5 minute read
CAMBODIA
Regulation to stimulate growth
Cambodia is expected to introduce its long-awaited casino regulation in September, which may attract further investment to one of Asia’s most vibrant markets.
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The government is planning to hold a regulatory seminar, bringing together officials and industry executives and is expected to introduce the updated rules.
Under the new legislation, casinos will likely face a system of taxation based on gross gaming revenue and unified reporting. The rules will also stipulate new minimum capital levels for properties, though there is expected to be a period of grace to allow many of the smaller casinos to comply.
Rhys Jones, managing director of the Ha Tien Vegas casino on the Vietnam border, says the rules should provide more transparency and improve confidence for investors.
Over the past year, Cambodia has seen an explosion in its casino industry, with about 184 licenses having now been issued, Jones said in a presentation to the World Gaming Executive Summit in Barcelona. About 100 of those have been issued in the past year alone, he added.
Rising tourism numbers, especially from China, have been a key driver but also a flood of foreign direct investment under Beijing’s “One belt, One road” initiative.
Tourist boom
In 2017, international visitation grew by 12 percent to 5.6 million visitors. Arrivals from China surged 46 percent to 1.2 million visitors, overtaking Vietnam as the leading source of tourism to Cambodia and were up a further 79 percent in the first four months of 2018.
Cambodian nationals are banned from gambling, therefore the majority of the casinos are in border areas to take advantage of foot traffic from neighbouring Thailand and Vietnam, where locals are also forbidden from gaming at home. The largest concentration is along the border with Vietnam, which is home to about 86 casinos, with a further 55 along the Thai border, according to Jones.
However, the area that has attracted the most interest over the past year has been the coastal town of Sihanoukville, which has seen a flood of foreign direct investment, driving a huge construction boom. It now hosts 42 casinos, including plans for one large-scale IR.
The investment has been driven by China’s “one belt, one road” project with Chinese investments in about $4.2 billion of infrastructure projects on the Southern Coast. It’s also home to the Kingdom’s biggest Special Economic Zone, which is now the base for more than 100 China-owned factories.
Jones says there are now 100,000 Chinese nationals living in the area, with that figure expected to treble over the next few years.
Although the Cambodian government has close ties with China, the influx of so many Chinese has created social tension, pushing up prices for locals and raising questions as to whether the area can support such runaway construction.
In a report last month, Reuters reported that the Dara Sakor Seashore Resort mega project appears to have stalled. The agency says the IR was touted by its Chinese developer as a citysized resort for “extravagant feasting and revelry”.
Mega project stalls
Work on the project began in 2008 after Cambodia leased 45,000 hectares of a national park to China’s Tianjin Union Development Group (UDG) for a period of 99 years. It was adopted as a Belt and Road project around 2017, and was described then as “the biggest project of the Belt and Road initiative so far.” Its status is now unclear.
However, another key draw of the Cambodian gaming market is the government’s open stance to online gaming, which is legal out of licensed land-based casinos.
According to Jones, there are currently about 20 casinos offering live dealer games from the actual casino floor, including Ha Tien Vegas. Many other venues are also offering studio facilities and are a key revenue driver for the border properties, which are otherwise reliant on foot traffic. The casinos bordering Thailand were hit particularly hard last year after a period of mourning for King Bhumibol Adulyadej dented consumer sentiment and spending.
The government doesn’t release figures for Cambodian GGR and Hong Kong-listed NagaCorp, the operator of NagaWorld and Australia-listed Donaco International, which operates Star Vegas, are the only ones to provide detailed figures.
Naga is by far the largest IR in the country and has a monopoly for a 200km radius of the capital Phnom Penh. The resort opened the second phase of its development, Naga 2, late last year, which won praise from analysts for its amenities and quality of service.
Stellar profit
As such Naga is seeing a greater share of the VIP market and is one of the most profitable casinos in Asia. In Q2, it reported an 85 percent gain in interim gross gaming revenue, driven by VIP visitation to its new Naga 2 property and strong growth in the mass market.
GGR hit $713.9 million, while EBITDA was up 29 percent to $232.7 million. VIP rollings increased by 117 percent to $16.8 billion, while mass market table buy-ins increased by 53 percent to $573.8 million.
It added Naga 2 is attracting a different clientele base and it has seen very little cannibalization from the original resort.
Its VIP business has been helped by an incentive accord with Macau’s leading junket operator, Suncity group, which set up a fixedbased business operation with fully fledged office facilities from March 1. The company said it has also seen an increase in the number of Southeast Asian players, notably from Thailand as well as a large number of Malaysians.
Star Vegas, which is based in Poipet, was affected by the death of the Thai king, but also by a dispute with the Thai vendors of the property to Donaco, which were operating an illegal operation nearby, despite non-compete clauses.
Naga CEO boosts stake in company
NagaCorp said its CEO and Executive Director Tan Sri Chen Lip Keong has boosted his stake in the operator of Cambodia’s largest casino.
On June 19th, he made on-market purchases on The Stock Exchange of Hong Kong Limited of an aggregate of 5.4 million shares at an average price of approximately HK$7.3342 per share for a total consideration of approximately HK$39.6 million ($5 million).
He now owns 65.84 percent of the issued share capital of the company.
Macau Legend eyes Cambodia expansion
Macau-based Macau Legend Development plans to enter Cambodia and wants to expand its property in Laos.
Speaking at the company’s annual general meeting, Chairman David Chow Kam Fai said it is in land negotiations for a property in Siem Reap in Cambodia and will soon unveil further details.
However, local media in Cambodia poured cold water on the plans, saying the government will not permit gambling in the area.
Siem Reap is home to the Angkor Wat temple complex, the country’s most popular tourist attraction.