Flutter Entertainment’s latest report shows solid year-on-year growth, but a fourth-quarter stumble and softer 2026 outlook rattled investors and raised fresh questions about US momentum.
The Quarter In Plain English: Growth Up, Expectations Missed
Flutter (FanDuel’s parent) posted fourth-quarter revenue of $4.74 billion, up 25% from a year earlier, yet still below what analysts were looking for. Adjusted EPS came in at $1.74, also missing forecasts, while adjusted EBITDA landed at $832 million versus expectations closer to the high-$800 millions.
CEO Peter Jackson summed it up on CNBC: “not everything went our way in the fourth quarter.”
Why FanDuel Felt “Off” To Bettors (And Why That Matters)
Flutter pointed to an unusually punter-friendly stretch of results in late 2025, especially around the NFL, which squeezed sportsbook hold. When bettors win more than normal, the book makes less per wager. There’s also a behavioral hangover: players often cool off after a hot streak ends, or they simply don’t feel the same itch to fire up the app.
Flutter also flagged that parts of the NFL postseason were missing the kind of storylines that drive casual betting volume. Translation for the average player: fewer “must-bet” moments, fewer parlays, less scrolling.
The Guidance That Spooked The Market
Even with full-year 2025 revenue at about $16.4 billion, Flutter’s 2026 outlook landed below the Street’s comfort zone. The company forecast 2026 revenue around $18.4 billion and adjusted EBITDA around $2.97 billion, while analysts were leaning higher (around $19.3 billion revenue and roughly $3.5 billion EBITDA in some estimates).
Shares slid after the release, with coverage pointing to a market that wanted cleaner execution and a stronger US trajectory.
Prediction Markets: Threat, Distraction, Or Both?
Investors have been jumpy about prediction markets in the US (think event contracts that can look a lot like sports betting from 10 feet away). Flutter’s message was basically: we’re watching, we don’t see meaningful damage to the sportsbook, and we think the trend could even push more states toward clearer legalization.
The company has also been building its own angle here, including FanDuel Predicts and plans to step up investment, which management said could weigh on 2026 profit.
What Analysts Are Saying Now
The early read from the market is “disappointing print, story not dead.” Commentary has centered on Flutter needing to prove it can defend its US lead as rivals sharpen their products and promos, while also showing that its scale advantage actually translates into durable margins.
What Online Casino And Sportsbook Players Should Watch Next
If you’re a regular FanDuel user, the next few months likely bring more retention moves rather than fireworks: Flutter has talked about using loyalty mechanics to keep customers engaged and differentiate from prediction-style platforms that can’t easily mirror casino-style incentives. For players, that usually means more structured rewards (and fewer random “spray and pray” promos).








