Showing posts with label Casino/IRs. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Casino/IRs. Show all posts

Tuesday, February 18, 2025

Marina Bay Sands gets record $12 billion loan amid tourism boo

Bloomberg

Tue, 18 February 2025

Marina Bay Sands’ expansion plans come as Singapore’s tourism industry has staged a sharp rebound since the pandemic.
(Photo: Sanjit Das/Bloomberg)



By Chien Mi Wong

(Bloomberg) — Marina Bay Sands Pte has obtained a $12 billion (US$9 billion) multi-tranche loan to fund a planned expansion of its casino resort in Singapore, according to a person familiar with the matter, marking the largest such financing in the city state ever.

Friday, February 2, 2024

Tourism in 2023, 13.76 million tourists to Singapore

That's about 70% of pre-pandemic arrivals. 

For 2024, tourists arrivals is expected to be as between 15 - 16 million. (Which probably means that we could expect maybe 17 million or more because Singapore tends to be conservative in our estimates.)

Friday, April 5, 2019

Investment talks with MBS, RWS were on Singapore’s terms due to economy’s strength: Chan Chun Sing

TODAY file photo

TODAY


By Faris Mokhtar


05 April, 2019


SINGAPORE — Negotiations with the integrated resorts to commit about S$9 billion of non-gaming investments took more than two years, but the Singapore Government was able to iron out a deal based on its own terms, Trade and Industry Minister Chan Chun Sing said.

Singapore has to be in a position of strength to negotiate, and ensure that the country is “never held ransom” or “overly dependent” on one particular sector, he said at a media briefing on Friday (April 5) to talk about the negotiation process.

Wednesday, January 27, 2016

Atlantic City dependent on Gambling Revenues threatened Bankruptcy. Christie Announces Plan for State Control

JAN. 26, 2016, New York Times


ATLANTIC CITY — The elected officials of this struggling seaside gambling resort will yield control of the city’s finances to the state government in a deal announced on Tuesday by Gov. Chris Christie that is intended to stave off bankruptcy.

Mayor Don Guardian had threatened to seek protection from the city’s creditors in bankruptcy court, a prospect that could have embarrassed Mr. Christie, who is campaigning for the Republican presidential nomination as a prudent financial steward. The governor detoured from stumping in New Hampshire to stand with Mr. Guardian, a fellow Republican, in Trenton and reveal their plans.

The agreement falls short of an outright takeover by the state of the city’s government, but it would leave state officials to make all of the important decisions about how to reduce its crushing debt of $240 million and slash the size and cost of its civil services. A report this month from an emergency manager Mr. Christie appointed concluded that the city could run out of money by the spring.

“The urgency of the city’s current financial predicament cannot be understated,” Mr. Christie said, adding that he hoped the intervention would stave off the “last resort” of a bankruptcy filing.

Stephen M. Sweeney, the president of the State Senate, had pressed for a full state takeover, and he said bills would be drafted to allow for the handover of financial controls.

“We have to fix this government,” Senator Sweeney, a South Jersey Democrat, said at a news conference, flanked by the governor and the mayor. “It’s not Atlantic City’s fault, but they’re spending three dollars and taking one in.”

Tuesday, June 9, 2015

Asia-Pacific's bet on casino-fuelled economic growth

EYE ON THE ECONOMY

Billion-dollar integrated resorts are sprouting across the region. What will it mean for Singapore?

JUN 9, 2015


BY GRACE LEONG

THE Asian gaming industry is going through a shake-out as China's corruption crackdown and slowing economic growth are scaring off its golden goose from Macau - high-stakes Chinese gamblers.

But casino operators are betting that the downturn is temporary and that the drop in VIP gaming revenues will bottom out. Across Asia, the race is on to open more integrated resorts in the region.

By 2020, analysts say the Asia-Pacific region, including Russia, could see at least 17 casino projects coming online - six in Macau, three in South Korea and at least two each in the Philippines, Australia, New Zealand and Russia's integrated entertainment zone.

As for Singapore, it has seen its share of VIP gamblers shrink in recent quarters, but analysts do not see this rash of new projects coming onstream as a threat to the Republic. The market is big enough, they say.

Monday, February 16, 2015

IR Casino - stories from 15 Feb 2015


Hard to pin down social costs of IRs

Five years after the opening of the two casinos, Theresa Tan takes stock of the social costs and economic benefits.


FEB 15, 2015

Five years after the opening of Singapore's two casinos, it would appear that the novelty has worn off and fewer Singaporeans are visiting them.

The entry levy collected has fallen from $223 million in the Singapore Totalisator Board's (Tote Board) financial year ended March 2011 to $151 million in its last financial year.

