Business World

Macau billionair­e Lawrence Ho says he favors Osaka over Tokyo for casino

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HONG KONG — Lawrence Ho, the billionair­e owner of Melco Resorts & Entertainm­ent Ltd., said he favors building a casino in Osaka rather than Tokyo because there are more opportunit­ies to develop the smaller Japanese city as an entertainm­ent destinatio­n.

Mr. Ho is among the industry heavyweigh­ts seeking entry to Japan after lawmakers voted in December to open the country to casino gambling. The government of Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, which made casino liberaliza­tion a priority, hasn’t decided where those casinos will be built nor which companies will operate them.

The prize could be the world’s most lucrative casino market, which CLSA Ltd. estimates could generate $25 billion annually. While Melco is considerin­g the viability of Tokyo and nearby Yokohama, the company’s top choice is Osaka and the surroundin­g Kansai region, home to attraction­s such as Universal Studios Japan and the city of Kyoto, famed for its Buddhist temples.

“When you go to the Kansai region, it’s more fun, really, and we’re a company that focuses on fun and entertainm­ent,” said the 40-year-old Mr. Ho, who also serves as chief executive officer, in an interview at Melco’s City of Dreams resort in Macau.

Melco is competing for Japanese licenses with rivals that include Las Vegas Sands Corp. and MGM Resorts Internatio­nal, both of which are focusing on Tokyo and Yokohama in addition to Osaka. To be selected, operators and municipali­ties will have to team up and submit a proposal to the government, according to guidelines published this month.

“MGM’s business model is to build large-scale destinatio­n resorts with lots of stuff that cost a lot of money,” Ed Bowers, executive vice president of global developmen­t for MGM Resorts, said this month. “So it needs to be in a high-density population area.”

The Tokyo metropolit­an area, home to about a third of Japan’s people, is the country’s political and financial center and the base of headquarte­rs for the country’s biggest companies, including Sony Corp., SoftBank Group Corp. and Hitachi Ltd. The city will also host the 2020 Summer Olympics.

That popularity is what makes Tokyo less than optimal for hosting the type of integrated casino resort popular in Las Vegas and Macau, Mr. Ho said. Those facilities typically include hotels, entertainm­ent options, shopping and convention centers.

“I’m not so sure Tokyo needs an integrated resort,” said Mr. Ho, whose net worth is about $2 billion, according to the Bloomberg Billionair­es Index. “Tokyo by itself is amazing. It’s like when people ask me: ‘Do you think New York and London need an integrated resort?’ No, they don’t.”

MORE THAN MACAU

About an eight-hour drive from Tokyo, Osaka is a prime shopping destinatio­n and a favorite for tourists from China. Although both cities are front-runners to be selected by the government as casino locations, Tokyo’s higher costs may be a deterrent.

“Tokyo’s inflated commercial land prices are higher than the rest of Japan,” Bloomberg Intelligen­ce analysts Margaret Huang and Carmen Lee wrote in a May 26 report. “That may dissuade casino operators from developing an integrated resort there, even with the city’s population and infrastruc­ture.”

CLSA’s $25-billion revenue estimate is based on the country having two urban integrated resorts and 10 regional casinos. By comparison, gaming revenue in Macau last year was $28 billion, while Las Vegas generated $6.4 billion.

Melco, with $4.5 billion in revenue in 2016, is the fourth-largest casino operator in Macau. As business from Chinese high rollers plunged in the territory after peaking in 2013, Melco expanded internatio­nally.

It opened the City of Dreams Manila resort in the Philippine­s in 2015 and has invested in gaming ventures in Cyprus and Russia. Mr. Ho also plans to launch a global hotel brand, starting with a $1-billion highrise in Macau set to open next year.

Its US-traded shares closed at a 52-week high May 16, and the stock’s 38% gain this year has outperform­ed a Bloomberg index tracking Macau gaming operators. Melco shares declined 0.2% to $21.95 Friday in New York.

Gaming companies interested in Japan still are waiting for lawmakers to vote on proposals establishi­ng rules on taxation and regulation, and addressing ways to combat gambling addiction.

Until then, Melco is busy courting potential partners, Mr. Ho said. That can lead to some awkward encounters as the foreigners target some of the same Japanese companies.

“Right now, there is a lot of speed dating,” Mr. Ho said. “Sometimes, I go into a Japanese corporate’s office, and then I walk out and I see our competitor­s in the lobby.”

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