James Packer to Build Trinity Casino on Macau Peninsula

Written on October 7, 2007 by admin

James Packer’s third casino, Trinity, is expected to cost at least $US675 million ($767 million) and open in late 2010, according to investor presentations to analysts by Melco PBL in .

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Trinity

Located in the main peninsula area of , the third casino project of Mr Packer’s PBL and its joint venture partner Melco is expected to appeal to day-trippers arriving at the ferry terminal or at border points from China.

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Map Courtesy: Macau Tripping

The partners told analysts at recent briefings that the Trinity project would consist of two towers - one with serviced apartments and a second containing a boutique hotel and a casino with 215 gambling tables and 500 poker machines.

It will be slightly smaller than the $US584 million Crown Macau, which opened earlier this year with 222 gambling tables, 550 poker machines and 216 hotel rooms.

Mr Packer’s second project, the $US1.85 billion City of Dreams, will be the largest, with an expected 450 gambling tables, 2500 poker machines, three hotels with 1600 rooms and two towers of serviced apartments.

The first stage of , which is being constructed by Leighton Holdings, is set to open in early 2009.

The partners have engaged Las Vegas casino architect Paul Steelman, who designed the Sands casino in , which opened in 2004, and the massive Venetian hotel-casino, which opened this month, and the New York-based Pei Partnership, to design their third project.

The joint venturers announced in July that they had negotiated an extension to the agreement to buy the third site from the end of this year to July next year.

They said this would give the company “the flexibility to evaluate the uncertain impact” of the recent restrictions by Chinese authorities on granting visas for its residents to and to “thoroughly review development plans” for the site.

At the recent briefing for analysts in the company indicated that it was still very committed to the project.

In a report issued last week, JP Morgan was critical of what it saw as the high cost that Mr Packer and Melco paid for the land at the Trinity site.
“MPEL has paid $US180 million for 1.5 acres to develop their third property,” the report says, adding: “we are increasingly concerned about the price paid”.

The report also notes that the opening of Crown in May was “premature, with construction of the building and training of staff incomplete”.

It notes that Crown is poorly located and is a “complex that relies on large volumes of high-rollers to achieve their cost of capital”.

Melco PBL executives estimated that Crown ’s share of the VIP market in had reached 9 per cent.

This was criticised in the JP Morgan report as “an underperformance relative to the venue’s cost base”.

The 9 per cent market share estimate was made before the August opening of the massive Venetian project, the world’s largest casino, with 1150 gambling tables, 7000 poker machines, 3000 hotel rooms, 350 shops and a 15,000-seat theatre.

PBL and Melco have not made any comment on how much the Venetian has bitten into revenue at the much smaller Crown .

The Trinity site is much closer to the current casinos, located along from the MGM Macau, which is being built by MGM and Pansy Ho and expected to open later this year.

While it is currently set to open in 2010, a blog, on the weekend predicted that if experience with Crown was any guide “cost estimates will probably increase and the opening date may sneak into 2011?.

Meanwhile, is bracing for mass demonstrations expected today for its National Day as its citizens express their frustration about the fallout from the casino boom, which has transformed the tiny former Portuguese enclave into a massive construction site.

While the casino boom has benefited investors and some locals, there is increasing concern about the social disruption caused by rising prices, higher land and apartment costs and the substantial influx of foreign labourers working on construction sites.

There is also increasing concern among locals about corruption, with some $20 billion worth of development under way or slated for a relatively small area.

On May 1, some 6000 demonstrators joined public rallies during which police fired shots in the air - in sharp contrast with the slow-paced life that has been the tradition in the city.

The May Day demonstration led to some reports that chief executive Edmund Ho might have incurred some displeasure in Beijing with his handling of the city’s rapid development.

Courtesy : The Australian

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