The Biggest Bet In China
SANYA, China (Reuters) - Placing bets on green-felt baccarat tables in a new casino bar on China's southern Hainan island,
punters seem oblivious to a huge wager quietly being placed around
them, one that could potentially siphon business from the world's
largest gaming hub in Macau an hour's flight away.
For now, players at Jesters casino bar, part of the newly opened Mangrove Tree Resort World
on Sanya Bay, cannot win cash - only points that they can use to pay
for accommodation, luxury goods, jewelry and artwork for sale at the
resort.
Owned by art, film and real estate mogul Zhang Baoquan, the casino bar marks the Chinese government's
first tacit approval of a gaming concept outside of Macau. Global
investors, including some of the world's biggest gaming companies, are
watching to see how the chips will fall.
"Our casino bar is the first in the country. The
government is monitoring, it's a test," Zhang told Reuters in a recent
interview at his 23rd-floor office overlooking his sprawling 173-acre
property that opened late last year. "Right now we are not at this stage (legalising casino
gambling), but my personal opinion is, in future, there is a big
possibility that they will have."
The stakes are
enormous -- China's monopoly gambling site, Macau, raked in $38 billion
in gaming revenues last year, primarily from Chinese gamblers. If Beijing were to allow gambling elsewhere in the country, cash would follow. It's not just the Chinese government that is watching the development. MGM Resorts International opened a hotel in Sanya last year and fellow U.S. casino operator Caesars Entertainment is set to open a hotel in 2014. An MGM spokesman said the company had no plan to
introduce "anything of this kind". Caesars did not respond to requests
for comment.
Dressed in jeans and a black-and-white Hawaiian shirt
during his interview, the 56-year-old Zhang said he aims to create an
integrated resort similar to those in Las Vegas and Singapore where
gaming, convention space and retail outlets are offered together.
Mangrove Tree Resort World, the newest addition to
Hainan's rapidly developing hotel scene, will be China's biggest resort
when construction is completed next year. It will have more than 4,000
rooms, a convention hall accommodating 6,000 people and facilities
including a water park.
It is one of 10 integrated resorts that Zhang is
developing around the country, including one more in Sanya and others
stretching from Lhasa in Tibet to the eastern coastal city Qingdao.
While the Chinese government does not permit casinos in
the country outside of Macau, Zhang - ranked by Forbes as one of the
country's 300 richest people in 2012 with $600 million - said Hainan
could become an exception. Sensitive to existing restrictions, the soft-spoken
businessman emphasized cultural attractions such as his art gallery
that, along with the casino bar, will be incorporated into the planned
resorts.
Inside Jesters, which models itself on Macau's casino
halls with garish chandeliers and a giant roulette wheel ceiling,
players buy tickets costing 500 yuan ($80) each. Bets range from
20-2,000 yuan in the mass area, while the high-limits area is set at
2,000-100,000 yuan. Big whale punters will be able to bet over 100,000
yuan once the VIP room opens on the second floor.
The casino bar, with 50 gaming tables now, is currently
open only to hotel guests, but when the resort is completed, local
residents will be allowed in. When players win, they receive "Mangrove" points that
can be used to buy products available in the casino such as an iPad 3G
or a Rimowa suitcase. Once luxury brands open outlets within the resort,
customers will be able to spend their points in those stores. Art work
from Zhang's Beijing art gallery is also available for purchase.
Retail stores including Prada and Louis Vuitton will be
part of a network of 20 luxury stores that will open at the resort next
year, Zhang said. Zhang, president of Beijing conglomerate Antaeus, has
the financial backing of China Development Bank. The state lender
invested 70 percent of the cost of the Mangrove Tree expansion.
"The local governments are very supportive," says the
boyish-looking Zhang, who started off as a carpenter in his hometown of
Zhenjiang in eastern Jiangsu province, and now is well known as an arts
philanthropist and prominent film investor. Married to Wang Qiuyang, a mountaineer whose father
Wang Chengbin was a former army commander, Zhang said any potential
change to gambling restrictions would take time, adding that the
government would need to decide whether to let other operators open
similar casino bars. "Gambling culturally is a very bad thing, but today
there is a difference -- gambling is a financial tool," said Zhang. "In Asia, even North Korea has two casinos. The richest
country, Singapore, before you would never think society would accept
it there. All over the world the attitude towards casinos is different
from what it was traditionally."
Zhang is pushing ahead with his expansion plans. Aiming to list the
Mangrove Tree brand on the Hong Kong stock exchange in 2015, Zhang hopes
to use the capital raised to take his Mangrove Tree brand outside of
China.
"Sydney, the Maldives, the United States, England,
Paris and Turkey" would all be good, said Zhang with a shy smile.