Casinos
Open Arms for Asians with Open Wallets
The lunar calendar unleashes
the Year of the Dog on Sunday and Las Vegas
casinos hope to take a bite out of Asian gamblers'
wallets.
Marketing
to Asian -- particularly Chinese -- gamblers
is Management 101 for casino bosses. Just about
anybody who works in a casino knows that many
Chinese believe the color red and the number
8 are lucky and that the number 4 is unlucky.
Many
Las Vegas Strip properties have decorated their
lobbies and casinos with orange trees, red lanterns,
gold coins and other Chinese symbols of luck
and prosperity.
Caesars
Palace's top executive will be on hand Feb.
4 for a traditional "painting of the eye"
lion ceremony in front of the property. The
Venetian will host a dragon dance, complete
with firecrackers and traditional music, in
its casino on Saturday. At the MGM Grand Garden
Arena, Chinese singer Paula Tsui will perform
in Mandarin and Cantonese on Saturday and Sunday.
For
non-Chinese, the public displays are an intriguing
and colorful nod to an important ethnic group.
For Las Vegas casinos, it's a business imperative.
Chinese
New Year, also known as Lunar New Year, has
grown from a small, private welcome for Asian
high rollers to a more mainstream event for
middle-income Chinese and Asian-Americans.
It
now ranks as one of the biggest gambling events
of the year for Las Vegas, vying for second
place with the Super Bowl, behind New Year's
Eve, experts say. Hotels are expecting 100 percent
occupancy this weekend in advance of the celebration,
which begins Sunday and lasts for two weeks.
A
Chinese propensity to gamble is a long-held
truism in Las Vegas that has yet to be documented
with any accuracy. But some say there is a cultural
basis for gambling during Chinese New Year --
a holiday that is inextricably tied to testing
one's luck.
If
a person wins a wager, it could bring new luck
for the rest of the year, or so the tradition
goes. Losing a bet could rid the bettor of bad
luck that's accumulated over the past year.
"Chinese
New Year is really a time for serious gambling,"
said Bill Eadington, professor of economics
and director of the Institute for the Study
of Gambling and Commercial Gaming at UNR. "It's
really a time to test destiny."
While
Las Vegas casinos don't specifically disclose
their Chinese New Year business, the holiday
is a boon for their baccarat tables -- the game
most favored by Asian high rollers.
Gamblers
wagered $754 million at Strip baccarat tables
in February -- 66 percent higher than January's
$453 million and 170 percent above March's $279
million. Last year, Chinese New Year began Feb.
9.
MGM
Mirage, Las Vegas' biggest Strip casino operator
and owner of at least three hotels -- MGM Grand,
Bellagio and Mirage -- that cater to Asians
of various incomes has witnessed a steady increase
in the number of Asian travelers in town for
Chinese New Year.
The
event has also boosted business each year at
the Venetian, which has cultivated a loyal Asian
following and is now marketing the property
with a casino it owns in the Chinese enclave
of Macau.
"It's
a very important time of year for us,"
Venetian spokesman Ron Reese said. The property
will host more than 200 VIP players this year.
MGM
Mirage spokesman Alan Feldman said the increase
is related in part to a boom in the Asian-American
population in the United States.
"It's
a growing, thriving community across the country,"
Feldman said.
The
Asian-American population grew from 3.8 percent
of the nation's population in 2000 to an estimated
4.3 percent in 2004, according to data from
the U.S. Census Bureau.
Asians
and Asian-Americans accounted for 7 percent
of Las Vegas visitors in 2004, up from 4 percent
in 2003, according to the Las Vegas Convention
and Visitors Authority.
American
Asians aside, analysts say that the burgeoning
number of middle-class customers in China --
a relatively untapped population of entrepreneurs
willing to spend money -- represent an even
bigger business opportunity for Las Vegas casinos.
Capitalizing
on that same Chinese market, Macau casinos are
expected for the first time this year or next
to win more money from gamblers than Las Vegas
Strip properties.
Experts
say intensifying competition in the casino industry
has already resulted in increasing Chinese New
Year traffic on the Strip.
Chinese
New Year is a clear example of how casinos have
become savvier in marketing to specific customer
segments as a way to boost overall business,
they say. Those segments include Hispanics and
Asians as well as nonracial and ethnic groups
such as single people and gay couples.
"No
longer are Chinese living in just Chinatowns
in San Francisco and New York," Las Vegas
casino consultant Jeffrey Compton said. "They
are dispersed throughout the general population.
They can come and celebrate their ethnicity
in Las Vegas in a way that they might not be
able to do at home."
In
spite of a growing number of public events around
Chinese New Year, holiday celebrations are primarily
centered on private parties for high rollers.
Wynn
Las Vegas -- which claims to own the biggest
chunk of the Strip's baccarat market -- isn't
offering public events, instead hosting a private
gala for more than 1,400 people that will include
a traditional dragon dance. Other major properties
will also host private events.
Chinese
New Year still flies "under the radar"
for the average Las Vegas visitor, Compton said.
That
might change in the future, some experts say.
As
a tourism destination, Las Vegas could do a
much better job marketing Chinese New Year,
which has the potential to become a more profitable
event on par with New Year's Eve, said Jonathan
Galaviz, a casino consultant specializing in
the Asian market.
Rather
than sponsoring ad-hoc events, Strip properties
could coordinate a much larger, citywide celebration
that recognizes the importance of the Lunar
New Year, Galaviz said.
"I
really think Las Vegas, as a global tourism
destination, needs to learn how to sell itself
better over Chinese New Year in the coming years,"
he said. "It may take an organization like
the LVCVA to consolidate the marketing of Las
Vegas as a global Chinese New Year destination." |