Home > Strategy > Pferdewetten.de’s bold gamble on HappyBet and Germany’s betting market 

Pferdewetten.de’s bold gamble on HappyBet and Germany’s betting market 

| By Martin Bjoerck | Reading Time: 5 minutes
Once a modest horse racing specialist, Pferdewetten.de is seizing its moment through acquisitions and consolidation. Can it scale fast enough to take on the national giants?
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For most of its history, Pferdewetten.de AG has been a relatively small and disciplined operator, surviving in one of Europe’s least hospitable gambling markets. The Düsseldorf-based bookmaker, which was established in 1997 and since 2000 has been trading on the General Standard segment of the Frankfurt Stock Exchange, was once almost entirely reliant on horse racing in the German market. But in recent years, it has begun a remarkable transformation. 

Acquisitions, aggressive expansion into retail betting and a determination to navigate Germany’s highly complex regulatory framework have turned it into one of the country’s most ambitious emerging challengers. 

Under the direction of 54-year-old CEO Pierre Hofer, who has been on the board since 2010, the company is accelerating a wave of consolidation that is reshaping the German betting landscape. 

The major acquisition by Pferdewetten AG subsidiary NetX Betting of the HappyBet franchise from Playtech, as part of the latter’s B2C exit, marked a major pivot for Pferdewetten.de AG. The deal was announced in late May and includes approximately 600 hardware units, such as betting terminals and POS systems. The main strategy is a simple question of gaining market share, explains Hofer to iGB. 

“We knew we could make the shops perform better with our product, improving revenues for franchisees. Playtech also wanted a fast and simple deal,” he says. But for Pferdewetten.de AG, it is only the beginning. A joint venture with Bet3000, another retail heavyweight, is already under way. 

“This [next] deal is actually five to six times bigger than the HappyBet deal. They will switch to our licence. Contracts are ready to sign and several dozen shops are already in the process of switching.” 

And yet another deal is on the horizon, Hofer says. He reveals that his company is in talks with another important player. “But I cannot talk about it for now. It’s consolidation.” He insists an announcement is imminent. 

Reshaping the German betting landscape 

For a company long in the shadow of national giants such as Tipico, the prospect of a sudden leap in scale is dramatic. Hofer admits that the past year has been transformational: “We have seen more or less every single part of a life with ups and downs,” he says. Yet the ups increasingly outweigh the downs. 

Pferdewetten.de AG began modestly during the early days of online betting. In its formative years, it offered general sports betting – until a lack of regulation forced a retreat. “Because we didn’t have a law or regulation for sports betting, management decided to pull out of the sports betting market and focus on horse racing,” says Hofer.

It was a fateful decision. Rivals pressed on in the regulatory grey zone, eventually becoming today’s industry giants, Hofer remarks. Pferdewetten.de AG remained a niche business, profitable but limited by the scale of Germany’s horse racing market. 

The pivot back to sports betting came only in 2018, facilitated by the acquisition of the Sportwetten.de domain (sportswetten means sports betting). “ It’s more or less the best domain you can have in the German market,” Hofer says.

Revenues from the racing business financed the relaunch. “We took positive results and cash from the horse racing business and invested them into the sportsbook in Germany,” he says. The firm grew cautiously, “in line with predictions”, while biding its time for a larger opportunity. 

That opportunity arrived in 2021. “The entire team of a leading sports betting operator in Germany – offering land-based shop betting and online betting – was looking for a new home. They had major discussions with the owner and decided to split,” Hofer explains. The move signalled turbulence among competitors – several foreign firms were shrinking their German exposure or withdrawing outright as compliance pressures mounted. Yet Pferdewetten.de began amassing talent, technology and shop expertise. 

The company’s business model shifted too. “We transformed from a stable, ‘boring’ horse racing operator into a sports betting startup, investing heavily. We moved from paying dividends to issuing capital increases and convertible bonds,” Hofer notes – a clear signal to investors Pferdewetten.de was preparing to scale. 

HappyBet: The deal that set the pace 

The next turning point was the aforementioned acquisition of HappyBet. Following Flutter’s purchase of Snaitech, the German HappyBet business was left in limbo and with Playtech, eager to complete its B2C exit, it sought a buyer. Hofer moved quickly. 

