Daily Mirror

On to a winner

Bet365 boss nets £271m payday bonanza despite gambling firm’s £72m loss

- BY GRAHAM HISCOTT Head of Business graham.hiscott@mirror.co.uk @Grahamhisc­ott

WHAT are the odds? Bet365 made a £72million loss last year, while the boss Denise Coates made £271million in pay and dividends.

Ms Coates, 56, Britain’s richest women and best-paid CEO, was pulling in the equivalent of £742,000 a day as her total earnings since 2014 hit £2.3billion.

Ms Coates, worth an estimated £6.2bn, set up Bet365 from a portable cabin in a car park in Stokeon-Trent, Staffs, in 2000.

She is now listed among the UK’s biggest tax payers, she and her family paid about £460.2m into the Exchequer last year.

Bet365 said it also gave £100m last year to the Denise Coates Foundation. The charity’s latest accounts show it had committed to £11m of grants and donations during the year.

Bet365 made an annual loss of £72.6m, from a £49.8m profit the previous year. The swing into the red was fuelled by expansion abroad and losses at Stoke City Football Club, which it owns.

Think-tank the High Pay Centre said Ms Coates’ huge pay package was not fair or appropriat­e.

Luke Hildyard, its executive director, said: “People deserve to be rewarded for innovation and success, but there’s a question of what’s sensible and proportion­ate. Nobody becomes a multibilli­onaire in isolation from wider society. In this case, the wealth

depends on money coming out of gamblers’ pockets, the efforts of thousands of staff, plus wider factors like people having some disposable income, a secure and reliable internet network or all the infrastruc­ture that goes into staging sports events.”

Publicity-shy Ms Coates and her husband Richard Smith lived for years in a farmhouse near Stoke-on-Trent.

But they hired Lord Norman Foster’s architectu­ral firm to design a futuristic steel and glass mansion in rural Cheshire. Set in 52 acres, the £90m estate is said to include a sunken tennis court, stables, ornamental gardens, workers’ cottages and a boathouse.

Ms Coates once said in a rare interview: “I was convinced early on that gambling would work well on the internet. It is private, accessible and allows you to present a huge range of betting opportunit­ies to customers.”

Yet the growth of internet betting has triggered concerns about the destructiv­e impact on problem gamblers. In its accounts, Bet365 said it “continued to invest significan­tly” in what it calls safer gambling. That includes improvemen­ts to the group’s Early Risk Detection System.

 ?? ?? SAFE BET Gambling chief Denise Coates
SAFE BET Gambling chief Denise Coates
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Bet365 owns struggling Stoke City
LOSSES Bet365 owns struggling Stoke City

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