Singaporeans and permanent residents (PRs) have to pay a $100 daily or $2,000 annual levy to enter the casino, a safeguard introduced to remind Singaporeans that "gambling is an expense and not a way to make a living", according to the Casino Regulatory Authority website.

The Tote Board, a government statutory board, channels the levies collected to fund social causes.

Tuesday, February 10, 2015

Close to $8 billion a year spent on gaming

FEB 8, 2015

BY THERESA TAN

Singapore punters bet close to $8 billion a year on 4-D, Toto, horse racing, soccer and other games - more than the combined revenue of the two casinos.

With the exception of horse racing, the turnover for 4-D, Toto, the Singapore Sweep and sports betting such as on soccer matches continued to grow even after the casinos opened five years ago.

According to CIMB Research, the combined gross gaming revenue for the two casinos here for 2013, the latest full year available, was $7.66 billion.

Compare that to the $7.89 billion turnover for games run by Singapore Pools and Singapore Turf Club for their financial year that ended in March last year.

Tuesday, September 23, 2014

Luck running out for Singapore's two casinos?

Singapore's two casinos have encountered slowing growth lately, partly due to a more tepid economic outlook. But the root of the sector's problem remains the Government's heavy hand in the industry.


SEP 23, 2014

BY GRACE LEONG

THREE years before their 10-year duopoly is due to expire, Marina Bay Sands (MBS) and Resorts World Sentosa (RWS) seem to be running into headwinds.

The two casinos were granted exclusive rights in Singapore from 2007 to 2017, partly so that their operators - Las Vegas Sands and Genting Singapore - could get a head start in recouping their large investments.

These rights allowed the integrated resorts (IRs) to rev up from zero to more than US$1.2 billion (S$1.5 billion) in combined quarterly revenues in the space of a few months, and soon made the casinos the world's most profitable, with margins of about 40 per cent.

But takings have plateaued lately. Last year, the IRs' combined revenue was about $7.4 billion - a rise of just 3 per cent from that in 2012, according to estimates from UOB Kay Hian.

Wednesday, June 8, 2011

Singapore to overtake Las Vegas this year

Jun 7, 2011

MACAU - SINGAPORE is set to overtake Las Vegas as the world's second-largest gambling hub this year, a US gaming industry head said on Tuesday, as Asia cements its place as a major betting market.

Singapore has emerged as Asia's hottest new gambling destination with a revamped cityscape and billions of dollars pouring into the economy, after the opening of two resort casinos in 2010.

The strong growth came after Macau - the world's biggest gaming hub - leapfrogged Las Vegas in gaming revenue and continues to post record-breaking growth, thanks to burgeoning numbers of wealthy Asians.

The two resort casinos in Singapore posted US$5.1 billion (S$6.3 billion) in gaming revenues in 2010, a figure forecast to rise to $6.4 billion this year, according to Frank Fahrenkopf, president of the American Gaming Association.

A report citing research by the Royal Bank of Scotland has suggested Las Vegas will take $6.2 billion this year.

'Now more than a year old, the two integrated resorts in Singapore have exceeded all expectations and turned the nation into Asia's second global gaming superpower,' said Mr Fahrenkopf. 'The country's gaming market will likely overtake Las Vegas as the world's second-largest gaming centre as early as this year,' he told a news conference at the sidelines of the Global Gaming Expo Asia which opened on Tuesday in Macau. -- AFP

[US$6b is about 3% of our GDP. From just 2 casinos. incredible.]

Thursday, March 10, 2011

Should fruits of gambling do some good?

Mar 09, 2011

by Richard Hartung

In 2009, before the casinos opened, the Government Budget forecast betting revenues of S$1.86 billion. That amount was about 5.5 per cent of operating revenue of S$33.43 billion, a nice contribution from the gaming industry in a difficult economic environment.

Since then, the integrated resorts (IRs) have opened with a roar and the results have exceeded expectations. In the fourth quarter of last year, Marina Bay Sands earned S$391 million on S$717 million of revenue and Resorts World Sentosa earned S$389 million on S$775 million of revenue.

Simply extrapolate that for a full year - not even counting the ongoing expansion of the IRs or the potential for VIP junkets - and revenue would reach nearly S$6 billion while profits would be over S$3 billion per year. Brokerage firm CLSA told Today that it forecasts revenue at S$8.1 billion next year.

With revenue growing so fast, one might expect the gaming industry to contribute a lot more to the Budget now. Even with the casinos going almost full bore, however, the Government expects betting revenue to contribute just S$2.41 billion to operating revenue in FY2011. That amount is just barely up from S$2.29 billion in FY2010, and it is an increase of only about S$550 million from the 2009 budget.

Not all of that S$550 million increase in betting revenue comes from the IRs, either. With more gamblers making Toto or 4D bets in an improved economy and newer games like Scratchit! offering instant wins, taxes from traditional gambling will most likely move higher in FY2011 too.

