Covid masks China policies to crimp Asia gaming revenue
Since taking office nearly a decade ago, China’s President Xi Jinping has tried to rein in gambling. Since mid-2019, new restrictions and threats have targeted overseas casino destinations, money transfers, online gambling, junket promoters and conspicuous consumption, the lifeblood of today’s integrated resort. As Covid recedes and international travel resumes, the regional impact of China’s restrictions will become more evident, according to more than a dozen industry executives, analysts and observers.
Due to Covid, for now only the Macau tip of the iceberg is visible in its sluggish recovery since reopening to mainland visitors a year ago and, this month, in proposals to increase regulation under new casino concessions.
Despite Macau’s issues, experts largely agree Beijing prefers that its citizens who gamble do so in Macau where they can be closely monitored. “Over the longer term, we believe that the crackdowns on overseas casino operators and online gambling remain neutral, if not positive for Macau’s mass business,” Sanford Bernstein senior analyst Vitaly Umansky and colleagues write in a 3 August note.
Beyond Macau, China’s restrictions will have uneven impact. Along with reasonably good Beijing ties – a longstanding requirement – casino destinations seeking to prosper will need domestic players and reasons beyond gaming for Chinese travelers to visit and bring money. “I think we will see a situation where it is nearly impossible for the average traveler to get into border destinations like Myanmar or Cambodia unless they can prove real business activity or a clear tourism itinerary,” China Market Research Group managing director Ben Cavender says.
“The Chinese government cannot stop individual Chinese citizens from traveling to a destination,” China Outbound Tourism Research Institute CEO Wolfgang Georg Arlt says. “It can only influence tour operators not to offer trips to certain destinations as it’s done in the past for non-gambling reasons with South Korea, Taiwan and other destinations.”
“It’s hard to speculate until the recovery gets under way. But it might be easy to assume that whomever doesn’t work constructively with Beijing with be targeted for special attention,” Anthony Lawrance, managing director of risk consultancy Greater Bay Insight, says. “In the longer term, Singapore might find itself in a tough spot if it decides to get off the fence and align more closely with US efforts to contain China’s rise.”
Along with Asia’s second highest pre-Covid casino revenue, Singapore had the most diversified gaming market base, according to a knowledgeable gaming executive who requested anonymity. Mainland China’s market share of Singapore’s casino revenue was less than 25%, followed by Indonesia, Malaysia and Thailand in double-digits, Vietnam and Japan. “The list for Singapore is long, 20 or 30 countries, eight or nine of them more than a five percent share,” the executive says. As a regional business hub and a popular travel destination, Singapore offers ample non-gambling reasons justification for Chinese visitors.
Moreover, as the world’s richest country by some measures, Singapore has a strong domestic market, despite government efforts to depress it through casino entry fees and promotion restrictions. Morgan Stanley analyst Praveen Choudhary estimates international travelers produced 75% of Singapore’s pre-Covid casino gross gaming revenue. During pandemic openings, with cross border travel halted, GGR at both Singapore casinos exceeded 50% of comparable 2019 totals.
The Philippines has the strongest domestic gaming market in Asia. Morgan Stanley estimates foreign travelers accounted for just 45% of Philippine GGR in 2019. A July report from Choudhary and researcher Gareth Leung calls Bloomberry Resort’s Solaire, the Manila market leader controlled by Philippine billionaire Enrique Razon, “best positioned among ASEAN peers as only 20% of its 2019 EBITDA came from Chinese tourists” to withstand reduced China travel.
The Philippines’ domestic gaming market strength comes from longstanding economic growth and welcoming local players from its origin in 1977. What’s changed is the foreign visitor mix.
“Prior to the current government’s warm stance towards the Chinese government, the tourist mix was more diverse – Koreans, Japanese, ASEAN, Americans, Europeans and a relatively small pool of Chinese travelers,” a seasoned Philippine gaming executive, name withheld by request, says.
In 2015, the year before President Rodrigo Duterte took office, half a million mainland Chinese visited the Philippines, 11.6% of arrivals, trailing South Korea and the US and just nosing ahead of Japan. By 2019, China arrivals had more than tripled to 1.7 million, 21.1% of total visitors, in second place, just behind South Korea.
That change “drastically tipped the balance of dependency from a diverse mix of international tourists toward Chinese tourists,” the executive says. “I think we can manage quite well to regain diversity, provided that we get our act together: promoting heavily again in many international markets, fixing our image overseas as a safe destination, leveraging on our Western orientation in terms of culture and language.” Duterte’s presidency ends next June 30th, and for North Asia, the Philippines remains the closest, cheapest tropical destination.
Part of the Chinese inflow to the Philippines provided labor for an online gaming boom. Pre-Covid, an estimated 110,000 Chinese worked in POGOs (Philippine Offshore Gaming Operations), overwhelmingly targeting mainland players. Duterte’s government refused China’s August 2019 demand to shut down POGOs, leading some analysts to view China’s secret blacklist of unnamed overseas gaming destinations announced in September last year as payback. However, bilateral links remain close despite rival South China Sea claims, and tax changes have curtailed POGO activity.
Cambodia banned offshore online gambling at the end of 2019, suspending breakneck gaming and real estate growth in Sihanoukville mainly fueled by Chinese customers and companies. Sihanoukville also hosts a burgeoning special economic zone tailored to Chinese manufacturers moving offshore that may support more measured gaming and property development.
Morgan Stanley estimates 70% of Cambodia’s GGR originates from international travelers. But beyond Sihanoukville, most of Cambodia’s casinos inhabit border enclaves serving customers from neighboring Thailand and Vietnam. NagaWorld, the country’s sole integrated resort, gets much of its business from Chinese residents in Phnom Penh (see accompanying article) amid deepening Sino-Cambodian economic and political ties.
