China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Tough luck asMacao gamblers lie low

World Cup and drive against corruption keep bettors away

- By BLOOMBERG

Macao’s casino revenue fell for the first time in five years last month as the soccer World Cup diverted some bettors in the world’s largest gambling hub.

To t a l gross gaming revenue dropped 3.7 percent to 27 billion patacas ($3.4 billion) last month, the first decline since June 2009, when it fell 17 percent, according to Macao’s Gaming Inspection and Coordinati­on Bureau. This compared with the median estimate of a 4 percent decline from nine analysts surveyed by Bloomberg News.

“We expect gross gaming revenue growth to return to the positive side in the second half of 2014 after the World Cup,” Billy Ng, an analyst at Bank of America Merrill Lynch, wrote in a report on Tuesday. Revenue should rebound in July to 30 billion patacas, 2 percent higher than a year earlier, Ng wrote.

Casinos inMacao, the only place in China where gambling is legal, rely for more than 60 percent of revenue on high rollers brought in by junket operators. Growth in the VIP segment has slowed as gamblers cut spending amid a cooling Chinese economy and a nationwide crackdown on corruption.

High rollers, bettors who wager at least HK$5 million ($645,000) per trip, are shying away fromMacao.

“Everybody wants to lie low,” Edmund Lee, a partner at Pricewater­houseCoope­rs in Hong Kong who specialize­s in the gambling industry, said in an interview. The high-stakes gamblers “don’t want to draw unnecessar­y attention to themselves amid China’s anti-corruption campaign,” he said.

President Xi Jinping

has waged war on corruption since 2012, and his crackdown on lavish spending has hurt luxury sales, from Chow Tai Fook Jewelry Group Ltd to Gucci bags.

The monthlong World Cup soccer tournament that started on June 12 also diverted some casino patrons, Phoebe Tse, a Hong Kong-based analyst at Barclays Plc, wrote in a note published June 23. While weak revenue figures could continue to be a red flag for gaming shares, current valuations are “attractive” for longer-term added.

Meanwhile, the Macao government’s plan to further restrict the use of China UnionPay Co’s debit cards at casinos also dented cash flow into the Chinese city.

Macao’s Monetary Authority in June ordered jewelry stores and pawnshops operating on casino floors to remove UnionPay card terminals by July 1, SJM Holdings Ltd Chief Executive Officer Ambrose So said.

investors, she

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