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Monday, 14 August 2017

Macau casinos’ revenue up

A rebound in Macau’s casino revenue accelerated in July as spending by high-rollers continued to add momentum to the year-long recovery despite China’s efforts to curb capital outflows.

Gross gaming receipts in the world’s largest gaming hub rose for a 12th straight month, increasing 29% to 23 billion patacas (US$2.9bil), according to data released by Macau’s Gaming Inspection and Coordination Bureau yesterday. That topped the median estimate for a 26% increase in a Bloomberg survey of nine analysts, and is the biggest gain since February 2014.

Macau’s gaming revenue has been steadily recovering after China’s corruption crackdown and slowing economy hit the market for more than two years. While an improving economy and the opening of new facilities have helped bring players back to Macau, the outlook still bodes uncertainties as Chinese authorities introduce efforts to halt hundreds of billions of dollars worth of outflows, some of which exit the mainland via gambling operations.

“Risk of heightening enforcement and potential policy pressures we had flagged have certainly not gone away,” said Daiwa Capital Markets Hong Kong Ltd analyst Jamie Soo in a note yesterday. “Some of the pressure on the gaming revenue does take time to manifest itself, and the seasonal impact of stronger mass numbers for summer months may very well smooth out the potential negative impact of this in the near term.”

Still, the third quarter looks to be off to a strong start, and the market will likely react favourably to the numbers, Soo added.

Wynn Macau Ltd shares rose as much as 1.2% before paring its advance after the data’s release yesterday. MGM China Holdings Ltd, which was raised to a buy at Morningstar, trimmed gains after climbing 2.3%.

Bloomberg Intelligence’s index of Macau gaming stocks has rallied 20% this year through Monday. Wynn Macau surged 37% in the period, while Galaxy Entertainment Group Ltd jumped 43%.

The recovery is still susceptible to any renewed anti-corruption crackdowns from the mainland, especially as China gears up for the 2017 party congress this fall. Investor concerns remain amid reports of mainland police investigating questionable money transfers and freezing accounts of junket operators who ferry in wealthy players to gamble large sums on credit. 

Macau regulators are also requiring facial recognition and identification card checks at ATMs to curtail the overseas shifting of currency.

Revenue from high rollers, which was hurt the most amid the downturn, has shown a faster pace of recovery this year. It grew 35% in the second quarter, better than the 8.1% in the market for recreational gamblers, according to the city’s gaming regulator.

“VIP segment, for now, continues to see broad recovery across big and smaller junkets, a trend admittedly well above what we had envisioned,” JPMorgan Chase & Co analyst D.S. Kim said in a note before the revenue data release.

Source :
1) www.thestar.com.my
2) Bloomberg

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