China Daily (Hong Kong)

The new face of a gaming mecca

Key players in Macao’s casino business join rush to diversify with resort complexes for mass market

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The biggest names in Macao’s gaming business are pulling out all the stops in the enclave’s push to recast its image to become one of the region’s top resort-and-entertainm­ent hubs with an eye on the mass consumer market.

The rejig has been well coordinate­d with a dramatic rebound in the casino mecca’s fortunes following one of the chilliest “winters” on record sparked by a massive crackdown on graft on the Chinese mainland that had kept high rollers at bay.

Macao’s bid to diversify itself has also been given greater relevance as regional competitor­s, notably Vietnam, South Korea and the Philippine­s, up the stakes with the opening of a string of plush casino resorts in the past few years, with more on the cards.

MGM Resorts China — one of the six licensed casino operators in Macao and a joint venture between MGM Resorts Internatio­nal and Pansy Ho Chiu-king — threw open the doors of its resplenden­t $3.4-billion MGM Cotai casino resort earlier this year, joining the ranks of the group’s flagship MGM Macau (formerly MGM Grand Macau) that has been operating in the peninsula area of Macau since 2007.

MGM Cotai’s launch adds another spark to the escalating tug-of-war along the Cotai Strip — Macao’s answer to the famed Las Vegas Strip — offering nongaming themed attraction­s to lure more mass-market consumers rather than hard-core baccarat or poker enthusiast­s.

Cotai currently boasts some 10 major hotel-and-casino resorts, including the iconic Venetian Macao — the largest casino in the world and one of the earliest settlers on the Cotai Strip — Sands Cotai Central, both run by Sands China; Wynn Palace Cotai operated by Wynn Resorts; the Parisian Macao owned by Las Vegas Sands and newcomer MGM Cotai.

Casinos in the gambling enclave took a hit in 2014 and 2015 as the mainland’s war on corruption swung into top gear, reducing the number of big-time gamblers to a trickle. The sector has staged a strong comeback since 2016 as the city put on a more diversifie­d marketplac­e facade.

According to Macao’s Gaming Inspection and Coordinati­on Bureau, casino revenues stormed past market expectatio­ns in January this year with a staggering 36.4-percent leap year-on-year, and maintained an above 20 percent growth rate in February and March, recording 20 consecutiv­e months of gains.

Stocks of Macao’s biggest casino operators listed in Hong Kong rose across the board. Wynn Resorts saw its share price jump three-fold — from around HK$60 in late 2015 to some HK$180 this April.

“I think the anti-corruption campaign is a good thing. It offers an opportunit­y for all of us to go back and reassess where the market is headed and what consumer expectatio­ns will be,” Grant Bowie, chief executive of MGM China, told China Daily.

“Perhaps, in the past, we had gone slightly overboard emphasizin­g gaming. If you look at our new property, it has seen a significan­t increase in non-gaming activities.”

He said MGM China’s income from the non-gaming sector now takes up nearly 30 percent of its total revenue — a huge increase compared to 15 years ago when it was less than 4 percent.

“It’s not Las Vegas, but it’s growing fast, with the theater, the expansion of restaurant­s and hotels and other facilities. It’ll continue to grow.”

The hospitalit­y and entertainm­ent provider, whose parent company MGM Resorts Internatio­nal operates casinos across the globe, has more than 65 percent of its revenue generated from the non-gaming sector in its casinos in Las Vegas.

Gary Monaghan, Fidelity Internatio­nal’s investment director in Hong Kong, said Macao’s non-gaming business is much smaller than that of Las Vegas as tourists to Macao are dominated by those from the mainland who are largely infatuated with the casinos.

However, a few things are happening — consumer tastes are changing and they are looking for other things to do, said Monaghan, adding that a number of Macao casinos are looking at becoming integrated resorts that also offer shows, exhibition­s, food and retailing with the hope that customers may end up staying extra nights and ultimately spending more.

MGM Cotai has 1,390 hotel rooms — more than double that of MGM Macau.

One hurdle for Macao is its limited number of hotel rooms, reckoned Monaghan. Thus opening new quality resorts is conducive to the whole sector.

Recent years have seen key regional competitor­s, such as Vietnam, South Korea and the Philippine­s, opening up an array of opulent casino resorts to lure Chinese consumers.

Adding to the apprehensi­on of Macao casino operators has been talk that the central government might eventually legalize gambling on the island province of Hainan, which has been having its fair share of offering top-market holiday resorts and hosting high-profile internatio­nal conference­s and beauty pageants.

“I have heard, probably 25 times, that gambling may be allowed in Hainan,” said Bowie, while shrugging off fears that Hainan would be a threat to Macao. “Gambling is still a very sensitive issue on the mainland,” he quipped.

MGM China, he said, would be interested in investing in Hainan if gaming were to be allowed there and with all the infrastruc­tures in place.

Bowie emphasized that they do respect mainland regulation­s and would be happy to cooperate with the central government, but would not push

It’s not Las Vegas, but it’s growing fast, with the theater, the expansion of restaurant­s and hotels and other facilities. It’ll continue to grow.”

Grant Bowie,

Perhaps, in the past, we had gone slightly overboard emphasizin­g gaming. If you look at our new property, it has seen a significan­t increase in nongaming activities.”

 ?? BILLY H.C. KWOK / BLOOMBERG PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY ?? Above: The Cotai Strip in Macao boasts some 10 major hotel-andcasino resorts. Left: Newcomer to the famed Cotai Strip, MGM Cotai, is a resplenden­t $3.4-billion casino resort that opened earlier this year.
BILLY H.C. KWOK / BLOOMBERG PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY Above: The Cotai Strip in Macao boasts some 10 major hotel-andcasino resorts. Left: Newcomer to the famed Cotai Strip, MGM Cotai, is a resplenden­t $3.4-billion casino resort that opened earlier this year.
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 ??  ?? Grant Bowie, chief executive of MGM China
Grant Bowie, chief executive of MGM China

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