In Vietnam, a mega casino rises
with the help of a Macau junket company
Chinese
tourists to Vietnam are expected to be the main players here while local
Vietnamese are forbidden from casino gambling
A model of the resort project by Suncity with nearby
constructions is shown at Hoiana, Vietnam March 26, 2018. Picture taken March
26, 2018. Photo: Reuters
Along a three-kilometer (2-mile) stretch of coastline
in central Vietnam, construction cranes are digging up mounds of sand and
rubble where the country’s biggest casino is set to open next year.
When completed, the $4 billion
Hoiana project will extend across almost 1,000 hectares, and also include
shops, restaurants, golf courses and water parks.
Driving the project is Suncity Group
Holdings Ltd, which has made billions luring high-rollers – mainly from China
– to the baccarat tables in the Chinese territory of Macau.
Vietnam is betting big on developing
a gambling industry, targeting the Chinese tourists who have been flocking to
the country in recent years.
In addition to Hoiana, two other
casinos, one in Van Don in the northern province of Quang Ninh, and one on
Phu Quoc island in the south, are also under construction. The two projects
will be part of a pilot program that would allow Vietnamese citizens to
gamble at casinos for the first time.
Hoiana will be the first casino
owned by Suncity, which will have a one-third stake in the project.
VinaCapital, a Vietnamese investment management and real estate firm, and the
Hong Kong-based VMS Investment Group will also have similar-sized stakes.
“The government really wishes to
bring tourism here,” said Henry Tam, project director of Hoi An South
Development, the local company which is building Hoiana. He added that
development of the area would also include a school and sports stadium for
local residents.
“This is a 15-20 year project,” he
said. “The area is four times the size of Macau’s Cotai strip.”
The Hoiana project comes with
challenges. Local Vietnamese will not be allowed to gamble at the casino and
operations are subject to Vietnam’s uncertain regulatory environment.
Competition around Asia is also
heating up, with Macau, the world’s largest gambling center, building more
resorts, and South Korea and the Philippines expanding their casino
footprints. Other countries like Singapore also compete in the sector.
Ho Tram, a multi-billion dollar
casino project located a two-hour drive from Ho Chi Minh City, had
construction delays and financing problems before it opened in 2013. The
casino - which is owned by Asian Coast Development, headed by the hedge fund
manager Philip Falcone - has struggled to attract foreign gamblers to its
remote location.
There are fewer than 10 casinos in
Vietnam, mostly smaller ones outside major cities. At present, only foreign
passport holders can enter and gamble in them.
Suncity executives are optimistic
for Hoiana, citing strong government backing, local support through
VinaCapital and large-scale infrastructure works like the four-lane highway
that will connect it to Danang’s international airport 40 kilometers away.
And they are pinning their hopes on
Chinese tourists. In 2017, Vietnam welcomed 4 million Chinese visitors, up 49
percent from the previous year.
The first phase of the project,
which includes a 140-table casino and a golf course, is due to open in 2019.
The second phase, which will add a lagoon, water park, second golf course,
entertainment village and four more beach resorts, is slated to open by 2023.
Anthony Chiu, Suncity’s chief
financial officer, said the cost of the first phase was $650 million, of
which VinaCapital, Suncity and VMS have put in around $70 million each, with
the rest coming from bank financing.
Companies associated with Chow Tai
Fook Enterprises, headed by the Hong Kong billionaire Henry Cheng, are
building 100 villas and a 1,176-room hotel as part of the first phase.
In addition to Hoiana, Suncity has
also signed a management service agreement for the Van Don project in the
north.
Van Don is scheduled to open in 2019
according to Suncity but details are scarce on the nature of the development.
Foreign investors are required to invest over $2 billion in order to qualify
for casino licenses.
Las Vegas operators including Las
Vegas Sands have been interested in setting up in Vietnam for several years.
But Sands has said it would only invest in a casino if locals were allowed to
gamble there.
Casino
expansion
For Suncity, the stakes are high in
Hoiana.
Booming gambling revenues in Macau
have created enormous wealth for junket operators like Suncity, who bring in
players from mainland China and collect their debts.
But as tighter regulatory controls
and a lack of space crimps further development in Macau, junkets have been
trying to expand overseas.
Their role remains critical for
Asian casinos eager to attract Chinese players, as gambling debts are not
legally enforceable in China.
Suncity is responsible for all the
casino operations in Hoiana, including bringing in VIP players.
Macau’s government will also soon be
deciding on whether to allow new contenders to set up casinos in the
glittering enclave once the six existing licenses start to expire from 2020.
Suncity’s 34 percent stake in Hoiana
will help position it as a contender for a casino license in Macau, said
Grant Govertsen, an analyst at Union Gaming in Macau.
Suncity’s executive director, Andrew
Lo, said Hoiana also gave the company an opportunity to be in control of an
operation rather than just a service provider.
“I think it’s a very good
investment,” he said. “Our marketing strategy is that we will become the
entertainment hub of the Danang and Hoi An area.”
By Reuters/Tuoitrenews
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Thứ Sáu, 20 tháng 4, 2018
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