That increase in the Budget comes even as the IRs are doing better than expected. Before the IRs opened, forecast revenue was reportedly S$10 million to S$15 million per day. Revenue of just S$6 billion would mean over S$16 million per day in revenue. And the daily take per table is reportedly double or triple almost anywhere else.

Singaporeans are visiting the casinos more than expected, too. In discussions on the IRs in Parliament in 2005, Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong said "our estimate is that with two IRs, gambling by Singaporeans in the IRs is unlikely to exceed S$1 billion a year". Inveterate Singapore gamblers may already have broken that barrier, though, since Dow Jones reported early on that over one third of the visitors at Marina Bay Sands' casino were from Singapore. While Singaporeans may not be the highest rollers, revenue from them could exceed S$1 billion already even if they only gamble about half as much as the tourists.

Admittedly, S$550 million more in the Budget is a lot of money. The surprise is that the increase is not higher and the question is what to do. The Government cannot raise the tax rate. In proposing the Casino Control Bill in 2006, then-Minister for Home Affairs Wong Kan Seng said that "casino tax rates will remain unchanged for 15 years". The Government cannot go back on its word and suddenly raise tax rates even if the situation has changed dramatically.

It is also true that the IRs are a business, not a charity. While the Tote Board mission is to "donate funds for activities that will make for a stronger nation and a better people", the IRs are private companies. It may be time, though, for the IRs themselves to look at whether they should do more in light of the changed circumstances.

Marina Bay Sands does say that it has "sponsored a wide range of charitable causes focused on youth and education". Resorts World Sentosa says it believes in "improving the lives of children".

In other countries, corporate social responsibility in the industry is gaining traction, going beyond social responsibility towards problem gamblers, to making the community a better place. Casinos and industry forums are discussing corporate social responsibility more. As macaubusiness.com said: "CSR can be a way to achieve a sustainable competitive advantage for Macau's six casino operators".

At a time when inflation is rising and families are trying to make ends meet, Budget initiatives to help are being discussed. Even if tax revenues from betting do not increase significantly, there could still be an opportunity for the IRs to take the lead in CSR and consider showing even more how they truly care about children, education and more here in Singapore.

Richard Hartung is a consultant who has lived in Singapore since 1992.

Thursday, February 24, 2011

Budget food for thought in Malaysia

Feb 24, 2011

By Zhang Ming Guang

IN THIS year's Budget, which was announced last Friday, the Singapore Government is giving away generous subsidies and 'dividends' worth $6.6 billion, of which $3.2 billion will go into the 'Grow and Share' package. All adult Singaporeans will each receive between $100 and $900 in Growth Dividends.
The remaining $3.4 billion will be used for long-term social investments, such as forming a new Community Silver Trust to provide aid to the long-term care sector, promoting cultural activities and upgrading housing estates.
It is hard not to link the goodies given out by the Singapore Government to rumours that a general election is likely to be called in the second quarter of this year. But the Government is able to share its Budget surplus with Singaporeans because it has reaped the benefits of its bold economic transformation initiatives.
When Singapore experienced development bottlenecks and declining tourism in 2002, the Government began to think about transforming the economy and drew up new competitive strategies.
It formed the Economic Review Committee, which was headed by then-Deputy Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong and comprised 20 members, seven of whom were ministers or ministers of state. It had seven sub-committees with between 200 and 300 experts from the Government, corporate world, private sector and academic circles studying the future economic direction of Singapore.
At the same time, the younger generation of Cabinet ministers formed the Remaking Singapore Committee to bring about economic transformation by reviewing Singapore's development strategies in the 21st century from the social, cultural and political aspects.
In August 2005, Mr Lee, by then Prime Minister, said in his National Day Rally speech that if Singapore failed to modify its economic model and carry out reform and innovation, it risked becoming a loser in the increasingly competitive global economy.
He cited this as the reason for the Government's decision to ignore public opinion and build two casinos in Singapore. The impact of the casinos, which started operations last year, was immediate.
In addition, Singapore won the rights to host the first Formula One Grand Prix night race in 2008. The opening of the casinos and the staging of the F1 races revived Singapore's tourism and debunked Hong Kong and Taiwanese tourism writers' negative stereotype of Singapore as a boring place.
Buoyed by the launch of the two casinos and positive economic sentiment, Singapore raked in $18.8 billion in tourism receipts last year, up nearly 50 per cent year-on-year. Visitor arrivals also soared and set records for 13 consecutive months. Full year visitor arrivals grew 20 per cent to 11.6 million.
The casinos also created about 35,000 jobs for Singapore. They have generated revenue of US$2.8 billion (S$3.6 billion) since their opening, contributing significantly to Singapore's robust growth of 14.5 per cent last year.
In the wake of increasing competition brought about by economic globalisation, the Singapore Government has maintained a cautious outlook.
By clarifying the direction of the country's economic transformation and goals, adopting strong policies and measures, and undertaking bold reforms and innovations, it achieved impressive results.
We on the other side of the Causeway envy Singaporeans for getting a share of the fruits of their country's economic transformation, but shouldn't we also ponder what path we should take?
After taking office, Prime Minister Najib Razak rolled out an economic transformation programme (ETP) to enable Malaysia to achieve high-income status and per capita income of US$15,000 by 2020.
Faced with resistance from conservatives within the ruling Umno, he does not have a free hand to do as he pleases. However, investor confidence in Malaysia's economy is reportedly growing, which shows that the ETP has produced some results.
But compared to Singapore, the pace of Malaysia's economic transformation is too slow. If we do not do our utmost to catch up, our fear of being overtaken by Singapore as the third-largest economy in South-east Asia will materialise very soon.
This article first appeared in Oriental Daily News, a Malaysian Chinese daily, on Monday.

