Macau gambling growth outstrips Vegas
By Bill Rigby
LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - Macau may not be hitting the astronomical growth targets set by excitable financial analysts, but the Chinese gambling enclave is still growing much faster than Las Vegas, the U.S. gambling capital.
The tiny former Portuguese colony -- the only legal place to make bets in China -- has posted a 47 percent increase in annual gambling revenue, outpacing Las Vegas and pushing it even further ahead of the Las Vegas strip in terms of total gambling revenue.
That's good news for casino operators in Macau, led by Stanley Ho's Sociedade de Jogos de Macau (SJM), which had a monopoly on the gambling market up until 2002, and new U.S. entrants like Las Vegas Sands Corp (LVS.N: Quote, Profile, Research), which opened the world's largest casino in Macau last summer.
According to figures released recently by Macau's Gaming Inspection and Coordination Bureau, casinos in Macau took in gross gambling revenue of $10.34 billion (83 billion Macau patacas) in 2007, up 47 percent from about $7.05 billion the year before.
The huge growth comes on the back of a massive expansion on the island and an adjacent stretch of reclaimed land called the Cotai Strip. The building boom took off after Macau, which has only half a million inhabitants, was handed back to China by Portugal in 1999.
Four new casinos opened on Macau last year, including Las Vegas Sands' massive Venetian Macao on the Cotai Strip, and MGM Mirage's (MGM.N: Quote, Profile, Research) startling new MGM Grand Macau casino resort on the main peninsula.
Another casino opened in January and a further five are slated to start up this year, plus as many as nine next year.
The growth in revenue may not have met the wildest hopes of some financial analysts, who were expecting an explosion of business from gambling-starved Chinese, but it is still very strong. Continued...





