Ho, MGM Mirage
Deal Should Pass Regulators
When Macau opened up its
casino market to foreign investors, no one would
have guessed that a Nevada casino operator would
end up dealing with casino kingpin Stanley Ho, whose
casinos were regarded as a snakepit teeming with
violent Chinese organized crime figures and brazen
loan sharks and prostitutes.
Three years later, the state's biggest casino operator
is partnering with Ho's daughter after buying rights
to build a casino from Ho himself.
Most gaming industry leaders and observers expect
MGM Mirage's partnership with Pansy Ho, daughter
of Asia's leading casino mogul, to stand up to Nevada's
regulatory scrutiny.
Experts say the deal between the Las Vegas-based
casino company and Pansy Ho would be looked upon
favorably because regulators have been assured that
Stanley Ho would not be associated with the venture.
In an interview with the Sun, Pansy Ho said the
ventures she oversees in Macau involve tourism enterprises
associated with the city's casinos -- boat transportation,
the area's only golf course, the city's primary
convention center, the municipal airport and the
Macau Tower tourist attraction among them.
Pansy Ho is managing director of Shun Tak Holdings
Ltd., an umbrella company for several tourism enterprises,
but Shun Tak is not associated with the MGM Mirage
deal.
"I really don't have that much experience
with gaming because my company works primarily in
transportation, food and beverage and entertainment,"
she said.
Pansy Ho was in Las Vegas last week with a contingent
of tourism and government leaders from Macau to
introduce Las Vegas to some of the special administrative
region's cultural highlights.
Pansy has been designated as the heir of her 84-year-old
father's empire. Hong Kong media have tagged her
as a party girl-turned-serious businesswoman who
has a business degree from the University of Santa
Clara in California. She says the "party girl"
label is a misconception; she says she organizes
parties as part of her responsibilities with Shun
Tak, but she's not a participant.
While her father's company is acknowledged as the
largest fish in the Asian gaming pond, Pansy said
her father has no role in the partnership with MGM
Mirage.
Stanley Ho's Sociedade de Jogos de Macau -- known
in the region as SJM -- controls 80 percent of Macau's
five-star hotel rooms and includes the largest casino
in the city, the Lisboa, and one of the newest properties,
the Casino New Century-Greek Mythology on the island
of Taipa.
Ho continues to hold a tight grip on the high-roller
action of Macau, but some critics say his casinos
allow interaction with organized crime figures --
an allegation boosters of the region say is part
of Macau's notorious past.
Ho held a 40-year monopoly on gaming in Macau,
but that changed in 1999 when the city became a
special administrative region that, like Hong Kong,
was turned over to Chinese control. The new government
in 2003 granted three gaming concessions, one to
Ho, one to Wynn Resorts Ltd. and one to a partnership
that included Las Vegas Sands Inc.
Although MGM Mirage was shut out of the initial
list of concessionaires, Nevada's biggest operator
able to enter the market through a subconcession
from Ho to MGM Grand Paradise Ltd., a 50-50 partnership
between Ho's eldest daughter and the Las Vegas company.
MGM Mirage put $180 million in equity into the
deal while Pansy Ho put $80 million into it. MGM
Mirage also has the responsibility to deliver a
$100 million interest-bearing loan to the partnership.
Third-party financing is being sought to fund the
remaining costs of the project, which is expected
to open in late 2007.
MGM Mirage has not disclosed how much was paid
to Stanley Ho for the subconcession, but Hong Kong
media reports said it was about $200 million.
Terry Lanni, chief executive of MGM Mirage, said
the MGM Grand Macau project, which broke ground
in June is now pegged to cost $1 billion after initially
being projected at $975 million.
He said while Pansy Ho is not a key figure in her
father's casino empire that she understands the
business and probably was being modest in her role.
"She's extremely bright and has a great deal
of experience with various travel and tourism operations,"
Lanni said. "She may not have a direct background
in gaming, but she'll learn from our people more
about some of the vagaries of the industry. She'll
be very involved and will have a significant role.
She was tremendously valuable in selecting an architect
and a contractor for our project there. She's the
managing director, but decisions are made jointly."