Friday, February 18, 2011

We want to expand MBS, say bosses of parent company

Feb 17, 2011
 
By Ng Kai Ling

LESS than a year after Marina Bay Sands (MBS) opened its doors, its bosses are already thinking of expanding if given the opportunity.

'We are already running out of meetings, incentives, conventions and exhibitions (Mice) space,' said Mr Sheldon Adelson, chairman of parent company Las Vegas Sands (LVS).

'I've told the Government that we need some more land to expand the Mice space...if they want to give me ten times more land, I won't turn it down.'

He was speaking on Thursday at a press conference before the grand opening of the integrated resort (IR). It had its soft launch last April.

LAs Vegas Sands' chief operating officer Michael Leven told the media that Singapore will need more hotel rooms to accommodate the 17 million annual visitors it aims to attract by 2015.

'Demand is going to be higher than supply very shortly as the entire hospitality industry is running at over 80 per cent occupancy,' said Mr Leven, who is eyeing two plots in the Marina Bay area for hospitality developments.

[Propose to offer the land to them on a 30 year lease, with option to renegotiate the lease at the end of 30 years. Sure, they took the risk to set up, but the risk was relatively low. They have first-mover advantage, but we should not let them entrenched themselves. So a 30 yr lease. Extension to be negotiated at the time.]

Wednesday, September 15, 2010

Resorts World Free Shuttle Bus Services

Citizens as casino watchdog
Public can raise alarm if IRs cross line in luring Singaporeans to gamble

Sep 15, 2010

By Elgin Toh

THE Casino Regulatory Authority's (CRA) halting of nearly all free bus services by the integrated resorts (IR) last week is an example of how ordinary Singaporeans can make a stand for the kind of society they want to live in, by voicing their concerns to the authorities.

To recap: Resorts World Sentosa (RWS) had, for three months, been busing Singaporeans from the HDB heartland to its premises, free of charge.

The first RWS route was introduced in Tiong Bahru in June. By early this month, the services had reached 12 HDB town centres, including Ang Mo Kio, Jurong East, Tampines and Choa Chu Kang. Next was Marine Parade. Each time it added a service, RWS sent advertisement fliers to the HDB blocks close by.

A daily average of 2,500 passengers took the buses. A Straits Times poll of commuters suggested that as many as 40 per cent ended up at the gambling tables.

It was a Bukit Panjang resident, concerned that the buses were making it too convenient for Singaporeans to gamble at the casinos, who spoke to his Member of Parliament, Mr Liang Eng Hwa (Holland-Bukit Timah GRC).

Mr Liang decided to file a parliamentary question, asking the Government whether the free shuttle services would encourage gambling among Singaporeans.

The Straits Times learnt of the parliamentary question and asked the Ministry of Community Development, Youth and Sports about its position on the free shuttle services.

Responding to this newspaper's queries, the ministry said last Wednesday night that it would investigate the matter, adding: 'The IR operators will not be allowed to target the local market or provide incentives in any form for Singaporeans to patronise the casinos.'

RWS responded by saying it would voluntarily cease the bus services by last Sunday. But a CRA directive last Friday forced an end to the services immediately.

Marina Bay Sands, which ran free shuttle services to the airport and hotels, and paid shuttles to Orchard Road and Outram, stopped all of them except the one to the airport, which was allowed by the CRA.

Some Singaporeans think the Government overreacted. One commuter said: 'Can you tell them to bring back the free buses? The parking is so expensive. Singaporeans can decide for themselves whether or not to board the bus.' A group of disgruntled RWS customers started a Facebook group to lobby the authorities to allow the free bus rides.

But if one considers reports from social workers and voluntary welfare organisations indicating that more problem gamblers have been seeking help since the casinos began operating here, one would conclude the Government acted rightly.

