• Subscribe
  • Magazines
  • About
  • Contact
  • Advertise
Monday 8 September 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

To the Manor Born or to the Manor Raised?

Newsdesk by Newsdesk
Fri 18 Feb 2011 at 16:41
3
SHARES
71
VIEWS
Print Friendly, PDF & Email

How effective would Pansy Ho be as boss of STDM/SJM?

It’s not 100 percent guaranteed, of course, at this stage that she will take that role. A compromise or figurehead candidate could emerge in a United Nations-style fudge as a way of uniting the warring Ho family factions. The effectiveness question arises, though, not because the STDM/SJM role might clash in US regulators’ minds with Ms Ho’s 50 percent ownership of MGM Macau. It’s because some Macau insiders suggest she may have to make quite a lot of adjustment to her personal management style if she is to fulfil the STDM/SJM role effectively.

Macau is a place where most business and political deals are done in backrooms and tied up long before they reach the eyes and ears of the media. A key attribute of the top job at STDM has traditionally been the ability to do those backroom deals in private and keep a diplomatic front in public.

If that remains a key attribute for the next person in the STDM hot seat, then Ms Ho can hardly be said to have got off to a flying start. A month-long battle via the public prints—and rather bizarrely via YouTube—over who should control Dr Ho’s shares in STDM is hardly the kind of thing to build the confidence of the market and of politicians that there will be a smooth and harmonious transition of power within STDM.

To be fair to Ms Ho, the fact her father has four different families by four different women was always going to make the transition difficult, when STDM as it is today is essentially a family business. It didn’t start out that way back in 1962, however. It started out as a four-way partnership between four (unrelated) families, and the shareholdings of the current business reflect those historic roots.

Because Dr Ho personally has never had a majority of the STDM shares, he has spent his career being part diplomat, part corporate hustler. Co-operation or at least co-existence between the shareholders has been important in getting anything done. When faced with an intransigent shareholder wanting her own way—as STDM was for several years in the case of Dr Ho’s sister Winnie Ho and her opposition to certain aspects of the flotation of SJM in Hong Kong—then it required leadership of enormous patience and diplomatic skill to be able to broker a deal. In the case of the IPO, that patient deal had to be brokered at the expense of market opportunity. The amount SJM eventually raised from the delayed flotation in June 2008 was considerably smaller than analysts had been estimating 18 months earlier. Some in Macau wonder if Pansy Ho has the instincts and people skills to be able to grin and bear such problems for the sake of corporate harmony.

Such diplomatic skills may well be needed by the next head of STDM/SJM, and not just because of family rifts. STDM/SJM is more than just a commercial enterprise. As our sister publication, Inside Asian Gaming, explained in the February issue, STDM, with its long tradition in the market, is in some senses a commercial proxy for the interests of the Macau government and the central government in Beijing. The continued pre-eminence of STDM/SJM is really about the maintenance of a Chinese rather than Las Vegan heart beating at the centre of the Macau gaming market. That’s as much a political issue as it is a commercial one.

Dr Ho in his pomp might have been able to charm and persuade his three surviving consorts and the respective children from his four families to toe a unified family line. A Dr Ho pressured by age and illness arguably has a harder job of acting as coherent umpire in the matter of the division or disposal of his STDM shares.

All three factions of the family (wives two and three and their children are currently allies) and their representatives have been busy briefing the media and spinning on the STDM share issue. The fact that it’s Pansy Ho that’s now being portrayed in the Hong Kong media as intransigent and the person responsible for preventing a deal may be partly a sign of the success of other factions in presenting their version of events.

Could Ms Ho’s personality, rather than pure circumstance, be one of the reasons she couldn’t get a backroom deal done on the shares? What we don’t know is how much horse-trading went on behind the scenes before family two and three made its pre-emptive strike on grabbing control of Dr Ho’s STDM shares in January. The insiders say Pansy Ho’s instinct is often to stick her neck out and lead from the front, rather than getting associates lined up on her side and convincing them it was their idea all along.

