Xi Jinping’s crackdown spreads to Macau and Hong Kong – MoneyWeek

Posted: September 26, 2021 at 5:09 am

Recent crackdowns have proven that few sectors are safe from Beijings control, says the FTs Lex column. No industry looks as vulnerable as Macaus gambling market. Shares in the territorys casino operators fell sharply amid a regulatory review that may end up cutting the number of casino licences in the worlds largest gambling hub. Should the new laws limit the number of licences below six, some operators could go out of business when all current permits expire in June 2022.

Even if that doesnt happen, it is clear that Macau will be more demanding than in past years, says Katrina Hamlin on Breakingviews. Operators may face unprecedented micromanagement, including state representatives scrutinising daily operations, and stricter oversight for junkets, which organise visits and credits for high rollers. Theres even a suggestion that firms may require government approvals to pay dividends.

The message for markets extends beyond Macau, says Shuli Ren in Bloomberg: China is serious about its common prosperity campaign. Hence shares in Hong Kongs four biggest property developers also tumbled after reports that Beijing has asked the territorys real-estate billionaires to resolve the citys housing crisis. The high cost of property in Hong Kong is often blamed for fuelling the widespread political protests in 2019. Investors now fear developers could be forced to donate some of their large land banks to the government.

Deflating Hong Kongs real-estate bubble wont just mean squeezing the tycoons it will also require a big shake up in tax policy, adds Jacky Wong in The Wall Street Journal. The territory earns twice as much from land sales as income tax, which is partly why tax rates have stayed so low until now. Hong Kongs housing market has produced immense wealth for some... Leaner times could be ahead.

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Xi Jinping's crackdown spreads to Macau and Hong Kong - MoneyWeek

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