• Subscribe
  • Magazines
  • About
  • Contact
  • Advertise
Tuesday 18 November 2025
  • zh-hant 中文
  • ja 日本語
  • en English
IAG
Advertisement
  • Newsfeed
  • Mag Articles
  • Video
  • Opinion
  • Tags
  • Regional
    • Africa
    • Australia
    • Cambodia
    • China
    • CNMI
    • Europe
    • Hong Kong
    • India
    • Japan
    • Laos
    • Latin America
    • Malaysia
    • Macau
    • Nepal
    • New Zealand
    • North America
    • North Korea
    • Philippines
    • Russia
    • Singapore
    • South Korea
    • Sri Lanka
    • Thailand
    • UAE
    • Vietnam
  • Events
  • Contributors
  • SUBSCRIBE FREE
No Result
View All Result
IAG
  • Newsfeed
  • Mag Articles
  • Video
  • Opinion
  • Tags
  • Regional
    • Africa
    • Australia
    • Cambodia
    • China
    • CNMI
    • Europe
    • Hong Kong
    • India
    • Japan
    • Laos
    • Latin America
    • Malaysia
    • Macau
    • Nepal
    • New Zealand
    • North America
    • North Korea
    • Philippines
    • Russia
    • Singapore
    • South Korea
    • Sri Lanka
    • Thailand
    • UAE
    • Vietnam
  • Events
  • Contributors
  • SUBSCRIBE FREE
No Result
View All Result
IAG
No Result
View All Result

Back on the Switch

Newsdesk by Newsdesk
Thu 12 Nov 2009 at 16:00
1
SHARES
34
VIEWS
Print Friendly, PDF & Email

China moves to again curb the inexorable visitor influx to Macau

The fact that China controls Macau’s ‘on-off’ switch when it comes to the number of Mainland visitors allowed into Macau, and therefore the rate of annual growth of the city’s gaming market, is now generally understood by investors.

How China will operate that ‘on-off’ switch now and in the future is less well understood—even by the people who live and work in the Macau market.

The uncertainty about this was reflected in the Hong Kong stock market’s twitchiness over locally listed Macau gaming stocks last month. On October 15th, they dropped between six percent and eight percent after local media reported Beijing had instituted another clampdown on travel by its citizens to Macau from the nearby Mainland province of Guangdong.

Starting early October, individual travellers from Mainland China to Macau can apply for visas only once every two months, according to the media accounts. That compares to the previous policy of once a month, Chinese language newspapers said, indirectly quoting the Guangdong Public Security Department.

This is being widely interpreted as an attempt by the Chinese authorities to cool down an again overheating market. Gross revenue from games of fortune in Macau in the third quarter reached 31.64 billion patacas (US$3.96 billion)—a 22% rise on a year ago.

On October 9th, Wynn Macau’s Hong Kong initial public offering had launched to much fanfare and champagne and a 6.9% first day gain on its stock launch price. The general losses on October 15th in the segment more or less evened themselves out the next day after the market decided the gloom had been too hasty a reaction.

That was certainly the view of some analysts quoted in the Hong Kong media. They said the initial stock falls were an overreaction and did not reflect the growth fundamentals of the casino operators.

This rather reminds Inside Asian Gaming of those Western intellectuals who used to claim that communism as practised in the former Soviet Union wasn’t actually what Marx intended.

What matters is how things really are, not how we’d like them to be. As Jesse Livermore, the great short seller of Wall Street stocks in the 1920s, once said: “Markets are never wrong, but opinions often are.”

The fact that there is political risk emanating from China in the Macau casino sector needs to stay at the forefront of investors’ minds, rather than being tucked away at the back in a dusty file marked ‘To be sorted’.

There is currently an internal debate about China’s economic management within the Communist Party of China. It’s a debate that has been actively encouraged by the current leadership as a form of ‘intraparty democracy’. This is about whether to give market forces greater influence in economic policy (particularly in the richer coastal areas such as Guangdong and greater Shanghai), or whether to continue with the status quo. The latter means in effect managing development with a view to redistributing wealth to the poorer inland provinces. Until that debate is decided one way or the other, expect China to continue exercising its right to apply the brakes to the Macau economy.

In that context, perhaps China’s desire to control the levers of Macau’s gaming industry looks less like political risk for investors and more like a safeguarding of their money. It certainly wouldn’t help them if there were civil strife in the core market.

One school of thought—expressed by senior gaming analyst Bill Lerner, a founder of Union Gaming Research based in Las Vegas, in an interview published in last month’s issue of Inside Asian Gaming—is that Beijing will try and rein in the Macau market’s annual growth to track more or less China’s annual GDP growth.

Against the background of all this political static in Macau, the prognosis for Asia-facing public gaming companies and their stocks is probably rosiest for those that have diversified into other legally sanctioned markets in Asia. The two obvious ones are Las Vegas Sands Corp in Macau and (soon) Singapore, and Genting Group in Malaysia, Hong Kong (via the cruise ship segment) and (early in 2010) Singapore.

