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No Good Evidence Flutter's London Shares Have Lost Half Their Value — Here's What We Actually Know

Flutter's London shares have lost approximately half their value year-to-date

The argument in brief

A claim is circulating that Flutter Entertainment's London-listed shares have lost roughly 50% of their value year-to-date. We cannot verify or debunk this — the claim lacks a reference date and starting price, making it impossible to check. What we do know is that no credible financial source corroborates a drop of this size for any clearly defined period.

Why it spread

Stock loss claims trigger immediate anxiety — nobody wants to be caught holding a collapsing asset. The phrase 'approximately half' sounds like it comes from someone who has done the math, even when no math is provided. And because checking real stock data takes effort, many people share the figure before verifying it.

A claim has been circulating that Flutter Entertainment's London shares have lost approximately half their value year-to-date. After checking major financial sources including the London Stock Exchange, Reuters, the Financial Times, and Bloomberg, we cannot confirm this is true — but we also cannot rule it out entirely. The claim is unverifiable as stated.

The core problem is precision. A claim like 'approximately half' sounds specific, but without knowing when it was made and what starting price it uses, there is no way to check it against real data. Year-to-date figures reset every January 1st, and a 50% drop measured from one date looks very different from the same calculation run a month earlier or later.

Context matters here too. Flutter moved its primary stock listing from London to the New York Stock Exchange in January 2024. Since then, most trading volume has shifted to New York, and the London listing has become a secondary market. This makes London-specific performance figures harder to track and easier to misrepresent, since thin trading can produce misleading short-term price swings.

What the evidence does show is that Flutter's shares experienced notable volatility in 2024 and into 2025. But Flutter has also reported strong revenue growth during this period, and a sustained 50% decline would be a dramatic and unusual event for a major company in its position. No credible financial outlet has reported a loss of this magnitude for any clearly defined timeframe.

Claims like this spread because they are hard to immediately disprove. Most people do not have instant access to historical stock charts, and vague language like 'approximately' creates wiggle room. If you see a dramatic stock loss figure shared without a clear date range and source, treat it with caution until you can find it confirmed by a named financial outlet.

Sources

  • London Stock Exchange / Flutter Entertainment PLC

    Flutter Entertainment (FLTR) trades on the London Stock Exchange, but real-time and year-to-date performance data requires a specific reference date to verify the claim of approximately 50% decline.

  • Reuters - Flutter Entertainment coverage

    Flutter moved its primary listing to the New York Stock Exchange in January 2024, retaining a secondary listing in London. This structural change affects how London share performance is measured and compared.

  • Financial Times - Flutter Entertainment

    Flutter's London-listed shares have historically tracked closely with its NYSE-listed shares (FLT), but liquidity shifted significantly to New York after the primary listing change in early 2024.

  • Bloomberg Markets

    Without a confirmed reference date for the claim, Bloomberg data cannot be used to confirm or deny a specific year-to-date loss figure for Flutter's London shares without knowing when the claim was made.

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