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Gambling tables at the the Grand Lisboa casino in Macau during the Covid-19 pandemic on 20 February 2020. Photo: Handout

Macau’s casino shares rise in New York as analysts cheer re-license report by the world’s gambling hub

  • The public comment period ran from September 15 to October 29
  • Respondents were mostly positive with the current arrangements, according to a Thursday summary of the findings by Sanford C. Bernstein & Co.
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Wynn Resorts, Las Vegas Sands and MGM Resorts International rose in New York trading after authorities in Macau released favorable results from public hearings on the renewal of casino licenses in the world’s largest gambling market.

The public comment period, which ran from September 15 to October 29, produced opinions largely as expected, with the respondents mostly OK with the current arrangements, according to a Thursday summary of the findings by Sanford C. Bernstein & Co.

Most participants said the current number of six casino licensees was a good number while the length of their concessions should be less than 20 years, Bernstein analyst Vitaly Umansky wrote.

The report boosts the likelihood that the current operators will get their concessions renewed by the June 2022 expiration of the current licenses without a major rewriting of the terms.

“We still believe the government is wholly set on finalizing the new concessions prior the June expirations,” Umansky said. “We do not view anything in the report that raises issues.”

Commentators agreed that capital commitments in the region should be increased, as well as local ownership and management. They also supported a government representative in the casinos, one of the proposals Macau authorities have said they were considering.

The majority of respondents disagreed, however, that the government should have control over dividends paid by the casino operators to shareholders.

The report is just a summary of public opinions and doesn’t represent a final decision by local authorities, Umansky wrote.

Sands rose as much as 6.4 per cent to US$39.38. Wynn was up as much as 5.4 per cent, while MGM was up 3 per cent. Shares of the three Chinese operators, Melco Resorts & Entertainment, Galaxy Entertainment Group and SJM Holdings also climbed.

Macau opened its casino market to foreign investment two decades ago, and the region has since exploded in popularity. The business has been impacted recently by restrictions on travel due to the global pandemic. Still, the market is viewed as lucrative one long term.

“We continue to believe that the market would likely accept a reasonable reduction of concession term (to 10 years, similar to that of Singapore),” Citigroup analyst George Choi wrote in a note Thursday.

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