
Gambling tycoon Stanley Ho’s family risks losing Portugal casino licences to rival bidder
- The Casino Lisboa, in Portugal’s capital, and Casino do Estoril, located in nearby Cascais, are operated by Estoril Sol, whose main shareholder is the Ho family
- The tender for a new 15-year deal on both casinos attracted two bids: one from a subsidiary of Estoril Sol, and another from an undisclosed suitor
“Overall, the competing offer had a higher value than the offer presented by our own subsidiary,” Estoril Sol said in a regulatory filing on Monday. The tenders will now be evaluated, it said, without providing details.
A representative of Portugal’s economy ministry declined to comment.
Estoril Sol operates the 91-year-old Casino do Estoril, one of the largest in Europe, with slot machines, a traditional gaming room, several restaurants and a showroom with a capacity for 1,000 people. It also manages the Casino de Lisboa and the smaller Casino da Povoa, in northern Portugal, and owns online gambling and sports betting licenses.
The company’s revenue reached €133 million (US$132 million) in 2021, compared with €136 million in the previous year, according to its earnings report.
Finansol, a holding company controlled by members of the Ho family, owns a 57.8 per cent stake in Estoril Sol.
Stanley Ho, the billionaire who built the Chinese territory of Macau into the world’s biggest gambling hub, died in 2020 at the age of 98. Known as the King of Gambling, Ho has for decades held the licence to operate the casino in Estoril. He also carried out several real estate investments in Portugal after its colonial rule over Macau ended in 1999.
