Wynning
in Macau
Steve Wynn didn't have to look
far when it came time to figure out how to best
capitalize on his valuable Macau casino concession.
The
Wynn Resorts chairman merely had to check out
Las Vegas Boulevard to see that offering some
of the world's best casino operators a chance
to join with him in a major Macau development
would give each party a chance to share in some
of the big money being generated in the Chinese
enclave.
But
Wynn and his company's investors would be the
biggest winners, experts predict.
One
year ago Wynn said he planned to develop "the
best two or three places" in Macau, and
do them himself. "Why would you want to
share?" he said at the time.
Times
change, and so did Wynn's mind.
"My
approach is simple -- I think it would be good
to have a Caesars Palace or a (Kerzner International)
or a Station Casinos join with us in an imaginative
development," Wynn said. "I'm going
to invite our friends to join with us on a joint-venture
basis.
"I'd
love to be partners with Harrah's (Entertainment)
and Caesars Palace. I'd love to be partners
with (the Kerzners) and their imaginative properties.
And Station Casinos -- the Fertittas are smart,
and I'd like to join with imaginative and bright
guys like them."
One
top Wall Street analyst said Wynn's joint-venture
plans would make sense for three reasons.
First,
the more high-quality brands on Macau's Cotai
strip, a new venue for casinos, the more quality
customers who will play there.
Second,
by clustering brands such as Wynn and Caesars,
the area becomes Cotai's anchor.
And
third -- and most significantly -- the money
invested by joint-venture partners limits Wynn's
investment while providing significant income,
increasing the return for Wynn's investors.
Wynn
said he is not prepared to announce any firm
deals at this time. He said he has yet to finalize
acquisition of land on Cotai, but expects to
acquire a parcel of about 50 acres.
Wynn
would supply the land and the right to open
a casino, Wynn Design & Development would
design the properties and the joint-venture
partners would invest the money needed to build
separate branded properties.
The
partners would then share in the properties'
proceeds -- "just like we did (at formerly
Wynn-owned Mirage Resorts) with the Gold Strike
guys (eventual owners of Mandalay Resort Group)
with the Monte Carlo, and like we did with Boyd
in Atlantic City (a partnership that became
the ultrasuccessful Borgata resort)," Wynn
said.
Instead
of building a convention-oriented cluster of
hotels on Cotai as Venetian owner Sheldon Adelson
plans, Wynn will place a major shopping destination
in the middle of his project.
"Sort
of like the Mirage and Caesars surround the
retail at Caesars Palace," Wynn said, referring
to the Forum Shops. "It's user-friendly.
It's a couple of hotels surrounding shopping
-- a pretty good idea."
Harrah's
Chairman Gary Loveman has said the company would
be interested in Macau and looks at opportunities
to get involved in the lucrative market. Harrah's
executives declined Tuesday to comment on Wynn's
remarks, as did Station Casinos executives.
Harrah's
has recently been on an international feeding
frenzy, announcing deals to build Caesars-branded
casinos in the Bahamas and Spain and another
deal to build a casino in Slovenia.
Kerzner
is a major international resort company that
operates Atlantis, the biggest casino resort
in the Bahamas, and is slated to operate a multibillion-dollar
casino in Dubai, United Arab Emirates.
Station
Casinos President Lorenzo Fertitta, on a June
broadcast of "Face to Face With Jon Ralston"
said that the company had a responsibility to
check out casino opportunities in Macau as well
as in the United Kingdom, Florida and Pennsylvania,
and had done so.
It
is no surprise casino operators want to get
in on the Macau action.
Macau
is expected to soon supplant Las Vegas as the
world's biggest market. There are more than
100 million people within a three-hour drive
and more than 1 billion people within a three-hour
flight of the semiautonomous enclave that was
ruled by Portugal until 1999.
The
Wall Street analyst said it makes sense for
major operators to partner with Wynn.
"A
company that's licensed in the U.S. could not
do business directly with Galaxy or Stanley
Ho (the other two Macau concession-holders),
because neither Galaxy nor Ho would pass regulatory
muster," he said.
UNLV
public administration professor Bill Thompson
said Wynn and his partners will all benefit
-- and so will Las Vegas and Macau.
"He
showed with the Monte Carlo that these joint
ventures are good business," Thompson said.
"He can just sit back and collect the money."
Las
Vegas will gain business because Wynn will have
incentive to bring his big Macau bettors to
Wynn Las Vegas to take advantage of Nevada's
low 6.75 percent gaming tax rate. Macau's tax
is almost 40 percent.
Macau
will gain the prestige of Wynn-associated resorts,
Thompson said.
"He'll
bring Strip-style upmarket properties to the
place," Thompson said. "These deals
will be a winner all the way around."
Wynn
doesn't have to wait for partners to get a taste
of the Macau sugar.
He
said his billion-dollar Wynn Macau on the Macau
peninsula is set to open in September, with
the builder set to turn over the finished 600-room
property in July, giving Wynn Resorts an unprecedented
six weeks to train the 4,600 employees before
opening.
"I
want the best-trained workforce in Macau,"
Wynn said. "More time will make them more
prepared, and there will be less stress for
the employees. I want them to have more fun
and less anxiety."
The
company began taking job applications for Wynn
Macau two weeks ago and hopes to get 40,000
in six weeks. They received 30,000 applications
in the first eight days, both online and in
person. Half of the jobs must go to Macau residents.
For
now, Adelson's Las Vegas Sands is the only Las
Vegas company bringing Macau gambling revenue
back to Las Vegas.
"Our
Cotai developments won't open until 2009 or
2010," Wynn said. "We haven't seen
the peninsula bloom -- that will happen in '06
and '07, when we open, MGM opens, Galaxy opens
and (Stanley Ho's) expanded Lisboa opens."
Wynn
seems to relish the prospect of competing against
Adelson. The two have sparred over the lack
of parking spaces at the Venetian. The Clark
County Commission, at Wynn's urging, forced
Adelson to prove he will have enough spots at
the new Palazzo hotel he's building next to
the Venetian.
"There
are four major joints opening next to Sheldon's
box of baccarat," Wynn said. "Then
we'll see how he does."
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