Gambling tycoon Sheldon Adelson, whose Las Vegas Sands Corp. owns Singapore’s landmark Marina Bay Sands, said he’s considering selling the casino resort’s retail assets after a government-imposed moratorium expires next year.
The company has spoken with potential buyers, Chairman Adelson said in a conference call after Las Vegas-based Sands announced first-quarter results yesterday (Macau time).
“We have been approached. We have been talking to people,” said Adelson. Capitalization rates at the 800,000 square-foot mall, located in Singapore’s prominent downtown district, “are attractive, and we may or may not sell a portion.”
Las Vegas Sands “always have thoughts of monetizing anything” except its core casino assets, Adelson said. The company’s casino license in Singapore doesn’t allow it to do so until 2017, and the 82-year-
old said he will discuss this when he meets the city-state’s government in May.
In Singapore, casino revenue at Marina Bay Sands plunged 28 percent to USD453.1 million in the first quarter, while mall revenue decreased 2 percent to $39 million, according to the parent company’s statement. Hotel room revenue slipped 0.8 percent to $88.9 million, even as occupancy rose 3.1 percentage points to 97.9 percent. Bloomberg
Retail | Sands’s Adelson mulls Singapore mall sale after restriction ends
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