$5B Grand Lisboa Palace Finished, SJM Holdings Expects 2020 Opening for Cotai Strip Casino Resort
Posted on: March 16, 2020, 10:39h.
Last updated on: March 16, 2020, 11:22h.
SJM Holdings’ Grand Lisboa Palace, its $5 billion integrated casino resort on the Cotai Strip, has finished construction and is slated to open in the second quarter of 2020.
The news came today during the Hong Kong-headquartered casino giant’s full-year 2019 financial disclosure. Gross gaming revenue (GGR) totaled $4.27 billion, which fueled net profits jumping 12.5 percent to HKD3.21 billion ($401.1 million).
We are pleased to report increases in adjusted EBITDA and net profit for 2019, constituting our best results in the past five years, whilst construction work was completed on Grand Lisboa Palace,” SJM Holdings CEO Ambrose So Shui Fai.
Founded in 1962 by billionaire Stanley Ho, the “King of Gambling” who held a monopoly on casinos in Macau for decades until the enclave was returned from Portugal to China in 1999, owns its flagship property Grand Lisboa in downtown Macau. Along with its forthcoming Cotai casino, the company operates casino services for numerous hotels across the Special Administrative Region.
Ho, 98-year-old, is no longer involved in the company’s day-to-day operations. SJM is now led by his daughter Daisy Ho, who serves as chairperson and executive director. She’s one of the billionaire’s 17 children, other notables including Melco Resorts founder Lawrence Ho, and Sun Tak Holdings chair Pansy Ho – who also owns a considerable stake in MHM China.
The three Ho children are all multibillionaires who inherited large fortunes, but also expanded their mass wealth through their own business dealings.
Grand Opening
SJM Holdings has gone from 100 percent market share of casino gambling in Macau during its monopoly days, to now less than 15 percent. Since the arrival of four commercial casino operators – Las Vegas Sands, MGM Resorts, Wynn Resorts, Melco Resorts, and Galaxy Entertainment – SJM has continually seen its market hold decline.
In 2019, the company’s GGR numbers reveal that SJM commanded a 19.5 percent market share on mass gaming tables, and 12.2 percent on VIP operations. Combined, SJM’s market share was 14.9 percent.
One reason for its dwindling command is its failure to build on the Cotai Strip, the area where Macau’s high rollers have flocked in recent years. Conceived by Sands, The Venetian opened in Cotai in August of 2007.
Cotai Strip Timeline
- The Venetian 2007
- The Plaza 2008
- City of Dreams 2009
- Galaxy 2011
- Sands Cotai Central 2012
- Studio City 2015
- Broadway 2015
- The Parisian 2016
- Wynn Palace 2016
- MGM Cotai 2018
Thirteen years after the first integrated resort on the Cotai Strip opened, only now is SJM readying to commence operations at Grand Lisboa Palace. The property is tailored towards regaining VIP market share.
Virus Concerns
After weeks of no new confirmed COVID-19 cases, Macau announced its 11th positive coronavirus patient this week. According to gaming analysts at Bernstein Research, that will likely lengthen the duration before the enclave begins easing coronavirus screenings on people trying to enter the region.
SJM advised investors, “The disruption of SJM’s business due to the outbreak of COVID-19 is expected to have a material adverse effect on the Group’s results in the first half of 2020 and potentially beyond. It is not possible to predict the full extent or duration of the impact … as it will depend on the progression of the disease and efforts to control it.”
Related News Articles
Most Popular
Most Commented
Most Read
LOST VEGAS: First Documented ‘Trick Roll’ by a Prostitute
Last Comments ( 2 )
'...and Sun Tak Holdings chair Pansy Ho – who also owns a considerable stake in MHM China.', do you mean MGM?
I am an expat from Canada living in China about an hour drive north of Macau. Macau along with Singapore and Shanghai are the three most amazing cities in Asia.The people in these cities are super friendly, the girls are gorgeous and the food and accommodation is truly five star. I recomend these three cities to anyone visiting Asia.