and 22. Ivey and Dwan will take part, but the real USP is the fact it’s a mobile-only series.

World Poker Tour Sold to Private VC Investors for $78 Million

World Poker Tour Sold to Private Investors for $78 Million 1 Allied Esports Entertainment announced the sale of its major poker brand, the World Poker Tour, to Element Partners, LLC, a move that seemingly came out of left field. The World Poker Tour has a new owner. (Image: worldpokertour.com) Element paid $78 million for the WPT to Allied Esports Entertainment, the esports company that owns the Luxor’s HyperX Esports Arena in Las Vegas. That arena plays host to the WPT’s televised final tables. Element will pay $68,250,000 upfront. The remaining $10 million balance will be paid via WPT tournament entry fees, with 5% of each buy-in being shipped to Allied. The WPT parent is currently seeking to sell off its esports business as well, and will then rebrand under a new business name. The company will focus on online entertainment, including internet gambling.

World Poker Tour Sold for Potentially $78 Million

World Poker Tour has changed hands once again. Element Partners LLC, a private investment company, has acquired the popular brand in a deal that could potentially be worth $78 million, the WPT announced via a Tuesday morning press release. Assuming shareholders approve the transaction, Element will pay $68,250,000 for the WPT, plus an additional 5% of WPT-branded tournament entry fees on Element-owned or licensed gaming platforms, up to a maximum of $10 million, payable over three years after closing. We think this deal will allow the World Poker Tour to do a number of things thats it s always wanted to do, said CEO For myself and my management team, we re still here and it s business as usual. We look forward to this exciting opportunity and the next chapter of the World Poker Tour. We look forward to continuing to bring the best in poker around the world.

WPT sold for $78 million

The World Poker Tour has been sold to Element Partners, LLC for a reported $78 million. Element Partners acquired the WPT from Allied Esports Entertainment in a deal that was officially announced on Tuesday. As part of the deal Element Partners will pay Allied Esports $68,250,000 upfront, and the remaining $10 million will be paid over three years from a guaranteed five percent share of entry fees from WPT tournaments. The deal was approved by Allied Esports’s board of directors, and it is expected to close in a few weeks once it receives approval from Allied Esports shareholders. In a video released on Twitter, WPT CEO Adam Pliska said, “We think this deal will allow the World Poker Tour to do a number of things that it’s always wanted to do. For myself and my management team, we’re still here and it’s business as usual. We look forward to this exciting opportunity and the next chapter of the World Poker Tour. We look forward to continuing to bring the best in poker aro

Why a Former GM Executive Quit to Start a Blank-Check Company

Article content (Bloomberg) Just five years after being recruited for an executive post at General Motors Co., Barry Engle in November 2019 ascended to president of the automaker’s $100 billion North American business, the company’s profit center. Then in August, not even a year in that post as one of the automaker’s top five executives, he quit. Engle already had been pondering a move to a place where he could be a CEO. At 56, he’s just two years younger than Mary Barra and unlikely to get a crack at the chief executive job. One defining moment, he said, was the March news that clean-energy trucking startup Nikola Corp. signed a deal that would eventually raise $700 million and go public via a reverse merger with VectoIQ, the special purpose acquisition company started by former GM Vice Chairman Steve Girsky. Engle reckoned that if Nikola which had a novel idea for hydrogen-powered semi trucks and little else could get that much cash, then the time was right for an

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