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Qld govt welcomes casino proposal
MGM Grand Paradise Gets $950 Million of 5-Year Loans
Analysts bullish on Macau gaming industry
Crown plans casino facelift
Tabcorp Second-Half Profit Falls 18% on Casinos, Slot Machines
Macau’s gambling records continue to tumble
Record betting spree expected
Malaysian tycoon defends sports gambling
Macao's gambling revenue almost doubled in May: report
Sands China to re-launch building work in Macau, on hold since 2008
Sands China Has $1.75 Billion Financing for Expansion
Malaysia allows sports betting for non-Muslims
Macao's gaming revenue hits record high in April
VIAGE GALA OPENING CAPTIVATES BRUSSELS
Sands sees Singapore casino returns in 5 yrs
Singapore's Marina Bay Sands Resort-cum-casino Opens Tomorrow
Developers set sights on Vietnam gambling strip
Bigger casinos are coming... eventually
Revel-ation: Morgan Stanley's $932M loss on casino
Mildura casino on the cards
 
Snippets
Loveman looks to China
(source: Review Journal, December 24 2009)

Harrah's Entertainment Inc. Chairman and Chief Executive Officer Gary Loveman wants to bring the Caesars Palace brand to Macau as the world's biggest casino company seeks new markets for growth.

Harrah's has held exploratory talks there and will likely hold more in the future, Loveman said in a recent interview. Entering the market would require working with an existing operator because the government limits the number of licenses to six.

"There's nothing immediately active that could lead us there," Loveman said. "We've made it very clear we would like to see the Caesars Palace brand in Macau. We certainly recognize there are six licensees, and somehow or other it has to fit through that lens."

Loveman's comments reiterate what he told the Las Vegas Review-Journal in June. He said then the company's interest in Macau is because it is "close to a lot of customers Caesars has been in contact with for more than 40 years."

Harrah's is also looking to expand in other parts of Asia, and in Massachusetts and Ohio, Loveman said. Macau is the world's largest gambling hub, and Las Vegas Sands Corp., Wynn Resorts Ltd. and MGM Mirage already have a presence. The territory overtook the Las Vegas Strip in 2006, after China ended a 40-year monopoly held by billionaire Stanley Ho.

"We need to try to bring our footprint into markets that are appealing to us," Loveman said. "We are not a one- or two- city company, we are a system of brands distributed to as many people as possible, so we need to continue to expand."


Date Posted: 26-Dec-2009