“Around a year ago, we started negotiating with Snaitech and Playtech to get hold of these franchise shops,” he recounts. The final agreement brought over a substantial portion of the HappyBet retail estate – along with the Maltese HQ, employees and several hundred betting terminals. Compatibility with Pferdewetten.de’s systems was a lucky bonus. “Our supplier is the same, so terminals are 100% compatible without major investments,” Hofer applauds.

HappyBet’s steady decline meant the portfolio required selective pruning. “There were maybe 90–95 shops available. We didn’t want around 30–35 of them – too small,” Hofer says. Even so, the remainder represents meaningful scale: “Yes, as expected, we are integrating a mid-double-digit number of shops.”

Pferdewetten.de wants to be number two behind Tipico

Perhaps it is the next chapter that signals a more profound shift. Alongside HappyBet, Pferdewetten.de is finalising a joint venture with Bet3000, one of Germany’s most recognised retail operators. Hofer outlines the scale: “They run 68 owned shops and 120 franchise shops.” 

Contracts are “ready to sign”, he says, with several dozen shops already migrating. If executed as outlined, the group could operate approximately 400 shops by mid next year – a remarkable escalation for a company that entered the retail market only in 2022. 

And then comes the tantalising hint of the new as-of-yet unannounced deal. The implication is clear: Pferdewetten.de is lining up a third acquisition, potentially larger than HappyBet, in a market where weaker operators are seeking exits. 

Hofer’s ambition is now explicit: “Three or four years ago, there were 11 players in the retail market. Now we are down to six. The Bet3000 deal will make it five. Another deal may make it four. Our goal is to become number two in the market – after Tipico – within four years of operations.” Tipico has a current market share of around 50%. 

For a company that once abandoned sports betting entirely, the target is bold. And Hofer’s enthusiasm suggests that he sees consolidation not as opportunism, but as a once-in-a-generation chance to model Pferdewetten.de AG’s trajectory. 

Germany’s regulatory knot 

The obstacle, as always, is regulation. Since the introduction of the Interstate Treaty on Gambling in 2021, Germany has imposed strict monthly deposit limits which narrow product offerings and require heavy compliance reporting. 

Hofer is blunt about the challenges. “Deposit limits make things complicated. It’s overregulated,” he says. He points to the flood of offshore competition. “There are more than 430 illegal betting platforms targeting Germany.” With restricted odds and capped deposits, “many high-volume customers go to illegal platforms. The online casino market is hit very hard.” 

Even fully compliant operators pay a steep price. “Compliance costs are huge – seven digits per year,” he says. “Last quarter alone we spent €300,000 on lawyers and consultants, excluding employees.”

He hopes that next year’s planned update to the treaty may ease restrictions. “Authorities believed they had 95% channelisation – this was unrealistic,” Hofer says. In reality, “the market appears to shrink but actually grows underground.” 

On whether regulation will improve, his answer is measured: “We hope so. Authorities are slow, but starting to understand reality.” 

Performance and prospects 

Despite regulatory pressures, the company’s underlying business is strengthening. “Third-quarter numbers were presented today — we didn’t expect to disappoint. We are at more or less break-even now,”  Hofer notes, adding that next year it should deliver “record EBIT”. 

Growth has been helped by a broadening retail base and a strong sportsbook product built specifically for domestic preferences. “We focus on the German market nationwide – from Munich to Hamburg to Berlin,” he says. 

There is tentative expansion abroad. The company also operates in Denmark under JackpotBet.dk, licensed for sports betting and casino, and maintains a small presence in Austria. But Germany remains the overwhelming priority. 

Asked whether the model is sustainable amid regulatory change, Hofer replies: “Yes, definitely for the next few years. Regulation can change, but we don’t expect it to get worse.” 

The company that in 2007 stepped back from sports betting now stands on the verge of becoming Germany’s second-largest retail operator. In one of Europe’s strictest markets, Pferdewetten.de AG is betting not on luck, but on timing – and on the sudden availability of competitors’ assets. 

If Hofer’s instincts prove correct, the horse racing specialist may soon find itself racing among giants. 

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