[An increase in problem gambling was expected. That was already recognised as a risk but a risk we would managed with various measures. Including increased awareness of problem gambling and spotting the signs of problem gambling.]

After all, when the building of the casinos was approved in 2005, the guiding principle was it should not encourage gambling among Singaporeans. Targeting Singaporeans who live in the HDB heartland to visit the IRs where the casinos are violates that principle.

Of course, there are safeguards already in place to make it hard for Singaporeans to gamble at the casinos.

There is a $100 entrance levy which Singapore citizens and permanent residents have to pay. Problem gamblers or their family members can get exclusion orders barring them from entry to the casinos. The Casino Control (Advertising) Regulations 2010 also prohibits the casinos from advertising outside areas frequented by tourists.

[Apparently, the free shuttle bus service can override the $100 entrance levy. If the convenience of a shuttle service to the doorstep can override the $100 levy, perhaps the Sentosa Express should not stop at the Waterfront station right next to Resorts World? The IRs are more than just the Casino. That was the plan and that was the implementation. The bus takes the passengers to Sentosa, to the IRs. Most of the passengers are not going to the casino proper but could be using the free transport to get to the other attractions.]

But the IRs generate most of their profits from gambling, and have every incentive to induce visitors to gamble. Whatever new marketing strategies they come up with should be scrutinised to make sure they do not target Singaporeans.

In the bus incident, casino operators benefited from a regulatory loophole. The buses to the IRs had government approval to stop at public bus stops. The regulations ban casino advertising outside tourist areas, but say nothing about providing transport to the casinos.

The CRA can, and should, clarify the rules and make explicit what the casinos are not permitted to do.

What other lessons can Singaporeans take away from the free bus saga?

First, ordinary Singaporeans should be encouraged to speak up about issues they feel strongly about, for doing so can effect change. It took just one concerned resident - and his energetic MP - to stop the IRs' free shuttle services.

Next, the saga shows it is up to the public to keep tabs on the casinos. In some countries, safeguards to prevent problem gambling from taking root, introduced when the casinos were first opened, were simply eroded over time.

In the United States, when Atlantic City's first casinos opened in 1978, they were made to close from 6am to 10am, because it was believed compulsive gamblers needed time away from the tables. But those rules were lifted in 1992, and the casinos now run 24 hours a day.

The rules in Britain at one time required casinos to admit only members, with new prospective members having to wait 48 hours - a cooling-off period - after making an in-person application. This waiting period was cut to 24 hours in 1997, and dropped altogether in 2007.

Questions have been asked as to whether the IRs are promoting casino-related packages to their Singaporean visitors, with some local visitors saying hotel vouchers have been dangled before them to entice them to visit the casinos.

Last week, the Government said explicitly that incentives must not be offered to Singaporeans to gamble at the casinos.

The IRs cannot be expected to self-regulate, so the authorities will have to be vigilant. Singaporeans must also be responsible and exercise restraint in gambling.

And given the creativity of businesses, the average Singaporean also has a part to play, to raise the alarm should he or she feel the IRs have crossed the line in luring Singaporeans to gamble.

elgintoh@sph.com.sg



Another knee jerk response?

Singaporeans can decide if they want to use the shuttle bus services to the integrated resorts
Updated 12:36 PM Sep 15, 2010

by Conrad Raj

The decision by the Casino Regulatory Authority (CRA) to stop the free bus rides provided by the two integrated resorts here, except from certain destinations like the airport and hotels, appears to be a knee-jerk reaction to complaints from the anti-gambling lobby.

The CRA's action followed a probe by the Ministry of Community Development, Youth and Sports (MCYS) to ascertain that Singaporeans are not being enticed to the casinos.

This in turn resulted from concerns raised by certain MPs, including Mr Liang Eng Hwa (Holland-Bukit Timah GRC) that the free shuttle rides from 19 destinations across the island, mainly to and from the HDB heartlands, amounted to providing incentives to Singaporeans to gamble at the casinos.

The two resorts had been providing the free shuttle rides since June having obtained permission for the service and the routes from the Land Transport Authority.

If the service was in violation of the casino rules, why did it take some three months for the CRA to act? Is this also another case of the left hand not knowing what the right hand was doing, given that the LTA had given the go ahead?

Resorts World Sentosa's (RWS) vice-president for resort operations Noel Hawkes had been quoted as saying that the resort had been working with government agencies to ease congestion at the junction of Telok Blangah Road and the Sentosa Gateway by providing bus services.
He is said to have further stated that services to the heartlands was part of its overall transport plans "so that we would bring people here by public transport and avoid people having to take their cars and jam up the junction".

