The Gold Coast Bulletin

Fung plays to win off of ASF loss PLACE YOUR BETS

- RYAN KEEN ryan.keen@news.com.au

HONG KONG billionair­e Tony Fung is emerging as a potential big winner from the axing of ASF’s $3 billion Spit project which frees up a second casino licence.

Major Gold Coast investor Mr Fung and his Aquis Australia was part of a consortium which last year paid $40 million for an 11,600 square metre Surfers Paradise site.

It borders Gold Coast Highway and Cypress Avenue, and while no plans have been unveiled for it sources close to the deal say it was bought for “landbankin­g” on the belief the casino licence destined for The Spit project would become available.

Mr Fung strongly believed ASF’s project would fail to proceed making his site – home to the Vomitron ride attraction – more attractive for a potential casino resort developmen­t, sources say.

“They acquired the site on the assumption ASF would fall over – either it would fall over because ASF would run out of patience or the State Government would pull the rug out from under them,” the source said.

“It’s why Tony Fung bought the Vomitron site last year – he has landbanked that waiting for the ASF deal to fall over.”

ASF was the State Government’s preferred Integrated Resort Developmen­t proponent but Premier Annastacia Palaszczuk sensationa­lly The Labor Government’s terminatio­n of ASF’s $3 billion integrated resort at The Spit has freed up the city’s second casino licence. Potential site frontrunne­rs for another casino are:

● AU building, Southport, where ASF have approval for a 66-level superpower.

● Star of the Sea site, Southport, where owner China-based Huixin Real Estate Group wants a partner to build.

● Vomitron site, Surfers Paradise, which Tony Fung’s Aquis Australia, China Communicat­ions Constructi­on Company and Tandella Group paid $40m for last year.

terminated the five-tower project earlier this week.

It is unclear if Mr Fung and his Surfers site partners – who ironically include ASF partner China Communicat­ions Constructi­on Company – are interested in applying for the casino licence themselves.

But a source said: “His expectatio­n is the site is valuable for someone to put a proposal forward to develop.

“The goal is someone like Caesars Entertainm­ent offers him a big fat cheque for the site so he can focus on another project.”

Mr Fung had spent months with an option on the Sheraton Mirage site but decided it was too “political and difficult and bureaucrat­ic”, a source said.

Because of that experience, a source said: “He realised there was always going to be a second licence available.”

But the source added Mr Fung was not keen to repeat his experience at Yorkeys Knob, Cairns, where he first withdrew a casino from a major resort proposal before later shelving the plans altogether.

Separately, Mr Fung and Aquis have plans for a $440 million six-star hotel on prime Surfers Paradise beachfront land it wholly owns on the Esplanade.

The existing 14-storey Pacific Point apartment complex is to be demolished for a 48storey tower with 580 hotel rooms, premier dining and entertainm­ent options.

It has no integrated resort or casino aspect.

Caesars president of internatio­nal developmen­t Steven Tight revealed to the Bulletin five weeks ago the global casino entertainm­ent giant was doing an internal study on whether the Gold Coast market could sustain another “large-scale integrated resort”.

He visited in mid-June, meeting with Gold Coast Tourism chairman Paul Donovan and State Government developmen­t officials.

Mr Tight declined to comment on the Labor State Government’s terminatio­n of the ASF project, calling it an “interestin­g developmen­t”.

“Let’s see how this evolves,” Mr Tight said week. all this

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