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The Honolulu Advertiser
Posted on: Sunday, June 3, 2001

Macau's gambling monopoly to end

Associated Press

MACAU — It's sundown on a Friday evening, and the crowds around the baccarat tables at the Lisboa Casino are getting down to the serious business of gambling.

The glitzy Lisboa Casino is one of gambling tycoon Stanley Ho's 11 casinos in the port city of Macau.

Associated Press

At the Jai Alai Palace, the Mandarin Oriental, the New Century and the Pousada Marina Infante, the scene's basically the same, and the proceeds are all going to one man — Stanley Ho.

Gambling is the business of this sleepy port city on China's southern coast, and for almost 40 years, Ho has been its boss.

But Ho's days as a monopolist are numbered. The Macau government has announced it will not renew Ho's gambling concession when it expires at the end of this year.

Dapper and fit at 80 years old, Ho seems untroubled.

"It's 40 years I've worked in the casino. It's high time the government should abolish the monopoly," Ho said in an interview at his penthouse office atop the Macau Ferry Terminal on Hong Kong's skyscraper-studded waterfront.

"We are not worried. We are the biggest company in Macau and the richest company," said Ho, whose assets have been valued at $1.8 billion by Forbes magazine.

Ho has been diversifying his business for years. He has invested in casinos in Portugal, Spain, Australia, Vietnam and North Korea. He has a small executive charter service called Jet Asia, and now the gambling empire is expanding into cyberspace with an online casino, DrHo.com.

In real life, Ho's Lisboa Hotel — marble floors, massive jade carvings and famed French chef Joel Robuchon — exudes opulence. But there is little Las Vegas-style glamour in the casino, where patrons gather grimly beside gaming tables in a warren of crowded, rundown rooms.

Ho's 11 casinos account for more than half of Macau's economic activity. He owns most of the hotel rooms and the high-speed ferries that shuttle visitors from Hong Kong and other Chinese cities. His dredgers keep Macau's shallow, silty harbors open. Altogether he employs about 15,000 people, one-fifth of the city's workers.

"Since it's so profitable, the company pays relatively well. It provides a means of social mobility for its employees and for those in the civil service," said Antonio Ng, a local lawmaker.

Back in 1962, when Ho acquired the gambling monopoly, the tiny Portuguese enclave 40 miles west of Hong Kong was a dying fishing port deluged with refugees from communist China.

"In those days, the Portuguese said Stanley Ho was a dreamer. I have fulfilled all my promises. I feel rather proud in having succeeded," Ho said.

While his fortune was made in Macau, Ho has spent most of his life in Hong Kong. His wealthy Eurasian family sank into poverty when his father lost its fortune in stock speculation in 1934 and fled to Vietnam.

Ho was working in the air raid warden's office when Hong Kong surrendered to the Japanese in 1941.

"I had to throw away my uniform and run to Macau as a refugee," Ho said. "Macau treated me so well. I went there with 10 dollars in my pocket and became a millionaire before the age of 20."

Ho's first coup was to negotiate a wartime monopoly on trading between Japanese-held Hong Kong and Macau. He credits his success to hard work and "not taking 'No' for an answer."

He is known for his skill at tennis and ballroom dancing, and his reputation is that of a ladies man — at last count he had fathered 17 children. The one pastime he has not indulged in is gambling.

"I don't gamble at all. I don't have the patience," Ho said. "Don't expect to make money in gambling. It's a house game. It's for the house."