GOOD NEWS FOR MACAU
25 September 2009
Chinese government eases visa restrictions
One of the chief non-recession reasons for Macau's
slowdown as a major Asian gambling centre has been the
Chinese government's curbs on visas, seriously
restricting the number of gamblers who could visit the
gambling island off Hong Kong. The good news this week
is that the restrictions have been "quietly eased",
boosting operator and investor confidence.
The
Reuters news agency reports that Chinese citizens
traveling from the populous Guangdong province to Macau
are having an easier time obtaining visas, sending
casino stocks soaring Monday this week as industry
executives bet on record October earnings as a result.
The Reuters report claims that the authorities were
concerned that citizens were doing too much gambling,
and consequently imposed new rules last year limiting
them to two trips a year to Macau.
Government
officials apparently began easing up on the rule as
early as two months ago, and noticeably loosened the
restriction at the start of this (September) month.
"The latest version is (they can travel to Macau)
once a month out of Guangdong," an anonymous casino
executive told the news agency. "Gaming revenues for the
first two weeks of the month have been good."
October holds the promise of further improvement; it is
a high travel season for Chinese because of the October
1 Golden Week holiday, and could see record monthly
casino revenues following the more relaxed travel
restrictions.
Macau has rocketed on to the global
gambling stage in recent years following reforms earlier
this decade that saw an end to a previous monopoly and
awarding of licenses to multiple players, boosting
competition.
The market grew 57 percent in 2007
alone, fueled by a huge influx of mainland Chinese, who
now make up about 65 percent of casino visitors.
Macau generated HK$105.6 billion ($13.5 billion) in
gross gaming revenues in 2008, more than double the
HK$46.7 billion generated by the Las Vegas Strip during
the same period.
More recently a combination of
travel restrictions and the global economic recession
has seen Macau revenues slump 12.5 percent in the first
half of 2009 (see previous InfoPowa reports).
Online Casino News Courtesy of
Infopowa
More news here.
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