Why DraftKings Rocketed 209% in 2023, and What's in Store for 2024

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The stock of DraftKings (NASDAQ: DKNG) certainly divides investors. The online sports betting company has been a favorite of "disruptive growth" investors like Cathie Wood, but it also once garnered the skepticism of short-sellers like Jim Chanos.

While the stock is still more than 50% below its 2021 all-time highs, 2023 was a year for the DraftKings bulls, with the stock soaring over 209% and becoming one of the best stocks in the market last year.

The question now is: What accounts for DraftKings' improvement, and is the stock still a buy?

Why DraftKings soared in 2023

It wasn't just speculative investors bidding up DraftKings stock in 2023. The company actually posted rapidly improving financials, even if it hasn't hit profitability yet.

Looking back, there were two main reasons for DraftKings' improved financial performance: Increased industry consolidation, and more parlay betting.

In 2023, Fox quit the online sports betting business and DraftKings took share

On industry consolidation, it appears as though DraftKings' first-mover position in legal U.S. states, combined with a large marketing budget, has forced many of the smaller players out of the industry. Even large, public companies hoping to get into this newly legal industry have bowed out, with Fox Corporation (NASDAQ: FOX) being the latest casualty.

In August 2023, this potentially formidable competitor decided to shut down its Fox Bet online sports betting (OSB) operations, clearing the way for DraftKings and existing companies to retain or take even more market share. The Fox shutdown followed those of other smaller hopefuls, including MaximBet, Fubo Sportsbook, Churchill Downs, and theScore, over the last couple of years.

Fox still owns 2.5% of Flutter Entertainment (OTC: PDYP.Y), the parent of FanDuel. FanDuel, along with DraftKings, now forms an oligopoly that shares just over 70% of the online sports betting market today. Fox also has an option to acquire 18.6% of FanDuel at a valuation of $20 billion. So, it appears Fox is just choosing to accede to the leader, in which it already has a stake.

DraftKings spent big, and competitors went home

Fox's move revealed that the massive investments DraftKings has made over the last few years seem to have succeeded in crowding out hope for smaller entrants.

That journey of aggressive spending began even from DraftKings' first days as a public company, when it simultaneously merged with its technology provider SBTech, during its three-way merger with special purpose acquisition company (SPAC) Diamond Eagle Acquisition Corp.