By Melodie Warner
MGM Resorts International (MGM) said the Macau government
granted its MGM China Holdings Ltd. unit a lease to develop a
luxury resort and casino in Cotai, Macau.
The company paid the government about $56 million as the initial
payment for the land concession contract.
Construction is expected to begin after the publication of the
land concession contract in the Official Gazette of Macau, a
process that could take up to 9 months.
The resort, with a budget of $2.5 billion, will be built on a
17.8-acre-site and include roughly 1,600 hotel rooms, 500 gaming
tables and 2,500 slots.
Construction is expected to take up to 36 months.
MGM Chief Executive Jim Murren told The Wall Street Journal in
May he believed the Macau government would soon approve the
company's plan to build a casino in its Cotai district. He showed
The Journal drawings of the casino, which featured towers designed
to look like stacks of patterned Chinese jewelry boxes.
Macau is the only place where gambling is legal in China. Cotai
has become the new center of growth in booming Macau and home to
Las Vegas Sands Corp.'s (LVS) Venetian Macao casino-resort. But
after an initial burst of excitement, the government had stopped
approving new projects, making would-be builders including MGM,
Macau gambling king Stanley Ho's SJM Holdings Ltd. (SJMHF, 0880.HK)
and Wynn Resorts Ltd. (WYNN), wait years for approval.
Shares were recently trading 3.3% higher at $11.28.
Write to Melodie Warner at melodie.warner@dowjones.com
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