Macau’s gaming revenue fell less than analysts’ estimates in June as tourists and leisure gamblers helped boost the city’s casinos including those owned by units of Las Vegas Sands Corp. and Wynn Resorts Ltd.
Gross gaming revenue fell 8.5 percent to 15.9 billion patacas ($2 billion), the lowest level since September 2010 and marking 25 consecutive months of declines, according to data from Macau’s Gaming Inspection and Coordination Bureau. That followed a 9.6 percent decrease in May and compares with the median estimate of an 9.5 percent drop by seven analysts surveyed by Bloomberg.
Macau’s casino operators have been shifting focus to tourists and recreational gamblers, with Wynn Macau Ltd.’s Wynn Palace project scheduled to debut August 22 and Sands China Ltd.’s Parisian expected to open September. That’s as the gambling slump in Macau extended beyond two years amid China’s economic slowdown and corruption crackdown.
Macau has been trying to reduce its reliance on gambling, which contributes about 80 percent of the former Portuguese colony’s tax revenue. The city’s government is planning stricter rules on the industry, including raising the entry threshold for gaming promoters.
Macau also banned phone betting in early May, a form of proxy betting favored by some high-stakes gamblers from China. The gaming regulator said June 17 it plans to introduce penalties for violations in its $30 billion gaming industry, as it plugs gaps in outdated laws including one banning phone-betting at casinos.
Read original article