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samsonyuen

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From: sg.biz.yahoo.com/060803/1/42jhm.html (AFP)
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Thursday August 3, 6:18 PM

Macau to overtake Las Vegas by 2007

Booming Macau will leap-frog the world famous Las Vegas Strip as the world's strongest casino market this year, analysts have said, predicting its gaming halls will generate 8 billion dollars by 2007.

With more than 20 billion dollars worth of investment committed to some 25 new hotels and casinos in the next five years the southern Chinese territory is expected to emerge as a world-class tourism destination, according to analysts Globalysis.

"We believe that Macaus (revenue) will surpass that experienced on the Las Vegas Strip in 2006, signalling Macaus success as a global casino gaming destination," it said in a statement Thursday.

While it gave no forecasts for Las Vegas revenues, the dozens of glitzy casinos on the strip earned just below 6 billion dollars in 2005.

The company stressed Macau was still some way from eclipsing all of Las Vegas' hundreds of casinos, which brought in 9.1 billion dollars in 2005.

Globalysis said Macau's mushrooming gaming business would be boosted by growth in casino-tourism related sector.

"Macau will continue its transformation into a holistic leisure tourism destination in 2007," Globalysis partner Jonathon Galaviz said in a statement.

"We believe that Macau's casino gaming revenue in 2007 will be driven by substantial growth in non-casino amenities such as new convention center venues and innovative entertainment options incorporated into Macau's fresh Las Vegas style integrated resorts."

Macau's century-old casino sector was resuscitated from years of crippling decline in 2001 when the Chinese-backed government of the former Portuguese enclave wrested a 40-year operations monopoly from ageing tycoon Stanley Ho.

The move brought in a flood of American investment, principally from Las Vegas Sands -- operator of the phenomenally successful Venetian resort -- which reversed the city's ailing fortunes when it opened the Sands Macau in 2004.

Sands Thursday posted record quarterly growth for the three months to June 2006, with pre-tax profits up 52.7 percent to 117 million dollars, a company statement said.

Growth in Macau would not have been possible without a coincidental relaxation of travel restrictions on Chinese tourists, which boosted visitors to the tiny territory to a record 18 million in 2005.

According to Globalysis, most of the investment committed to Macau over the next five years is destined for the Cotai Strip, a gaming district under construction by the Sands corporation on a 100,000 square-metre plot of reclaimed land.
 
I think what is being overlooked here is that Vegas is no longer solely a gambling desination. It is now more entertainment based.
 
I bet a Chinese government representative just walks into a state-run casino once a year, sits down at the roulette wheel, places $3 billion on black, and loses.
 
Macau is a tourism destination, but it's far from being a "world-class" destination like Las Vegas (or Niagara Falls). The secret to its success (and strangely the article doesn't even mention it) is the fact that Hong Kong is just an hour away from Macau by fast ferry (with frequencies that would make TTC red with envy), and China is just north of the border. Both China and Hong Kong restrict gambling (lottery, horse racing, and mahjong only). Macau doesn't need to advertise itself- it already has a big market of tourist-gamblers who are willing to come back again for more gambling.

Macau is already moving to diversify its tourism industry away from gambling. Last year its historic city centre was designated as a UNESCO heritage site, and the city is known for really good food. Just those two things would make me want to go to Macau again and again!

Macau photos

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Crazy housing density in Macau (what tourists don't usually see)

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Macau skyline

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Avenida Almeida Ribeiro, Macau's main street

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Historic city centre

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Casino Lisboa, the city's most famous casino

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Sands Macau, Macau's first Las Vegas-style casino
 
I think what is being overlooked here is that Vegas is no longer solely a gambling desination

Crazy, you definately hit it on the head. Macau is definately a grubier version of hong kong, the tourist attractions are in my opinion, are stretching it. The highlight is what mode of transportation you are going to take to get there. Macau is definately more tailored to the hard core gambler. I went all around Macau plus explored the city, and I'm glad I went, but if I want that type of trip I would go/stay in hong kong. Its always nice though to sample the local portugese flavoured foods, and drink out of the old school soda glass bottles, and buy some expensive teas.
 
Is there any far-flung corner of the earth left that UNESCO hasn't designated as culturally or historically significant?
 
^Wait 'till they start an award show for culturally significant cities. A new winner every year!
 

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