Bangkok Post

Casinos see revenue fall 88% in Feb

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HONG KONG: Casinos in Macau, the Chinese territory that’s the world’s biggest gambling hub, reported a record drop in gaming revenue, as they grappled with the cost of closing down their businesses for 15 days to help contain the deadly coronaviru­s outbreak.

Gross gaming revenue was 3.1 billion patacas ($386.5 million) in February, down 87.8% from a year earlier, according to data from the Gaming Inspection & Coordinati­on Bureau. In a survey, analysts had predicted a median 90% slide.

The slump follows a decision by Macau’s government to suspend casino operations from Feb 5 for just over two weeks, dealing another blow to the gambling mecca that’s already struggling to recover from a revenue decline in 2019.

The closure was the longest on record and only the second such instance, after a typhoon in 2018 forced a 33-hour shutdown.

Even after the partial resumption of business around Feb 20, gaming floors have seen few footfalls as China continued to halt individual and group visas to Macau and restrict transporta­tion in a prolonged fight against the spread of the virus.

“Looking at the glass half-full, we feel it could have been worse given the extensive level of disruption suffered,” according to a March 1 note by JPMorgan Chase & Co analysts including DS Kim in Hong Kong.

“While they expect the near-term outlook to be “murky”, stocks could move higher on “less bad” trends. “We do not think Covid-19 will curb gamblers’ enthusiasm in a sustainabl­e way, so its impact on the industry’s sustainabl­e earnings power should be limited.”

JPMorgan is forecastin­g a 24% decrease in gross gaming revenue for the year, based on the expectatio­n of a 70% slump in March and 35% decline in the second quarter, before narrowing the decline to 8% in the following three months, followed by a 5% bump in the final quarter.

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