MACAU QUARTERLY REVENUES UP 22.3 PERCENT
23 October 2009
But fears that new visa restrictions may slow
recovery
After months of slow business occasioned by the economic
meltdown and political interference, Macau land casinos
seem to be on an improvement curve, judging by the
latest numbers from the Macau Inspection and
Coordination Bureau.
The Bureau reported that
casino revenue climbed 22.3 percent in the three months
July to September, reaching 31.78 billion patacas ($3.81
billion).
Despite the positive statistics, shares
generally traded down, with operators reportedly still
concerned over recent government moves that have again
introduced visa restrictions hampering travel to the
gambling islands from other Chinese mainland regions.
Visas are now restricted to one visit every two months
(see previous InfoPowa reports) instead of one a month.
The tightened travel restrictions were viewed by
some analysts and casino executives as an attempt to
cool growth in the city's gambling industry amid growing
unease that the cash flooding into casinos could be
siphoning off funds needed to spur China's domestic
economy.
Other challenges face the island
gambling industry. The government has resumed its review
of gaming policy, disrupted by the global financial
crisis. TamPak Yuen, the government's secretary for
economy and finance, said recently that Macau's social
and natural resources are very limited, and the
over-expansion of the gaming industry could have a
negative impact on the diversification of the local
economy, which is the long term goal of the government.
He was speaking on measures supported by the six
major operators on the island to restrict further
expansion of gambling on the island.
The
implementation of such restrictions depends on the
completion of the government review and its
recommendations, Yuen said. It was therefore likely that
a final policy leading to a regulatory regime may not be
possible within the term of office of the incumbent
administration, which ends in December 2009.
Gambling operations in Macau generated revenues of 10.8
billion patacas (US$1.37 billion) in September, surging
by 52 percent over the same period last year. Dr.
Stanley Ho's SJM group, which owns 20 of Macau's 33
local casinos, was still the industry leader with a
market share of 30 percent in September.
In a
further move to cool down the gambling market, the
goverment has prevailed upon Macau operators to reduce
and restrict the amounts paid in commissions to junket
operators - agents that bring the high rollers who are
the main engine driving the business - to the casinos.
In return, the casino operators pay a percentage of bets
placed by VIP gamblers to the junket operators as
commissions.
The commission rate rose to a high
of 1.35 percent as competition heated up after the
liberalisation of Macau's gaming sector in 2002,
compared with just 0.8 percent when the sector was still
monopolised by SJM, the newspaper Xinghua reports.
Macau's six licensed gaming operators have now generally
agreed that the maximum commission rate should be fixed
at 1.25 percent, a number accepted by the government.
Yuen revealed that the government is drafting new
laws and rules concerning the age limit of persons
entering local casinos and the location of slot machine
halls. The draft bill will soon be submitted to the
Macau legislature, and proposes an increase in the
minimum age for casino entry to 21 years, a limit that
will also apply to casino staff. The bill also contains
restrictions on the setting up of new slot machine
halls.
Online Casino News Courtesy of
Infopowa
More news here.
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