USA TODAY US Edition

What’s next for Vegas’ casinos?

- Leo Sun The Motley Fool Leo Sun owns shares of Las Vegas Sands. The Motley Fool has no position in any of the stocks mentioned.

You might think Las Vegas is the gambling capital of the world, but it’s not. Macau, a special administra­tive region of China in which gambling is legal, claimed that title more than 10 years ago.

Las Vegas Sands, the biggest casino operator in the world, was the first to notice that shift, and it now controls the heart of Macau’s Cotai Strip. Its Vegas-based rivals

Wynn and MGM Resorts played catch-up over the past decade, but they still generate far less revenue from Macau than Sands, which owns the Venetian, Parisian, Sands Cotai and Four Seasons properties in Cotai.

Sands and Wynn, which are more exposed to Macau than Vegas-oriented MGM, faced tough conditions over the past two years due to anti-corruption probes in China, where the government viewed Macau’s casinos as hotbeds of money laundering. However, those headwinds have faded over the past year, and Macau’s gaming revenue rose annually for the 10th consecutiv­e month in May. This makes Macau-centered casino operators such as Sands and Wynn interestin­g plays in the growth of China’s middle class and increasing tourism in Macau.

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