Sydney, May 20, 2026, 09:08 AEST
Tabcorp Holdings shares entered Wednesday’s Sydney pre-open with a modest rebound behind them and a larger test ahead, after the stock last traded at A$0.685 on Tuesday, up 1.5%, while the S&P/ASX 200 — Australia’s main share index — closed 1.17% higher at 8,604.70. The ASX cash market had not yet moved into normal trading; ASX says continuous trading runs from about 09:59:45 to 16:00 Sydney time. Investing.com Australia
The reason it matters now is that Gillon McLachlan’s turnaround plan is running into a narrow window. The Australian reported that the Tabcorp chief executive has been in daily talks with Racing NSW boss Peter V’landys over a national tote deal that could be clinched as soon as this week, with agreements still needed from greyhound and harness racing bodies in NSW. The Australian
The share price shows investors are not treating this as a clean recovery. Intelligent Investor data listed Tabcorp around A$0.685, compared with A$1.150 at the time of the May 7 AUSTRAC notice and A$1.165 around the May 5 Macquarie presentation — a fall of roughly 40% from those levels. Intelligent Investor
A national tote means combining separate totalisator pools, a form of pool betting in which all bets are put together and the final payout moves as more money comes in before a race. In its Macquarie Conference presentation, Tabcorp said it was targeting delivery by the end of FY26 and listed technology, regulation, engagement with racing authorities and harmonised rules as the four work streams. Company Announcements
Before the AUSTRAC shock, the numbers had started to support McLachlan’s story. Tabcorp reported first-half revenue of A$1.34 billion, up 1.0%, and EBITDA — earnings before interest, tax, depreciation and amortisation — of A$217.4 million, up 14.3%; McLachlan said then the company was “not where we want to be yet” but had made progress.
AUSTRAC changed that tone. On May 7, Tabcorp told the ASX the Australian Transaction Reports and Analysis Centre had serious concerns about its ability to manage money-laundering and terrorism-financing risks, and had begun an enforcement investigation into its anti-money laundering and counter-terrorism financing program. McLachlan said he was “committed to leading a compliant and safe company,” while Chairman Brett Chenoweth said the board and executive were “fully committed” to working with the regulator.
The market reaction was severe. Reuters reported that Tabcorp shares fell as much as 28% after the probe became public, wiping more than A$700 million from market value, and noted the company’s reach across about 4,000 pubs, clubs and TAB outlets in Australia’s A$30 billion bookmaking industry. Reuters
The regulatory backdrop is not limited to Tabcorp. AUSTRAC has already taken Entain Group, operator of Ladbrokes and Neds, to Federal Court over alleged serious and systemic breaches of Australian anti-money laundering and counter-terrorism financing laws, putting compliance costs and customer monitoring squarely in focus for wagering operators. AUSTRAC
But the risk is that Tabcorp gets squeezed from both sides: a slower or narrower national tote agreement would weaken the growth case, while an adverse AUSTRAC outcome could bring penalties, legal costs and remediation spending. Fitch said the investigation had no immediate rating effect, but warned enforcement could increase costs, operational demands and governance risks across the sector. IAG
That leaves the stock with little room for vague promises. A confirmed tote deal would give investors something concrete to price. Without one, Wednesday’s open starts with the same two questions hanging over Tabcorp: how much of the turnaround can still be delivered, and what the regulator may find.