Current Report: Betsson May Gain 19.48% In A Year

Betsson projects a 19.4% annual return, driven by a robust 8.12% dividend yield and historical price recovery.

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Source: DepositPhotos

The company was founded in 1963 and is headquartered in Stockholm, Sweden.

Betsson AB (BTSBF) invests in online gaming companies. It offers casino, sportsbook, and other games via gaming licenses in countries in Europe and Central Asia.

Three key data points gauge BTSBF (or any dividend-paying entity):

(1) Price 

(2) Dividends

(3) Returns

Those three keys also indicate if any company has made, is making, and will make money.

BTSBF Price

Betsson’s single share price dropped $8.11 (or about 46%) from $17.54 to $9.43 in the past year, per Tuesday’s opening market report.

No analysts cover the stock. However, the BTSBF's past four-year price history shows an average $1.07 annual price gain, which I’ll use for its annual return after I discuss dividends.  

BTSBF Dividends

Betsson has paid semi-annual dividends since May 2025. The latest SA amount of  $0.38 is payable November 18th (to shareholders on record as of November 11th), yielding 8.12% annually (per Tuesday’s opening market report)

BTSBF Returns

Putting it all together, as of July 14th, a possible gross gain of $1.83 was projected. The $1.07 per share historic annual gain was added to the $0.76 forward-looking annual dividend to equal a $1.83 gross gain.

A little under $1000 invested in BTSBF at Tuesday’s $9.43 opening share price would buy 106 shares, which multiply the $1.83 gross gain to $194.06 for the coming year, or about 19.4%.

My dividend dogcatcher rule is to only buy initial shares of a dividend stock that pay an annual dividend (from $1000 i

BTSBFs projected annual dividend from $1K invested is $81.20. As BTSBF shows, an annual dividend from $1,000 invested at a $9.43 price proves to be 8.6 times its recent single share price.

The exact track of BTSBF’s future share price and dividend will entirely be determined by market action and company finances. 

Remember, the best way to track stock performance and dividend payments is through direct ownership of company shares.

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