Las Vegas Review-Journal

MGM exec with long tenure in Macao dealings to step down

- By Richard N. Velotta Las Vegas Review-journal

A longtime casino executive of MGM Resorts Internatio­nal’s Macao operations is retiring, according to a public filing.

Grant Bowie, CEO and executive director of MGM China, which oversees MGM Macau and MGM Cotai, “decided not to extend his contract and elected to step down earlier to match with his personal retirement plans,” according to a Monday filing with the Hong Kong Stock Exchange.

He worked for three major Las Vegas companies in the past 22 years.

His retirement is effective May 31, but Bowie will remain as an executive director until a new appointmen­t is made. He’ll also serve as an adviser to the company through 2022.

“Grant is an incredibly valued leader and we wish him the best,” MGM spokeswoma­n Callie Driehorst said on behalf of the company. “He played a central role in taking our efforts in Macau to new heights throughout his 12-year tenure with MGM Resorts. We are sincerely grateful to him. It was a great run.”

Bowie, an Australian, first entered Macao’s gaming market in 2003 as president and general manager of Wynn Resorts Macau. Bowie opened Wynn Macau in 2006 but left the company a year later before it began developmen­t plans for Encore Macau.

He joined MGM China as president of MGM Grand Paradise, a title he has held through retirement.

He became CEO and a director for MGM in 2010.

Prior to working in Macao, Bowie served as a senior vice president for Caesars Entertainm­ent-australia from 1998 to 2003 before joining Wynn.

Bowie also serves as an adjunct professor of tourism for the University of Queensland in Brisbane, Australia.

Contact Richard N. Velotta at rvelotta@reviewjour­nal.com or 702-477-3893. Follow @Rickvelott­a on Twitter.

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