What's going to happen now? What if the jams get worse? Erect ERP gantries? It is not as if everyone using the service went to the casinos to gamble. In fact, the vast majority used them to get into Sentosa or the various outlets at the integrated resorts.

According to survey by RWS more than 60 per cent of the 2,500 people who made use of the free bus rides daily did not end up at the gaming tables or the jackpot machines.

Remember the whole idea of naming them integrated resorts and not just casinos?

So, the majority are being punished for the sins of the minority. What makes the authorities so sure that the minority will not end up at the casinos in any case? Die-hard gamblers will find their way to the gaming tables by hook or by crook.

Isn't the $100 levy per person for entry to the casinos supposed to dissuade Singaporeans and permanent residents from making wagers at the gaming tables?

Perhaps, the discriminatory levy is not high enough and should be raised? And not forgetting we also have the casino exclusion measures as additional safeguards to stop problem gambling. Members of the family or the gambler himself can apply to have him or herself excluded from entering any of the casinos.

Why did Marina Bay Sands, which claimed not to have provided buses to the HDB heartlands, have to stop its paid bus services as well as its free shuttle services to the hotels?

Yet, the Singapore Turf Club is allowed to provide paid bus services from certain destinations. Why do people go to the Turf Club? To admire the horses and smell the hay?

There also appears to be some hypocrisy - at the very least a turning of blind eyes - to the gambling in the heartlands, be it on soccer matches here and abroad, Toto, Four-D, and the races at the numerous betting shops of the Totalisator Board.

As a result of the cessation of the free rides, the bus owners stand to lose heavily on their gamble to buy two dozen new buses to service the routes. And a number of bus drivers may be out of job following the CRA move. Can they claim compensation from the CRA considering that initial approval had been given by the LTA?

Why not then let the CRA be the final authority on all matters pertaining to the integrated resorts - as the casinos are within the premises? People should not be left wondering if approval from other authorities could be at odds with the CRA.

Perhaps it is time that the authorities stop treating Singaporeans like kids and let them decide for themselves what is good for them - within the bounds of the law. If they want to use a free bus ride to go to the casinos, why not?

The writer is editor-at-large at Today.

[Well said. ]

Sunday, August 29, 2010

Casinos wipe out a big chunk of club earnings

Aug 28, 2010

By Ng Kai Ling

JACKPOT machines, a long-time revenue-spinner for clubs in Singapore, are slowly falling silent as patrons who used to spend hours playing on the one-armed bandits migrate to the two casinos here.

Faced with takings that have fallen by as much as 50 per cent, the clubs are now anxiously looking at their bottom lines and new ways of raising revenue, including pulling some privileges from members.

About 100 outfits in Singapore - from exclusive ones like the Singapore Recreation Club (SRC) to heartland hangouts like S-League clubhouses - have permits to operate the so-called 'fruit machines'.

All of those which responded to queries about their takings said they have felt the impact of the casinos.

At the Seletar Country Club, for example, jackpot takings have fallen by between 25 and 30 per cent, said its general manager, Mr Wun Khai Ping.

Neighbourhood clubs visited by The Straits Times yesterday, such as Sengkang Punggol Football Club, said revenue has fallen by about 20 per cent.

Bigger establishments, such as the Singapore Island Country Club and Chinese Swimming Club, refused to say how much business has dropped since the casinos at the Resorts World Sentosa (RWS) and Marina Bay Sands (MBS) integrated resorts opened earlier this year.

The integrated resorts have been doing well, with RWS making $861 million in revenue in the second quarter and MBS booking pre-tax profits of US$94 million (S$128 million) in its first 65 days of operation.

If a recent letter from the SRC to its members is anything to go by, the drop in clubs' earnings could be startling.

In it, SRC president Dr Johnny Goh wrote: 'Despite having created a new revenue stream from the club's 26 guest rooms, we have seen a sizeable drop in takings from fruit machines. All clubs with fruit machines have seen their takings dip as much as 50 per cent.'

It is not just gaming revenues that have taken a hit. Food and beverage receipts are also down, as gamblers who used to spend all day in the clubhouses head for the bright lights of the casinos.

Industry analysts say the clubs are facing a serious plight as they are unable to compete with the casinos in terms of bigger payouts and variety of slot machines.

Said Bank of America Merrill Lynch analyst Melvyn Boey: 'I expect the decline to continue. It may not drop by more than what they are seeing now, but it will never recover to pre-IR days.'

This could mean big trouble for places like the Gombak United Football Club (GFC) clubhouse, where 17 jackpot machines are its cash cows and make up 80 per cent of revenue.

It is now looking to add a karaoke room to draw the crowds.

At bigger clubs such as the SRC, the situation is not so dire, but clawing back some of what has been lost is still the order of the day.

The 127-year-old club, one of Singapore's oldest, is looking for ways to make up the shortfall.

