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Aruze to open its first casino |
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Financial Times 14-Sep-2008 By Roel Landingin in Manila Aruze, the Japanese maker of pinball, pachinko and other gambling machines, said it plans to open its first casino resort - in the Philippine capital of Manila - by early 2010. The company, which owns about 24 per cent of Wynn Resorts (NASDAQ: WYNN - News) , was granted a provisional gaming licence last month by the Philippine Amusement and Gaming Corp (Pagcor), the government casino monopoly that wants to build a huge casino and entertainment complex. Aruze has acquired a 30-hectare property in Manila worth $300m, signalling it is moving ahead with plans to build its first casino resort estimated to cost at least $1bn. The project includes a 2,000-room hotel and a Ferris wheel similar to the London Eye. "The Philippine project represents the core element of our casino resort operation business," Aruze told the Financial Times. Pagcor is banking on the $15bn project called "Entertainment City" to turn the Philippines into one of Asia's leading gaming and tourism destinations in the next decade. It expects the project to boost tourism arrivals from under 3m a year now to more than 15m a year when the project is completed after five years. Pagcor has also granted a provisional gaming licence to Travellers International Hotel group, a joint venture of Philippine property developer Alliance Global and Star Cruises, the world's third-biggest cruise ship operator. Star Cruises is owned by the Genting Berhad Group of Malaysia, which is developing one of two casino-centred integrated resorts in Singapore's Sentosa Island, and holds the franchise for developing Universal Studios theme parks in Asia. Travellers' casino resort, which is estimated to cost at least $1.1bn, is scheduled for completion by December 2009. Companies: Aruze Corp ;Wynn Resorts Ltd ;Wynn Resorts Ltd ;Ticker Symbols: jp:6425; us:WYNN; NASDAQ:WYNN; Subjects: Company News; Facilities & Equipment; Government News; Marketing; Sales; Strategy; Countries: Japan; Philippines; United States of America; FT.com Copyright The Financial Times Ltd. All rights reserved. |
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