RelatedPosts

Macau GGR run-rate moderates through mid-November as National Games occupies hotel rooms

Macau GGR run-rate moderates through mid-November as National Games occupies hotel rooms

Mon 17 Nov 2025 at 15:58
Sands China launches Sands Responsible Gaming Academy

Sands China launches Sands Responsible Gaming Academy

Mon 17 Nov 2025 at 14:47
Japan’s new Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi was an early proponent of IR bill

China issues advisory warning citizens against travelling to Japan following PM’s Taiwan comments, Macau and Hong Kong follow suit

Mon 17 Nov 2025 at 04:11
On the brink

Jefferies raises Macau Q4 GGR estimates following recent market strength

Thu 13 Nov 2025 at 14:35
Load More
Tags: Macau
ShareShare
Newsdesk

Newsdesk

The IAG Newsdesk team comprises some of the most experienced journalists in the Asian gaming industry. Offering a broad range of expertise, their decades of combined know-how spans multiple countries across a variety of topics.

Current Issue

Editorial – Careful what you wish for

Editorial – Careful what you wish for

by Ben Blaschke
Tue 11 Nov 2025 at 17:28

The shock withdrawal of MGM Resorts from the New York casino licensing bid highlights the challenges faced by jurisdictions globally...

2025 Asian Gaming Power 50: Ones To Watch

The 2025 Asian Gaming Power 50

by Andrew W Scott
Tue 11 Nov 2025 at 17:21

Long established as the definitive list of the most influential figures and personalities in the regional industry, IAG’s Asian Gaming...

2025 Asian Gaming Power 50: Meet the panel

2025 Asian Gaming Power 50: Meet the panel

by Newsdesk
Tue 11 Nov 2025 at 17:01

IAG introduces the nine members of the judging panel who have determined this year’s Asian Gaming Power 50 list. Andrew...

2025 Asian Gaming Power 50: Ones To Watch

2025 Asian Gaming Power 50 List

by Newsdesk
Tue 11 Nov 2025 at 16:44

RANK POWER SCORE NAME TITLE ORGANIZATION 1 6,045 FRANCIS LUI CHAIRMAN Galaxy Entertainment Group 2 5,843 PANSY HO CHAIRPERSON AND...

Evolution Asia
Dolby banner
Aristocrat banner
GLI
Nustar
SABA
Mindslot
Solaire
Hann
Tecnet
NWR
568Win

Related Posts

2025 Asian Gaming Power 50: Ones To Watch

The 2025 Asian Gaming Power 50

by Andrew W Scott
Tue 11 Nov 2025 at 17:21

Long established as the definitive list of the most influential figures and personalities in the regional industry, IAG’s Asian Gaming Power 50 celebrates its 18th anniversary in 2025. It is now 17 years since Inside Asian Gaming first published the...

2025 Asian Gaming Power 50: Meet the panel

2025 Asian Gaming Power 50: Meet the panel

by Newsdesk
Tue 11 Nov 2025 at 17:01

IAG introduces the nine members of the judging panel who have determined this year’s Asian Gaming Power 50 list. Andrew W Scott is Vice Chairman and CEO of Inside Asian Gaming (IAG) and CEO of parent Complete Media Group (CMG),...

2025 Asian Gaming Power 50: Ones To Watch

2025 Asian Gaming Power 50 List

by Newsdesk
Tue 11 Nov 2025 at 16:44

RANK POWER SCORE NAME TITLE ORGANIZATION 1 6,045 FRANCIS LUI CHAIRMAN Galaxy Entertainment Group 2 5,843 PANSY HO CHAIRPERSON AND EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR MGM China 3 5,325 LAWRENCE HO CHAIRMAN AND CEO Melco Resorts & Entertainment 4 4,608 ROBERT GOLDSTEIN CHAIRMAN...

2025 Asian Gaming Power 50: Number 10 – Wilfred Wong

2025 Asian Gaming Power 50: Number 1 – Francis Lui

by Newsdesk
Tue 11 Nov 2025 at 12:40

CLAIMS TO FAME Built Galaxy into Macau’s de facto local gaming champion Continuing to build out largest single land plot in Cotai via Galaxy Macau Holds strategic stakes in Monte Carlo casino operator SBM and Wynn Resorts The driving force...

Your browser does not support the video tag.


IAG

© 2005-2025
Inside Asian Gaming.
All rights reserved.

  • SUBSCRIBE FREE
  • NEWSFEED
  • MAG ARTICLES
  • VIDEO
  • OPINION
  • TAGS
  • REGIONAL
  • EVENTS
  • CONSULTING
  • CONTRIBUTORS
  • MAGAZINES
  • ABOUT
  • CONTACT
  • ADVERTISE

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In

Add New Playlist

No Result
View All Result
  • Subscribe
  • Newsfeed
  • Mag Articles
  • Video
  • Opinion
  • Tags
  • Regional
  • Events
  • Contributors
  • Magazines
  • Advertise
  • Contact
  • About
  • Home for G2E Asia

© 2005-2025
Inside Asian Gaming.
All rights reserved.

  • English