From next month, it will withdraw the rebates that it has been giving members since 1992, raising monthly subscriptions as a result. A member of 15 years, for example, will have to pay $14 to $15 more.

In his letter to members, Dr Goh said the move is being taken 'in order to enable the club to operate on an even keel'.

At Seletar Country Club, Mr Wun said he is counting on other revenue streams like restaurants and bars, golfing fees and banquets to keep it in the black.

But fruit machines have not been removed from the revenue equation.

'We are looking at improving our product offering, but it involves a sizeable amount of money to update or buy new machines,' said Mr Wun.

He said that having newer machines with different modes of play might do the trick and lure some customers back.

At the clubs which The Straits Times visited yesterday, only a handful of patrons were working the machines. Employees said that in the past, there were many more players.

Still, clubs like GFC are optimistic that players will return once the sheen of the new casinos wears off.

'We hope our takings will recover,' said Ms Selva Balli, finance manager at GFC clubhouse. 'They can't be going to the casinos every day, right?'

Additional reporting by Alexandra Jen Wong

[If Casino goers decide to pay the $2000 annual pass, they can treat that as their membership to the Casinos instead of the club membership they have been paying. If gambling is their main activity, and sports facilities are just for show, then it means that gambling have been subsidising sports for the longest time even in clubs.

Clubs will have to review their business model. Unless the shine wears off from the casinos, the clubs will have to reinvent themselves in terms of their revenue streams. When jackpot machines make up 80% of their revenue, it is not a healthy business model.]

Wednesday, March 17, 2010

The house doesn't always win

Mar 17, 2010
THE ST INTERVIEW

S'pore's earliest casino advocate now cautions about their odds for survival

By Susan Long

FOR the longest time, he agitated for a casino.

Now that the Republic's first casino is upon us, Singapore's earliest and staunchest casino advocate has apprehensions over how it is taking shape.

For almost three decades, Mr Ronald Tan lobbied the Government to set up a casino here. In 1981, he wrote his first letter to the then Singapore Tourist Promotion Board, proposing a restricted- access casino at Sentosa.

Now 65, the gaming and hospitality consultant, who recently addressed an Institute of Policy Studies roundtable on casinos, recounts ruefully: 'I received a phone call from an officer saying that Singapore was not ready for it.'

But he continued to press his suit with many senior officials, and wrote over a dozen advocacy letters to the press. 'Since then, every single tourism board chairman knows me as the man who comes in pleading for a casino,' he says.

In the 1970s and 1980s, travelling around the world as a military tentage businessman, he saw how casinos were sprouting up across Europe, the Mediterranean, the United States, Africa and even in Lebanon, reviving cities and furnishing jobs.

He became convinced that Singapore should have its own casino to pull in quality tourists: 'About 5,000 Singapor- eans leave our shores daily to gamble on cruise ships, in Genting, Macau, Australia and Las Vegas. There are also no less than 100 underground gambling dens here.
'With all that appetite to gamble, why not satisfy it at home, with proper jurisdiction and safety, in a legalised casino, instead of our people going elsewhere and getting exposed to loan sharks and crime?'

Over the years, he got to know casino operators such as Shun Tak Group's Stanley Ho, Genting Group's Lim Goh Tong, Kerzner International's Butch Kerzner and Aspers Group's John Aspinall, and what made their businesses tick.

'They were doing everything right, just that safeguards were not in place. My idea was that Singapore could do a much better job and be a beacon to the world in casino management,' he says.

So when the Government announced it was awarding not just one but two casino licences in 2005, no one was more enthused than Mr Tan.

'With two integrated resorts, we can spawn a lot of technological advantages and innovate in casino surveillance, regulatory controls, policing, research and development,' he says. For example, chips can be embedded with radio-frequency identification (RFID), and through their movement detect problem gambling, he suggests.

In the 'perfect casino' - and he believes there exists such a thing - patrons will be issued biometric cards at the entrance: 'When they zap the card at any table, all the money that changes hands gets recorded.

'This is something I foresee that casinos around the world will soon adopt because many people are wagering beyond their means. If a person earns, say, $50,000 a year, they can ill afford to lose over $20,000. When their losses reach a certain level, a counsellor can come up to make the person sign an exclusion order.'

Today's gambling stakes, he worries, are dangerously high. A typical starting bet used to be $10 to $50, but can now inch into the thousands.

At the VIP tables, a big bet used to be $20,000, but now no one bats an eyelid at $200,000. At Resorts World Sentosa, he says, bets have tipped $500,000 - a new world benchmark.
He notes about 70 per cent of Asian casino patrons now favour the double-quick game of Baccarat, also known as Punto Banco. Accordingly, most casinos across the Asia-Pacific now devote 70 per cent of tables to Baccarat.