Ms Ho may wish to consider reading or re-reading’The Art of War’ by Sun Tzu. Her father, Dr Ho, seems to have been an avid student of, and practitioner in, the ideas of that work. His favourite sentence is probably: “The victorious strategist only seeks victory after the victory has been won, whereas he who is destined to defeat first fights and afterwards looks for victory.”

Dr Ho had a reputation for being as tough as old boots in private business dealings—but only to equals, and only in the run up to getting a backroom deal done. He has been very careful in his long career to cultivate a kindly and paternalistic image in public—especially to underlings. In China, that’s important. Word soon gets round if you start to display hubris. And that can end up eroding political support and being bad for business.

Many political analysts suggest the fact Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao spends so much of his time kissing babies on their heads and visiting the injured after China’s many natural and man-made disasters is a significant factor in maintaining the popularity and legitimacy of China’s communist regime. He’s known in the popular Chinese press as ‘Grandpa Wen’. That’s not quite as irreverent as it sounds. In Chinese culture, with its emphasis on family bonds, it’s common for unrelated friends or respected people to be given an honorary family title such as ‘uncle’. Dr Ho in his later, mellower years, can be seen in some ways as Macau’s answer to Grandpa Wen. Dr Ho’s version is to reward people in his circle and beyond and be loyal to them not because they might harm his interests if he doesn’t, but because good news travels far and fast—and buys a lot of goodwill and a lot of loyalty in turn. A room full of STDM employees who each get a lai see packet stuffed with money, just because one of Dr Ho’s horses won a race that day, tell their friends and family about that good experience. Employees who witness one of their superiors getting bawled at by a top company official (as has allegedly happened on a number of occasions at other Macau gaming companies, though not MGM Macau) go away and tell a very different story to an awful lot of people.

No one is suggesting Pansy Ho should turn into a Princess Diana-type figure and start hugging AIDS patients if she wants to be STDM boss. Nor is anyone suggesting China could or would ‘dethrone’ Ms Ho if she took the top job at STDM and her particular style didn’t always chime 100 percent with the views or tastes of China’s leadership. China is changing all the time, in terms of the way business and to some extent politics is conducted. But Chinese culture still places a lot of emphasis on harmony. It’s a very different environment from the purely meritocratic and iconoclastic approach of Western business.

At MGM Macau, Ms Ho is simply a businesswoman (and heiress) who is the 50 percent owner of a Macau casino. Were she to become head of STDM/SJM, she would be steward not only of a family business, but would be taking on a role that’s one quarter political, one quarter diplomatic, one quarter about being a Chinese national celebrity and only one quarter pure free market business. It may be a question of ‘Cometh the hour, cometh the man’ (or woman). There’s certainly an argument that if anyone in the family is capable of growing into the role, then it’s Pansy Ho. But STDM/SJM is, and probably needs to be, a very different culture from MGM Macau or even Shun Tak, the Hong Kong-listed and Ho family-run shipping and property conglomerate of which Ms Ho is managing director.

From the moment of her birth, Ms Ho will have been fawned over, deferred to and generally treated with kid gloves by outsiders, even if privately her father and mother discouraged the family entourage and immediate circle from doing so. Under such circumstances, it would take an extraordinarily strong character not to have a little bit of imperiousness of manner by the time of reaching adulthood. By contrast, Angela Leong, Dr Ho’s fourth consort, is often portrayed in the Hong Kong media not so much as to the manor born, but more as a gold-digger—the classic archetype of a much younger woman with an eye on the main chance. She’s from a modest family in Guangdong and caught Dr Ho’s eye as a young dancer. It’s interesting to note, however, that she’s known in Macau for generally being very scrupulous and polite in her dealings with underlings. She’s also been scrupulous in cultivating her political connections, and is a two-term member of Macau’s Legislative Assembly. Those abilities to nurture her public and private image in Macau could turn out to be her greatest asset, and Pansy Ho’s greatest threat. That threat is not so much because Ms Leong might trump her to the top job at STDM, but she might trump Pansy Ho to the hearts and minds of Macau people. That’s a much more dangerous and insidious kind of opposition.

