MACAU'S BAD RUN CONTINUES
9 January 2009
Casino revenues fall for third consecutive month
The tough times for Macau continue to cause executive
stress in the Asian offshore gambling mecca, with the
news that casino revenues fell for the third month,
declining 5.8 percent from a year ago to 7.65 billion
patacas.
The tally represented Macau's biggest year-on-year
percentage decline in more than three years, unofficial
data reported yesterday by Portuguese news agency Lusa
shows.
Beijing's seven-month-old restrictions on mainland
visits has combined with a credit crunch among the VIP
junket agents who lend money to high rollers, bringing
growth in Macau's once-booming casino industry to a
dramatic halt.
Average casino winnings shrank to 7.8 billion patacas
per month in the last four months of the 2008, down 20
percent from 9.7 billion per month recorded between
January and August.
The year-on-year growth rate in monthly revenues plunged
to minus 2.1 percent on average in the last four months
from 51.6 percent during the first eight months,
although that comparison is skewed by major resort
openings last year including the Grand Lisboa, Crown,
Venetian and MGM Grand operations.
Despite the dramatic slowdown in recent months, casino
revenue for the full year grew 31 percent overall in
2008 to 108.76 billion patacas, up from 83.02 billion
patacas in 2007.
The leaked unofficial figures have historically proven
accurate. On average, they underestimated the actual
revenue data by 1.08 percent in the 14 months to
October.
December 2008 also suffered an unfavourable calendar
comparison as it included one less Saturday than the
same month a year ago.
Beijing has cut the frequency of visits that mainland
passport holders can make to Macau, reducing these to
once every three months from once every two weeks prior
to June 1.
At the same time, the financial crisis is eroding
private wealth across Asia. High rollers who account for
about 70 percent of Macau's casino revenue and who often
play on credit have delayed or defaulted on repayments
to the junket agents who bankroll their gambling
sessions, reports the South China Morning Post.
Junkets fearful of getting caught out for cash have
responded by tightening their credit controls, which
adds more downward pressure on VIP gaming revenues.
The fall-off has dealt a busted flush to investors in
Macau plays. Las Vegas Sands Corp's share price
plummeted a shocking 94.25 percent last year, while Wynn
Resort's 62.31 percent decline was the best performance
among the city's six licensed casino operators.
Online Casino News Courtesy of
Infopowa
More news here.
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