综合一区欧美国产,99国产麻豆免费精品,九九精品黄色录像,亚洲激情青青草,久久亚洲熟妇熟,中文字幕av在线播放,国产一区二区卡,九九久久国产精品,久久精品视频免费

Business / Industries

Macao's future still anyone's to bet on

(Agencies) Updated: 2015-01-06 09:07

While analysts last year correctly forecast Macao casinos would suffer a first-ever revenue drop, prospects for 2015 are looking as uncertain as a coin toss.

Those surveyed by Bloomberg News were evenly split on whether revenue will shrink or grow in the world's largest gambling hub this year. Gaming revenue fell 2.6 percent in 2014, ending a golden age in which growth spiked more than eightfold over a decade and transformed Macao into a gambling center larger than the Las Vegas Strip.

But conflicting signals are muddling the outlook. While the central government's campaign against graft and extravagance is keeping high-rollers from the Baccarat tables, company steps to target mass-market tourists are making some analysts more bullish even as China's economy cools.

"We are at the peak of uncertainty right now," said Grant Govertsen, a Macao-based casino analyst at Union Gaming Group. While the company downgraded the sector in June on the view that "the anti-corruption campaign was a lot more fierce than people were giving it credit for", it now expects single-digit revenue growth in 2015, he said.

The most optimistic analyst predicted casino revenue will rise 10 percent this year, while the most pessimistic expected a 9 percent slump, giving a median estimate of a 0.35 percent year-on-year growth from eight analysts surveyed last Friday.

Most agree that there will be an eighth straight month of gaming losses in January, which would beat a record losing streak in 2008-09 when revenue dropped seven straight months amid the global financial crisis.

The industry may fare even worse in February unlike last year's record sales over the Lunar New Year, traditionally a peak season for gamblers, according to Credit Suisse Group AG.

The brokerage estimates revenue will drop between 14 and 18 percent this month and the decline could widen in February.

Casinos are also grappling with weakening economic growth in China, as well as more scrutiny over junkets and stricter visa requirements that affect mainlanders going to Macao.

SJM Holdings Ltd said Macao's gaming industry will struggle to have a "breakthrough improvement", according to a Dec 31 internal memo obtained by Bloomberg News.

Macao, China's only city that legally allows casino gambling, is facing pressure from Beijing's tightening grip on money flows out of the mainland mostly by the high rollers who made up about two-thirds of its gaming revenue.

The government in Macao has restricted the use of China UnionPay Co's debit cards at casinos. The gambling regulator is also tightening scrutiny of agents used by junket operators which arrange trips and provide credit for Chinese high-stakes gamblers.

Analysts such as CLSA Ltd's Aaron Fischer and Union Gaming's Govertsen see the new resorts opening from mid-2015 as a silver lining as companies target mass-market customers amid a continued increase in visitors to Macao.

The number of mainlanders going to the city jumped 27.8 percent in November compared with the previous year, following a 20.5 percent increase in October.

Hot Topics

Editor's Picks
...
石台县| 沂源县| 常德市| 西林县| 景洪市| 莆田市| 鄯善县| 买车| 玉林市| 山阴县| 石河子市| 华阴市| 固阳县| 子长县| 新营市| 新龙县| 永昌县| 双鸭山市| 古交市| 青州市| 西林县| 镇远县| 基隆市| 镇江市| 杭锦后旗| 万载县| 凤台县| 龙岩市| 皮山县| 潮安县| 昭觉县| 武城县| 太原市| 郯城县| 新余市| 东兰县| 汤原县| 平乡县| 泾阳县| 阆中市| 涪陵区|