Bet365 boss Denise Coates gets £300m pay package - a £170m cut
Bet365 boss Denise Coates took home about £300m during its last financial year - £170m down on the previous year - as growth stalled.
The billionaire founder of the online gambling firm received £250m in salary and a share of the company's pay-out of £97.5m in dividends.
Ms Coates, one of Britain's wealthiest women and a major philanthropist, has received a total of about £1.3bn from the business in the past five years.
Bet365 was created 21 years ago.
Ms Coates and her brother John took over a betting shop business run by their father, spotting that online gambling could revolutionise the industry. She now owns about half of the company.
Bet365's latest accounts filed at Companies House show revenues were broadly flat at £2.82bn in the first year of the pandemic, compared with £2.81bn in the previous year.
Although not named in the accounts, Ms Coates has always been regarded as the person referred to as "highest paid director". She is thought to be Britain's biggest individual tax payer.
It's unclear why the pay fell so much, although Bet365's earnings from sports betting was hit as the pandemic caused chaos to sporting schedules. A rise in betting via online slot machines and casinos helped offset the loss.
Bet365 said: "At the start of the period we experienced the almost complete cessation of sporting events. However by the end of the first half of the year, we saw the resumption of sports with the vast majority of European football leagues managing to conclude their domestic seasons."
Meanwhile, operating profit increased by 47% year-on-year to £285.5m, a gain the firm said was driven in large part by reduced pay packets for directors.
Bet365 made charitable donations, mostly to the Denise Coates Foundation, of £103m, up from almost £90m the year before.
Ms Coates achieved a first-class degree in econometrics and later trained as an accountant within the family firm.
The company owns Stoke City football club, and is based in Stoke-on-Trent.