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Gaming
mogul Packer retreats from Japan plans - 23rd October
2017





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SYDNEY
- Tycoon James Packer Monday said plans for gaming
empire Crown to expand into the lucrative Japanese
market were "off the table" as the company
focuses on developing a flagship Sydney casino.
The
Australian billionaire outlined his interest several
years ago in building a resort-casino in Japan to
tap the country's love of gambling.
But
the firm is now pursuing a restructure amid a Chinese
gambling crackdown, exiting its holding in Melco Resorts
in Macau this year and shelving plans for a Las Vegas
casino.
Packer
said he did not want management "distracted"
by participating in any competitive bidding process
to build an integrated resort in Japan, should a casino
license become available in Yokohama.
"There
isn't a great opportunity to get back into Vegas.
And there isn't an opportunity to get back into Macau.
I don't want our management to be distracted,"
he told The Australian newspaper.
"People
talk to me about Japan. I don't believe it is realistic
for us to win a license in Japan."
Asked
if that meant a Crown resort in Japan was off the
table, Packer replied: "It is off my table. But
I am only one director and I havent had the
conversation with the board.
"I
am not saying 'no forever', but what I am saying 'no'
to is writing a Aus$500 million or Aus$1 billion cheque
to go into Japan next week."
Japan
has long been viewed as the Holy Grail of Asian gaming
because of its wealthy population, proximity to China
and appetite for other forms of legal gambling, including
horse racing and pachinko, a slot machine-style game.
The
newspaper said the international casino industry was
still waiting to see a formal bill setting out the
main principles under which Japan's casino industry
would be run.
Crown
is undergoing a revamp after 19 current and former
employees were held for 10 months in China on charges
of luring rich Chinese to Australia. They were released
in August.
The
case hurt Crown's high roller revenues, with anti-corruption
laws in China banning organising gambling activities
overseas for wealthy Chinese.
The
company is now focusing on its casinos in Melbourne
and Perth and developing a Aus$2.4 billion ($1.9 billion)
gaming resort in Sydney which Packer called the "most
important building built in Australia for a long time".
(Agence
France-Presse)
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