The Day

Digital currency may combat Macao casino woes

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Macao has moved a step closer to the potential introducti­on of a digital currency as it seeks to better combat money laundering and tax evasion in the world’s biggest gambling hub.

The government plans to amend laws to regulate the issuance of a virtual legal tender, Chief Executive Ho Iat Seng told lawmakers this week. The government will work with China’s central bank to “study the feasibilit­y of issuing a digital currency,” he said.

Although no formal plans have been announced on whether or how a digital currency would be implemente­d, some junkets — businesses that act as middlemen for Chinese high-rollers who make up half the city’s gambling revenue — are worried the imposition of a traceable, government-linked currency will be the death knell for an industry already hobbled by the virus and stricter rules around high-stakes gambling. A number of casino operators have been approached by Macao’s regulator to discuss the feasibilit­y of using a digital yuan to buy gambling chips, Bloomberg News reported in December.

The aim of introducin­g a virtual currency is to improve effectiven­ess in reducing money laundering, tax evasion and terrorism financing, according to Ho.

The plan comes amid a slow recovery from the slump in casino revenue caused by the pandemic travel curbs that kept lucrative Chinese gamblers away.

Casino analysts still need more

details to evaluate the impact of the potential launch of a digital yuan. The mandatory use of a digital currency as the only option for buying gambling chips would be negative for Macao casinos by essentiall­y eliminatin­g the junket system, according to an earlier note by Sanford C. Bernstein analysts led by Vitaly Umansky.

However, it would be a long-term positive, especially for the premium mass-market, if a digital yuan becomes one of the options that offer easier access to money in the city, the analysts said.

The People’s Bank of China has tested a digital yuan in several cities, putting it on track to be the first

major central bank to issue a virtual currency. A broader rollout is expected for the Winter Olympics in Beijing in February 2022, giving the effort internatio­nal exposure. The developmen­t of a digital yuan has raised U.S. concerns of a potential threat to topple the dollar as the world’s reserve currency in the long term.

 ?? BILLY H.C. KWOK/BLOOMBERG ?? The MGM Grand Macau casino at night in Macao, China. The world’s biggest gambling hub seems to be exploring digital currency as a way to combat money laundering and tax evasion.
BILLY H.C. KWOK/BLOOMBERG The MGM Grand Macau casino at night in Macao, China. The world’s biggest gambling hub seems to be exploring digital currency as a way to combat money laundering and tax evasion.

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