Saturday 23 March 2013

Ladbrokes Closes London Casino


 announced this week that it was closing its Paddington Casino in West London, following irreversible losses of millions of pounds.

This is the second London casino to close down in less than a month, after the Fifty Casino in St. James shut its doors very recently.
Ladbrokes opened the casino in 2006 after the UK government issued 17 licenses to operators to open gambling establishments across the country.
The Paddington casino was meant to the be first in a chain of Ladbrokes casinos and was purchased with the backing of former London Clubs International chairman, Alan Goodenough.
In 2007, Ladbrokes purchased Goodenough's 65% stake in the casino for £ 11.5 million.
After the government changed its tune and u-turned on its decision to okay the opening of 17 new casinos, the Paddington venue proved to be financially unviable and lost millions in its value.
The casino was put up for sale in February 2008 and the casino license was sold to the Malaysia tycoon, Quek Leng Chan, owner of the Thistle and Guoman hotel chains.
Chan entered the UK gambling market three years ago after he purchased the Mayfair Clermont club from the Rank Group for £31 million.
Ladbrokes recently moved its online sports betting and casino operations to Gibraltar after the group announced that it was financially impossible to compete in the English market within the strong tax regime imposed on operators by the government.
Ladbrokes offers sports, poker, casino, games, bingo, financial bets, lottos and backgammon on its official website.

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