Foreign casino operators go all in as they vie for Osaka
license
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[August 20, 2018]
By Thomas Wilson and Mari Saito
OSAKA (Reuters) - In late July, a lavish
fireworks display lit up Osaka's skies in the finale to one of Japan's
most famous festivals, courtesy of a first-time sponsor: Macau casino
operator Melco Resorts and Entertainment Ltd <MLCO.O>.
The company's chief executive, 41-year-old billionaire Lawrence Ho, had
only hours earlier met Osaka's governor after a donation for natural
disaster preparation.
Also in town was MGM Resorts International's <MGM.N> chief executive,
Jim Murren. He didn't bring a donation - just the Blue Man Group to
entertain around 100 guests on a chartered boat.
The partying and pageantry were part of a concerted effort to convince
Osaka who should operate one of Japan's first casino resorts. Just days
before, the country authorized the initial three licenses.
Thanks to strong local political support, an available site and a
supportive business community, the western Japanese metropolis of 2.7
million is widely expected to become the first major city to host a
casino.
"Tokyo has not raised its hand, Yokohama has not raised its hand - Osaka
has raised its hand," said Ed Bowers, MGM's executive vice president of
global development.
A huge new revenue stream is on the line for the casino operators, which
also include Galaxy Entertainment Corp <GALE.BO>, Caesars Entertainment
Corp <CZR.O>, Genting Singapore Ltd <GENS.SI> and Las Vegas Sands Corp <LVS.N>.
An Osaka casino could generate $4 billion a year, Morgan Stanley says.
For Osaka, which has seen its wealth and power fade in relation to
Tokyo, gambling could boost tourism and bring in much-needed money. It
hopes to open a resort by 2024, but even after it picks an operator it
must win government approval.
"I want to properly nurture the tourism industry in Osaka as one of its
pillars," Osaka Governor Ichiro Matsui told Reuters in an interview.
Interviews with dozens of casino executives, lobbyists and politicians
depict sophisticated campaigns aimed at winning over a skeptical public,
wooing local businesses and persuading officials.
And Osaka, eager to avoid even the appearance of corruption, has become
more cautious in dealing with casino operators.
In July, the city reiterated a ban on officials' attending parties,
sharing meals or receiving gifts. It also prohibits officials from
meeting casino representatives alone.
All told, at least eight major operators are courting Osaka. MGM, Sands
and Melco have in recent years pledged to sink $10 billion into a
resort.
DREAM ISLAND
Osaka wants to build a casino on a man-made site called Yumeshima, or
"Dream Island."
Yumeshima was built during Osaka's 1970s boom times. Its bayside area
was once a blue-collar district crowded with chemical factories and
shipyards. But those companies moved production abroad.
The city was hit hard when Japan's bubble economy popped, and
politicians have for two decades tried with little success to revive
both the waterfront and Osaka.
Still, with a four-fold surge in foreign tourists over the last five
years - more than 11 million people visited Osaka in 2017, attracted by
its rich culinary culture and wealth of nearby sights - casino operators
see a fertile market.
"This is the greatest opportunity of my lifetime," Melco's Ho told
Reuters by phone.
Executives from 11 casino companies have met Governor Matsui for
"courtesy calls" 25 times between 2012 and May 2018, prefectural records
show. Operators and other related companies have met Osaka officials 119
times since May 2017. Osaka declined to provide breakdowns of meetings
by company.
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Instructor Daisuke Sato spins a ball in the spinning wheel on a
roulette table at Japan Casino School in Tokyo, Japan August 4,
2018. REUTERS/Toru Hanai
HEARTS AND MINDS
Melco's most recent donation to Osaka, reported by local media to total about 50
million yen ($450,000), wasn't its first. Melco also gave money for victims of a
June earthquake that killed four in Osaka, and for parts of western Japan
devastated by flooding a month later.
The company declined to say how big those donations were; its fireworks
sponsorship was worth about $9,000.
Ako Shiraogawa, Melco's Japan president, told Reuters she reassured local
officials the donations were not meant to curry favor. It was a coincidence that
Ho met Osaka's Matsui before the fireworks display, she said.
"It looks like we are doing too much," Shiraogawa said. "But it just happened to
be the same day as the festival."
Like its Macau rival, MGM is building a bigger presence in Osaka, including an
office. It says it is trying to win the "hearts and minds" of the city's public
and businesses.
Before the festival, for instance, it gave shoppers at a local arcade the chance
to win tickets to its boat party.
Behind the scenes, MGM has worked to connect with Osaka companies, said Kanji
Hori, who runs the Hyakusha Kai association of small businesses, which is hoping
for a stake in an operating consortium.
Tokyo-based GR Japan lobbies on behalf of MGM, Bowers told Reuters. GR Japan
opened an Osaka office in February, hiring as associate director a former
national lawmaker from Matsui's Ishin-no-Kai party.
For its part, Las Vegas Sands says it has focused on engaging with local
officials, businesses and community groups. Its chief executive, Sheldon Adelson,
met Matsui in September.
Officials from Sands declined to be interviewed.
SENSITIVE SUBJECT
In Osaka, 42 percent of residents are opposed to a casino over fears of gambling
addiction and less than a fifth are in favor, a poll by public broadcaster NHK
in March showed.
The city's government is trying to swing public opinion with seminars on
dependency and a message of prosperity. A resort would create more than 80,000
jobs a year in the region, officials say.
But Teruo Sakurada, a professor at Osaka's Hannan University who heads an
anti-casino group, said those positions would most likely be part-time and lower
paid.
"They want tourism and foreign demand to drive the local economy, but this isn't
a sustainable model," he said.
Despite casino operators' enthusiasm in courting Osaka, there have so far been
no major accusations of impropriety.
The only incident approaching scandal: a PwC Consulting employee on a 377
million-yen contract to advise the city on casinos attended MGM's boat party,
breaking no laws but earning a scolding from a local official. A PwC Japan
spokeswoman said the incident did not violate its agreement.
"It's natural that we need to be fully open, and make sure that citizens have no
doubts about unfairness or corruption," Matsui said. "There's no doubt a lot of
money will be involved and that it's going to be a big business."
(Reporting by Thomas Wilson and Mari Saito; Additional reporting by Farah Master
in HONG KONG and Ami Miyazaki in OSAKA; Editing by Gerry Doyle)
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