Lanni said he can understand how Pansy can keep
her distance from her father.
"I have a number of friends in a variety of
businesses who don't want their children involved
in their industry for a number of reasons,"
Lanni said. "I can attest to the fact that
she is rather unfamiliar with some of the specifics
of the gaming industry. But she has a number of
other strengths."
Marc Falcone, a Deutsche Bank gaming analyst who
has watched American casino companies emerge as
competition has unfolded in Macau, said MGM Mirage
executives have been very diligent in making sure
Nevada regulators are apprised of their dealings
with Pansy Ho and her role in the venture.
"She has a strong reputation as an intelligent
business woman and that's most important to her
participation with the joint venture," Falcone
said. "She's been the managing director, but
she doesn't directly handle the day-to-day operation.
"All the Nevada operators (in Macau) have
been very diligent about working within the Nevada
regulatory environment to remain in compliance with
their licensing," Falcone said. "MGM doesn't
view her as a liability."
Dennis Neilander, chairman of the state Gaming
Control Board, said investigators are still gathering
information about Pansy Ho and her association with
MGM Mirage and that it would be premature for him
to comment directly on her role.
Neilander said foreign operators don't have to
be licensed to engage in partnerships with local
casinos abroad. Only one state -- Mississippi --
requires board approval on such deals and it has
endorsed MGM Mirage's association with Pansy Ho.
Neilander explained that the board would evaluate
investigative findings to determine if Pansy Ho
is a suitable partner for MGM Mirage. State regulators
could ask her to file a detailed application if
board members can't reconcile specific issues.
There's no timeline in place for the board to consider
Pansy Ho's suitability.
A frequent critic of the casino industry says he
thinks regulators shouldn't try to delve into the
Ho family's history of associations.
Bill Thompson, a professor of public administration
at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas, and a frequent
critic of the industry, said gaming regulators would
find themselves in "a quagmire" if they
sought out all of Stanley Ho's associations.
Instead, he would hope that investigators would
focus primarily on Pansy Ho's record.
"They should say, 'OK, we're monitoring things
from this day forward,' and not try to scrape the
barrel for all these associations," Thompson
said.
Thompson said Stanley Ho has been a successful
operator and a supporter of the region's culture
and charitable causes. He said he was able to build
his empire by making numerous contacts in China
and noted that Wynn and Las Vegas Sands may also
need to reach into China for future partnerships.
Stanley Ho has denied any connection to organized
crime in the region. But his estranged sister, Winnie
Ho, vows that her brother has associated with criminals
involved in loan sharking, prostitution and illegal
gambling.
An executive with one of MGM Mirage's rivals in
the Macau market, Las Vegas Sands President Bill
Weidner, has been quoted in local media as saying
that his company wouldn't partner with Stanley or
Pansy Ho. And he said he believes that the father
controls his daughter's businesses.
Weidner was traveling and could not be reached
for comment.
Pansy Ho said many things changed in Macau when
the area was turned over to Chinese control.
Edmund Ho -- a former banker who is no relation
to Stanley or Pansy -- became chief executive of
Macau and vowed to make the control of crime a priority.
Pansy Ho said the Chinese government had a greater
ability to enforce the law than the Portuguese administrators
who were formerly in place, even stationing 1,000
troops in Macau to get tough with gangsters known
as the "Triad."
The government convicted and executed some of the
gangsters and, just before the handover to the Chinese,
authorities "caught the most troublesome guy."
Wan Kuok-koi, known in the region as "Broken
Tooth," was given a 15-year sentence in November
1999 after a trial that Pansy Ho said was a turning
point for the gaming industry because it signaled
a tougher regulatory environment.
Lanni also applauded Edmund Ho's emergence as an
effective administrator and said the environment
in Macau has some interesting parallels to Las Vegas'
notorious past.
"Ben Siegel was a handsome guy that was one
of the founding fathers of the industry as we know
it today," Lanni said. "But over time,
people like Grant Sawyer, Harry Reid, Howard Hughes
and many others helped turn it into a very legitimate
business with significant background checks and
regulatory safeguards.
"Our history has a lot in common with theirs."
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