'Baccarat depends entirely on luck rather than skill. With eight decks of cards, about 60 games can be played, and easily $1 million to $2 million changes hands. Many people innocently start, then lose control of themselves, their lives, relationships and jobs,' he warns.

With two casinos soon to be on the doorstep of Singaporeans - especially stressed Shenton Way workers - he worries the temptation of easy access may be too great for many to bear: 'In the case of Macau and Genting, at least there's a physical distance to overcome to get to a casino. If you're addicted and have already paid the $2,000 yearly entrance fee, it only works out to $5.50 a day.'

Worse, he fears casino operators will encourage ever-greater bets because the operators bid so excessively - at least twice of what they can possibly make back - and are now under pressure to recoup their investments. The Government, which accepted the dizzying bids, now has the 'moral hazard' of ensuring they do not fail too spectacularly, he adds.

'My concern is they overspent on the two IRs. No matter how you look at it, their rate of return is limited by the sum total of bets. It's an arithmetic thing,' he says. 'Take the sum total of people who walk in the casino doors and multiply it by the money they bring in. Of that, the industry average is they usually leave about 20 per cent of it behind.'

He says Genting and Marina Bay Sands could have originally worked on a basis of reeling in $10 million a day each. Now, they must work towards $15 million: 'They are under pressure to increase gambling revenues, which means they must push bets higher and turn around tables faster.'

Despite the worst of the global recession being over, there are still signs of slowdown everywhere: 'Singapore is no exception. I'm afraid I do not see either Genting or Sands exceeding their forecasts of US$1 billion (S$1.4 billion) each in revenue from the gaming side within a year.' This may not cover the sky-high building costs of both IRs, which took place amid a construction boom that saw escalating sand and manpower prices. The total bill for both: Over $13 billion.

What contributed to such overexuberance? 'They wanted to win the prestige and legitimacy of being here in Singapore,' he says. 'The fact that Singapore announced it would have a casino opened up the floodgates to legitimacy. If squeaky-clean Singapore did not think it wrong to have casinos, who are other countries to think so?'

As such, many operators felt they 'had' to win the Singapore prize, 'come hell or high water': 'Once they won, it was, 'Just do it, don't worry about cost'.'

But he fears the overbidding has thrown a spanner in the works: 'Instead of allowing both casinos to open in a more relaxed way during the first few years, the IRs are now under tremendous pressure.' As such, Mr Tan augurs that the road ahead is 'no bed of roses'.
'Don't assume for a moment that once you land a casino licence, you will make money. It's a question of averages. Half the casinos around the world are in the red. The house doesn't always win.'

Case in point: Melbourne's Crown Casino suffered substantial losses for two years straight, due to a combination of bad management and poor patronage, after it opened in 1997. The original owners sold it off in the red to the late media mogul Kerry Packer in 1999.

But what about the viability of the IRs' much-vaunted side attractions? Can they bail out the house?

Mr Tan has his doubts: 'Within the next three years, the other attractions - theme park and hotels - will likely not make up for the shortfall.' He holds out little hope for Universal Studios, once the novelty wears off after about a year.

'Many Singapore attractions, from Tang Dynasty Village to Haw Par Villa, flopped because of the heat and humidity. The majority of Universal's attractions are outdoors, which means people have to wait in line under the hot sun. If even Hong Kong, a temperate country, cannot succeed with Disneyland with its huge China hinterland...' he trails off.

But ultimately, he fears what will do the IRs in is Singapore's upward-spiralling cost structure: 'Why was Hong Kong's Ocean Park more successful? Because its initial investment started from a very low base. Our cost of doing business here now is very worrying.'

But he does see a silver lining: 'Because manpower is costly, we can explore mechanisation of tables to replace croupiers. What gives Singapore an edge in running casinos is our IT capability and good governance and controls.'

Thanks to all these odds stacked against their success, Singapore's casinos will be forced to move beyond business as usual and step up their game to reinvent the industry in their favour. This could end up lighting the way forward for others, he projects.

'Just look at how we did a great job making our Turf Club world class and keeping out illegal bookmakers and the underworld. And how we built up expertise in service apartments and created the Fraser and Ascott brands. In time, Singapore can become a casino advisory to other countries,' he says.

'Countries that are opening IRs soon, such as Taiwan on Penghu Island, the Philippines at Manila Bay, and Tokyo at Odaiba, will come here to learn, not just about the attractions but the policing and regulatory aspects.'

Already, he says he has two clients, from Japan and Vietnam, who have commissioned studies on how the Singapore model can fit in their home countries.

'We could become the PSA and HDB in casinos, where other countries will invite us to come in to clean up, regulate or start up casinos,' he declares, his eyes gleaming with the possibilities he has ruminated over for some 30 years.

suelong@sph.com.sg