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Casino Operators Gain Billions As Macau Stays At 6 Licences

Casino operators shares jump nearly 10% after Macau’s government said on Friday the number of operators allowed in the world’s largest gambling hub would be limited to six


Tourists take snaps in front of the Hotel Lisboa and Grand Lisboa Casino in Macau. AFP photo.

 

Shares of Macau’s top casino operators racked up as much as HK$65.53 billion ($8.42 billion) on Monday – or 15% of their market value – as the government of the world’s largest gambling hub retained the limit on casino licences to six.

By the close of the Hong Kong market, the six Macau casino operators had gained 9.9% in value, or HK$42.2 billion, putting the overall market value of the operators at about HK$469 billion. Sands China led the rally.

Shares of Sands China Ltd, which jumped as much as 22.3%, ended the day up 14.6% in their biggest daily percentage gain since October 2011. That compared with a 0.7% decline in the benchmark Hang Seng Index.

Wynn Macau, which jumped as much as 19.1%, closed up 11.9% in its best day since March 2020.

Macau’s government announced on Friday that the number of new casino operators allowed to function in the world’s largest gambling hub would be limited to six with an operating period of up to 10 years.

The regulatory announcement provides new clarity and should remove most investors’ key concerns such as dividends, government oversight, minimum shareholding by a Macau permanent resident, and gaming tax, Citi said in a research note.

The former Portuguese colony is the world’s biggest gambling hub in terms of money wagered.

 

Scrutiny Tightened

Macau massively tightened its scrutiny of casinos in recent years, with authorities clamping down on illicit capital flows from mainland China and targeting underground lending and illegal cash transfers.

The market value of US casino operators, including Sands China, Wynn Macau, MGM China and Melco, gained as much as HK$43.23 billion ($5.55 billion) in Hong Kong.

Citi raised target prices on the six Macau casino operators by 8%-14% following the government’s clarification on the revisions in gaming law.

Shares of Galaxy Entertainment, MGM China, SJM, and Melco finished up between 4.8% and 11.7%.

“The proposed bill would remove the current sub-concession structure, but not change the competitive dynamics ultimately,” Jefferies wrote in a research note.

“As the government crackdown on junkets continue, we expect long-term pressure on VIP business,” Jefferies said, adding that the near-term gross gaming revenue outlook remains bleak amid uncertainties over timing of the border reopening with recent Covid-19 outbreaks on the mainland and in Hong Kong.

 

• Reuters with additional editing by Jim Pollard

 

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Jim Pollard

Jim Pollard is an Australian journalist based in Thailand since 1999. He worked for News Ltd papers in Sydney, Perth, London and Melbourne before travelling through SE Asia in the late 90s. He was a senior editor at The Nation for 17+ years.

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