Visitation on the rise in September but Macau recovery slower than other jurisdictions – Inside Asian Gaming

Posted: September 18, 2020 at 1:02 am

The recovery of Macaus gaming industry has proven to be slower than levels seen in other jurisdictions across Asia-Pacific, despite some signs of improvement over the first two weeks of September.

According to a Monday note from investment bank JP Morgan, gross gaming revenue over the past week reached approximately MOP$115 million per day an improvement upon MOP$80 million per day in the first week of September and three times higher than the MOP$40 million per day of July and August.

Visitation has also reached about 15,000 arrivals per day compared with 2,500 through July and less than 8,000 in August.

However, JP Morgan analysts DS Kim, Derek Choi and Jeremy An noted this was still below earlier expectations that daily GGR would have reached closer to MOP$200 million per day by now after IVS visas were reinstated for the entirety of Guangdong Province from 26 August.

The pace seems slower than what weve seen in other re-opened jurisdictions (such as Australia, Korea or US regionals, where local demand recovered to 70-100%+ of pre-COVID-19 levels in a matter of a months), they said, adding that the numbers suggest Guangdong has recovered to around 40% of its daily visitor numbers from 2019.

The slower recovery is attributed to, Weak VIP amidst increased scrutiny on capital-flow and junket/agents some practical issues that hinder visitations, such as slower visa processing (due to yet-to-reopen self-service kiosks) or COVID-19 testing; and seemingly less-than-strong confidence in travelling overseas.

Wed like to think that these are rather transitory and can be resolved gradually in the coming months, but we admit the visibility is low.

The analysts estimate September GGR to reach between 15% and 20% of last years level in September rising to between 40% and 50% in October, aided by the 1 October Golden Week holiday.

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Visitation on the rise in September but Macau recovery slower than other jurisdictions - Inside Asian Gaming

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