RelatedPosts

Team Spirit

SJM moves towards acquisition of Hengqin office space for new hotel development, adds another 5,000 square meters to plans

Mon 28 Jul 2025 at 18:01
STDM-run casino among five concessions up for grabs in Portugal as government launches tender process

STDM-run casino among five concessions up for grabs in Portugal as government launches tender process

Mon 28 Jul 2025 at 05:54
Morgan Stanley: Macau’s peninsula IRs could claim some GGR share from closure of SJM’s satellites

Morgan Stanley: Macau’s peninsula IRs could claim some GGR share from closure of SJM’s satellites

Thu 12 Jun 2025 at 12:54
Team Spirit

Shun Tak’s Macau hotels enjoy occupancy rate surge in 2024 but group losses widen

Tue 25 Mar 2025 at 21:43
Load More
Tags: Angela LeongPansy HoSJM
Share1Share
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 – Flipping the script

Editorial – Flipping the script

by Ben Blaschke
Thu 28 Aug 2025 at 12:30

This month represents an important milestone for Inside Asian Gaming as we launch IAG EXPO – an expansion of the...

Asia market roundup

Asia market roundup

by Ben Blaschke
Thu 28 Aug 2025 at 12:26

Inside Asian Gaming takes a deep dive into the state of Asia-Pacific’s key gaming markets: who’s hot, who’s not and...

Rewriting the rules

Rewriting the rules

by Newsdesk
Thu 28 Aug 2025 at 11:43

IAG EXPO, taking place at Newport World Resorts from 8 to 10 September, is not your usual trade show. IAG...

Test of character

Test of character

by Newsdesk
Thu 28 Aug 2025 at 11:28

Since its establishment in 1989, Gaming Laboratories International (GLI) has developed into the world’s most trusted name when it comes...

Evolution Asia
Your browser does not support HTML5 video.
Aristocrat
GLI
Nustar
SABA
Mindslot
Solaire
Hann
Tecnet
NWR
NWR

Related Posts

MGM Resorts CFO Corey Sanders to retire after 30 years with company

MGM Resorts CFO Corey Sanders to retire after 30 years with company

by Newsdesk
Sun 7 Sep 2025 at 11:35

MGM Resorts International has announced the retirement of its long-serving Chief Financial Officer Corey Sanders after 30 years with the company. Sanders, who first joined MGM as tax director of MGM Grand in Las Vegas in 1994, will remain as...

Bhumjaithai Party and anti-casino voice Anutin Charnvirakul voted in as Thailand’s new Prime Minister

Bhumjaithai Party and anti-casino voice Anutin Charnvirakul voted in as Thailand’s new Prime Minister

by Ben Blaschke
Sun 7 Sep 2025 at 10:30

Thailand has officially unveiled its 32nd Prime Minister after the House of Representatives on Friday voted to elect Bhumjaithai Party leader and vocal casino opponent Anutin Charnvirakul to the role. Anutin’s ascension comes after the Pheu Thai Party’s Paetongtarn Shinawatra...

Vietnam’s new Van Don integrated resort project scheduled for 2032 opening

Vietnam’s new Van Don integrated resort project scheduled for 2032 opening

by Ben Blaschke
Sat 6 Sep 2025 at 09:34

A new US$2 billion integrated resort to be built by Vietnamese development giant Sun Group in Van Don, Quang Ninh Province is planned to open in 2032, the company has informed Vietnam’s central government. The update, reported by local media...

IAG announces 19 sponsors of IAG EXPO’s Manila After Dark Official Welcome Event at Newport World Resorts on Monday 8 September

IAG announces 19 sponsors of IAG EXPO’s Manila After Dark Official Welcome Event at Newport World Resorts on Monday 8 September

by Newsdesk
Fri 5 Sep 2025 at 10:26

Inside Asian Gaming is delighted to announce a total of 19 sponsors for Manila After Dark (MAD) next Monday 8 September – the official welcome event for IAG EXPO, taking place at Manila’s Newport World Resorts. Running from 8 to 10 September,...

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