The Straits
Times, 23 May 04
Vegas in Asia
New American casino adds glitz to the gambling scene in Macau
MACAU -- REUTERS
THE world's largest chandelier, boasting 5,970 light bulbs, has
helped turn the spotlight back on this island again. It hangs in
the lavish new US$240 million (S$411 million) Sands Macao casino
opened here last week by American tycoon Sheldon Adelson. The casino
brings an end to local tycoon Stanley Ho's 40-year gambling grip
on the island.
But even he is not complaining. 'As long as the competition is friendly,
I believe the pie will grow bigger and bigger, and it's fine to
share it with others,' said Mr Ho, 82, who attended the opening
of the Sands on Tuesday with his fourth wife. He said he is polishing
up his flagship Lisboa and plans to build a 40-storey luxury hotel-casino
- along with an amusement park in town.
At a press conference on Tuesday, Mr Adelson, whose company also
owns the Venetian Hotel in Las Vegas, said his vision for the future
was to transform Macau into 'Asia's Las Vegas'. He has pledged to
invest at least US$1.1 billion over 20 years in the gaming sector
here. He said he wanted to tap the enormous Chinese market, where
people gamble away billions of dollars each year at Mr Ho's dingy
and smoky casinos.
Mr William Weidner, president of the Las Vegas Sands, said 'Macau
is on the verge of becoming the world's top revenue-producing gaming
market'. Its casinos are expected to bring in US$4.2 billion to
US$4.6 billion in gaming revenues this year, compared with US$5
billion for the Las Vegas Strip alone. Macau already gets more than
two-thirds of its tax revenue from gambling, which last year accounted
for 43 per cent of the US$8 billion economy, government figures
show. Macau is not the only island Las Vegas Sands has big plans
for.
A company spokesman said on Thursday it is 'very interested' in
developing a casino in Singapore and it has been in talks with the
authorities for the last two months. It is willing to put US$2 billion
(S$3.4 billion) on the table for a super-casino, the same amount
it is pumping into a second venture in Macau to build a strip of
resorts in Cotai. -- Reuters, AP, Bloomberg
Catering to high flyers and the hoi polloi
THERE are 277 table games and 405 slot machines at the Sands Macao,
with the gradual addition of 114 more slots specially designed for
the Asian market. The Sands also has 11 Paiza Club private VIP high-limit
gaming tables. Paiza membership is by invitation only and will allow
VIP guests access to private jets and 24-hour concierge services.
When gamblers get hungry, they can tuck into Thai, Indian and Japanese
food, as well as six different regional Chinese cuisines at the
Las Vegas Buffet.
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