Today, 21
May 04
Sands
castle in Sentosa?
by Val Chua
SINGAPORE : Two days after its brand new Macau casino attracted
busloads of mainland Chinese and caused a stampede, Las Vegas Sands
Inc is ready to talk business in Singapore.
Its president and chief operating officer, Mr William Weidner, said
the company - which is also behind the successful Venetian Casino
Resort in Las Vegas - is ready to pump in as much as US$2 billion
(S$3.44 billion) to operate a casino on Sentosa.
"We are very interested in the possibilities of developing a casino
in Singapore," said Mr Weidner, who was in Singapore for the 7th
Asia-Pacific Hotel Investment Conference.
Discussions with the Singapore Government started a couple of months
ago and a Singapore delegation is currently in Las Vegas, according
to Mr Weidner. "They're studying various aspects of casinos. They've
toured our casinos and talked to our department heads. They're thoroughly
evaluating many aspects of casinos, like the employment, the economic
impact and issues like compulsive gaming and job skill training,
all the things you'd expect them to look at closely," he added.
However, talks are exploratory and no formal tender process has
started, he stressed. Nor has the Government formally given a go-ahead
for the casino proposal, although it has said a decision will be
announced in six to nine months' time. Still, Las Vegas Sands, with
cash of US$1 billion and planning an IPO to raise as much as US$300
million, may have a head start already.
For one, it has just opened a US$240-million casino in Macau. Next,
it wants to create an Asian version of the Strip with another artificial
Venice in Cotai, Macau, to be ready by 2007. In all, it's pumping
in over US$2 billion to make Macau a "destination" for gamblers,
betting big on just one market - newly-affluent mainland Chinese.
Singapore, which has previously resisted calls to have a casino
due to its social dangers, has since floated the idea of an upmarket
gambling paradise for high rollers, with restrictive access for
locals.
However, analysts have said the most profitable casinos are the
ones with mass appeal, with their slot machines, shopping malls,
and themed hotels. Even in Las Vegas, the US$1.2-billion Venetian
casino derives 80 per cent of its cash flow from non-casino operations,
said Mr Weidner.
So if Singapore ditches this mass-market formula, and goes for the
upmarket crowd, will it work? For instance, London-style casinos
are only open to foreigners and require registration in advance,
but don't appeal to investors because of its stuffy image, say industry
players.
But Mr Weidner argues that although limited casinos cannot generate
the kind of additional investments that an unlimited casino can,
such as hotels and malls, "Singapore has all these already". "What
it doesn't have is a casino. So for Singapore, a casino is just
an extension to its tourism assets like its airport," he pointed
out.
As an example, he said The Sands in Macau caters to two segments
of customers. On the lower floors are 2,500 seats for day-trippers
who make their way from Hong Kong and Zhuhai by bus, served with
Asian buffet and fast food.
What Singapore could duplicate is its VIP area, which is "by invite
only", with its four destination restaurants, 51 suites, and spas.
And with its pan-Asian reach, Singapore can reach out to the Indian
market -- which is currently untapped by Macau casinos, he said.
"If the Singapore government says they want a US$2 billion destination
resort, we'll do it. We have the capability. But I doubt it. They
will want to take a step at a time," he said.
This step-by-step approach is natural, he said. "Most governments
will want to put their toe in the water to find out its temperature,"
rather than plunge in immediately, he said. Singapore could be successful,
even if it decides not to go further than that dip in the pool,
he said. He added that Las Vegas Sands is open to taking an equity
stake in a joint venture if there is an "appropriate partner". Nor
does he rule out working with the Government, should it be involved
in the high-stakes casino game as well.
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