Bangkok Post

Crown exits Macau casino joint venture

- VINICY CHAN DREW SINGER DANIELA WEI

HONG KONG/NEW YORK: Casino billionair­es Lawrence Ho and James Packer have said their last adieu to a decade-long gaming partnershi­p in Macau, with each going in opposite directions.

Packer’s Crown Resorts Ltd says that it will sell the last of its stake in Melco Resorts & Entertainm­ent Ltd and will receive about $987 million from the transactio­n, according to an exchange filing yesterday. The company said it would use the net proceeds to reduce Crown’s net debt.

Hong Kong billionair­e Lawrence Ho, who controls the casino and resort developer, kicked off a share sale to fund the concurrent repurchase, the company said in a filing on Monday.

While calling Packer a “great friend and partner,” Ho said he would take the solo route in a global expansion, with Japan as the next target. Packer, on the other hand, is retreating back to Australia.

“Despite our positive history with Crown, I made the strategic decision to terminate the joint venture arrangemen­t and allow Melco to pursue Japan alone,” said Ho, chairman and chief executive officer of Melco Resort & Entertainm­ent, in a statement.

“This highlights our confidence in and commitment to, identifyin­g and evaluating new markets which will drive long-term shareholde­r value.”

Crown Resorts began selling down its stake in Melco Crown last year, in the aftermath of a clampdown by Chinese authoritie­s in October, when more than a dozen Crown staff were detained for alleged gambling crimes. It’s now mostly focused on its Australian resorts and developmen­t projects in the country.

Melco said on Monday that it offered to sell 27.8 million American depositary shares and almost 82 million ordinary shares along with the buyback. Terms showed separately that 15.8 million ADS were offered at $21.25 to $21.45 each via Deutsche Bank AG, UBS Group AG and Morgan Stanley.

Melco Resorts’ majority shareholde­r, Melco Internatio­nal Developmen­t Ltd, will repurchase its joint venture partner Crown Resorts’ remaining stake in the company as part of the deal, according to a statement on Monday.

Upon the completion of the share repurchase on May 15, Crown Resort will cease to be a shareholde­r in the company and Crown’s sole remaining nominee director will resign as nonexecuti­ve director.

“In the long-run, the partnershi­p’s end is a net positive for Melco that puts it in the driver’s seat,’’ said Union Gaming Group LLC analyst Grant Govertsen.

“The total eliminatio­n of Crown (and therefore the dissolving of the JV) is a positive for Melco,” he said. “While the Melco side of the JV already had majority control, this transactio­n cements the control and allows Melco to solely determine strategies going forward.”

Ho, whose company also operates a casino in the Philippine­s and owns a controllin­g stake in a Russian gaming resort, said in an interview with Bloomberg earlier that the company “will do whatever it takes” to get a casino licence in Japan.

Japan legalised casino gambling last year, and legislatio­n on the rules for the industry will be introduced in coming months.

Ho forecast the country could “easily” be a $20 billion market if cities such as Osaka or Yokohama had one or two casino resorts.

 ??  ??
 ??  ?? Packer: Retreating back to Australia
Packer: Retreating back to Australia

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Thailand