Asia
Sands puts Macau and Singapore Casinos in the spotlight

Las Vegas Sands, which is in the course of selling off its Las Vegas business to Apollo Global Management and Vici Properties for $6.25bn, appears to be investing in its overseas business.
There is a distinct shift in earnings emphasis at Las Vegas Sands, to Macau and Singapore, judging by the group’s first-quarter results.
Announcing the quarter’s earnings, CEO Rob Goldstein said: “We remain confident in the eventual recovery in travel and tourism spending across our markets.
“Demand for our offerings from our customers who have been able to visit remains robust, but pandemic-related travel restrictions, particularly in Macau and Singapore, continue to limit visitation and hinder our current financial performance.”
Sands reported a net loss of $342m on revenue of $1.196bn compared with a net loss of $51m on revenue of $1.147bn in the comparative quarter.
Macau casinos were closed for 15 days in the quarter and while the figures in the Chinese resort and in Singapore fell, the company is optimistic that an improvement is becoming visible as travel recovers.
-
Africa7 days ago
NOVOMATIC Africa Launches Local Assembly for Panther LPMs, Driving Innovation and Growth
-
Compliance Updates6 days ago
AI in Action: Transforming Player Engagement and Compliance in iGaming
-
Gambling in the USA6 days ago
Gaming Americas Weekly Roundup – June 30-July 6
-
eSports7 days ago
Esports World Cup Foundation Renews Partnership with Albaik
-
Latest News6 days ago
Nolimit City braces for another invasion in Brute Force: Alien Onslaught
-
Latest News7 days ago
TaDa Gaming Releases Golden Bank 2
-
Latest News7 days ago
Spinomenal presents new slot: Queen of Oasis
-
Africa4 days ago
Mobile-First Innovation and Cultural Strategy Drive SBC Summit 2025’s Focus on Africa