South Korea understands the confluence of politics and gaming all too well. In 2017, Chinese arrivals were nearly cut in half to 4.2 million from 8.1 million in 2016 after Seoul deployed a US missile defense system over Beijing’s objections. China banned group tours to the country. All but one of South Korea’s 18 casinos requires a foreign passport for admission, and the industry had recently shifted its focus from Japanese to Chinese players, so the ban hit hard. New measures to curb Chinese gamblers’ visits promise further pain.
“Surely it will effect the Korean gaming market,” Incheon Free Economic Zone investment division director Nicholas Kim, supporting IRs and other development around South Korea’s gateway airport outside Seoul, says. “We are now trying to make more fabulous non-gaming tourism attractions to promote international visitors.”
“China’s actions do not impact our business plan or investment plan for Inspire,” Mohegan Gaming & Entertainment international president Bobby Soper says. The Native American group is developing US$5bn Inspire IR adjacent to Incheon International Airport, scheduled to open its first phase in 2023 as a bookend to Paradise City, a US$1.4bn joint venture of Korean operator Paradise and Japan’s Sega Sammy launched in 2017. “Our model as it relates to gaming is not built on a junket dependent profile, but rather on the back of more mass and premium mass business.”
Soper, who was Mohegan CEO when it won the Incheon license in 2016, then stepped down in 2017 and returned to the company in March, notes 28 million people residing within a 90 minute drive of Inspire represent a rich target even they can’t gamble.
“Just as an example, even though Seoul is the Asian hub for pop culture, especially live entertainment, there is an extremely limited number of entertainment venues in the greater Seoul area, and those that do exist are sub-optimal for live entertainment. Accordingly, we believe Inspire, which will be driven by entertainment, including among other venues, a state of the art 15,000 seat arena, will be a market maker and market leader in entertainment for greater Seoul.”
Mohegan unsuccessfully sought one of three IR licenses available in Japan, and opinion is divided on the consequences of China’s actions there. EuroPacificAsia Consulting managing director Shaun McCamley sees the Japan impact of China’s restrictions as “none. [Chinese players] were never really front and center in the revenue projections, and commission play will not be permitted through junkets.”
On the other hand, “Should the Japanese IR process proceed, fewer Chinese gambling patrons combined with overly onerous Japanese restrictions will reduce the rate of return on investment, resulting in less grand developments by IR licensees,” The Agenda Group director of regulatory affairs Peter Cohen says.
“For Australia, I think the impact of Covid-19, along with contemporaneous trade tensions with China, has made all sectors of industry realize that there has been an over reliance on China over the last decade or so,” Melbourne based Cohen says. “As a result, all sectors seem to be reevaluating their relationship with China, whether this is for supply chain issues or potential Chinese visitors.”
Cohen, previously the top gaming regulator in Victoria, believes, “Junket promoters might be facing more difficulties in the markets to which they bring their clients than any difficulties they are facing in China. Recent media stories and subsequent inquiries into Crown in Australia have shone a light on junkets and, in effect, killed the business in Australia. Becoming casino operators is one way junket operators can transition into a sustainable business model.”
In Macau last year, junket promoter Tak Chun Group chairman and CEO Levo Chan took over Macau Legend, a Hong Kong listed company that runs three casinos in Macau and Savan Legend in Laos, catering to Thai players.
Leading Macau junket promoter Suncity Group listed its non-junket activities on the Hong Kong stock market in 2017. Last year, the listed arm acquired a majority interest in Hong Kong listed Summit Ascent, operating Tigre de Cristal, the first casino in Vladivostok’s Primorye Entertainment Zone, bordering on China’s northwest and benefiting from 146 million Russians who supported hundreds of casinos before the Kremlin closed them in 2009 to institute designated gambling areas.
Suncity has also partnered with Philippine billionaire Andrew Tan’s Alliance Global Group to build the fourth casino in Manila’s Entertainment City district, effectively replacing Malaysia’s Genting Group as Alliance’s partner in the long delayed project.
Suncity’s biggest bet on casino operations is its 34% stake in Hoiana, a multibillion dollar IR in central Vietnam – another project Genting abandoned – that staged a soft opening last year. Heirs to Hong Kong billionaire Cheng Yu-tung, controlling Chow Tai Fook jewelers, conglomerate New World and Rosewood Hotels, own 70% and local investor VinaCapital holds 6%. Vietnam and China have a long history of animosity, currently exacerbated by competing claims in the South China Sea.
With Vietnam requiring a foreign passport for casino entry, significant gaming activity awaits resumption of international travel at Hoiana, longtime Macau junket destination Crowne International in Danang, Australia listed Donaco’s Aristo on the China border at Lao Cai, and Vietnam’s first IR, The Grand Ho Tram south of Ho Chi Minh City. Corona Resort, the lone casino admitting local players, occupies a white sand beachfront on Phu Quoc, an island offering visa-free entry to foreigners, including Chinese, unlike the rest of Vietnam.
Moving into operations may not prove a winning play for junkets. “China is focused on the players just as much as the agents who recruit them,” McCamley says.
“It is a trend that we have seen elsewhere – junkets and others have attempted to legitimize themselves by becoming casino operators. That was the historical trend in Las Vegas,” Spectrum Gaming managing director Fred Gushin, a former New Jersey gaming regulator, says. “The practice of bringing junket patrons overseas from China will be the issue that both the junkets, now casino operators, and the Chinese government will have to address.”
Former US diplomat Muhammad Cohen has covered the casino business in Asia since 2006, most recently for Forbes and Inside Asian Gaming, and wrote Hong Kong On Air, a novel set during the 1997 handover about TV news, love, betrayal, high finance and cheap lingerie.