Big US casino operators like Wynn and MGM stand to lose millions after China’s gambling capital of Macau shut down operations to curb Covid
Casino operators are not out of the woods yet when it comes to Covid-19 lockdowns.
China’s gambling capital on the island of Macau has shut down operations for the first time in more than two years, according to a report from Reuters, potentially costing US-based casino operators like Wynn, MGM, and Las Vegas Sands millions of dollars.
Macau, the world’s largest gambling hub, is seeing its most significant surge of Covid-19 to date.
US-based casino operators have poured billions of dollars into Macau in recent years, and the Chinese region has grown into a major gambling destination. But the lockdowns come as the casino-operators struggle to maintain steady growth amid China’s virus-mitigation policies.
Wynn, MGM, and Las Vegas Sands derive hundreds of millions of dollars in revenue from their China businesses. However, all three casino operators saw Macau revenues decline in the first quarter of 2022 compared to last year. In their quarterly earnings reports, all three companies partially attributed this slump to travel-related restrictions in China.