Sands to invest US$1.1b in London-themed Macau remodel

Las Vegas Sands Corp will spend US$1.1 billion renovating its properties in Macau, including turning the Sands Cotai Central into a London-themed resort. PHOTO: BLOOMBERG/ANTHONY KWAN

LOS ANGELES (BLOOMBERG) - Las Vegas Sands Corp, capitalising on the rebound in Macau gambling, will spend US$1.1 billion renovating its properties there, including turning the Sands Cotai Central into a London-themed resort.

In Macau, Las Vegas Sands' earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization rose 3.8 per cent to US$652 million, beating the US$641.3 million average of estimates compiled by researcher Consensus Metrix.

Profit in Singapore, Sands' second-largest market, climbed 13 per cent to US$442 million. Ebitda in Las Vegas fell 12 per cent to US$76 million.

Overall, Las Vegas Sands reported profit rose to 77 cents share excluding some items, beating the 68-cent average of analysts' forecasts. Sales grew 7.7 per cent to US$3.2 billion, exceeding Wall Street projections of US$3.13 billion.

In Macau, the Sands Cotai Central will be rebranded as the Londoner Macao and feature attractions tied to some of the English capital's most recognizable landmarks, the company said on Wednesday (Oct 25) in a statement. The remodeling will add an additional 1.7 million square feet of space, and the resort will accommodate more overnight guests than the Venetian and the Parisian combined, said billionaire founder and CEO Sheldon Adelson. The Four Seasons Macao will get 295 new suites in a separate tower.

"Having three iconic must-see European third destination resorts, with a broad range of amenities, will strengthen our marketing and customer-service capabilities and position us to grow faster than the Macau market and every segment, of both the top line and the bottom line in the years ahead," Adelson said on an analysts call on the results.

Sands has already invested over US$13 billion in the region since it was the first US company to open a casino there in 2002. Sands and its rivals have been looking for vindication for their bets on expensive new properties after withstanding a Beijing-led corruption crackdown that stalled growth in Macau for three years. Overall gambling revenue in the region rose 22 per cent to 67 billion patacas (S$11.34 billion) in the third quarter, the fifth in a row of year-over-year growth.

Macau, the only place in China where casino gambling is legal, accounts more than half of Sands' sales. The city is seeing a return of VIP players even as new resorts such as Sands' Parisian lure more middle-class gamblers. Sands' investments underscore its bet that long-term growth will come from attracting mainstream Chinese visitors.

"The company remains focused on a broad range of non-gaming amenities, which is ultimately what will drive visitation and put the company in a better position to remain a strong operator in the dynamic market," said analyst Chad Beynon at Macquarie Bank Ltd.

Sands' appeal to casual gamblers, tourists and families continue to pay off as the company's third-quarter results topped analysts estimates. About 89 per cent of Macau profit in the quarter was generated from mass gaming tables, slot machines and non-gaming offerings.

Visits from mainland Chinese visitors gained 15 per cent from a year ago, the company said. The visitors increased the length of their stays, and the casinos' winnings at the tables and slots generally frequented by casual gamblers increased 8.7 per cent to US$512 million.

Join ST's Telegram channel and get the latest breaking news delivered to you.