Paradise expands to handle Chinese influx; Incheon plans fourth resort casino

South Korean casino operator Paradise Co Ltd says it will expand its gaming operations due to increased demand from Chinese gamblers. The $26m expansion will add 26 new gaming tables, bringing the company’s total table tally to 252.

Paradise’s expansion will double the size of the gaming area at its Jeju Grand Hotel casino, while expanding the gaming floor space at two of its other four properties. Paradise is South Korea’s top foreigners-only casino operator, controlling nearly half the country’s international market. The country’s most successful casino remains Kangwon Land, the only one of South Korea’s 17 casinos that accepts locals.

Paradise vice-chairman Lee Hyuk-Byung told Bloomberg that the company’s casinos weren’t full on weekdays, but “from Friday afternoon to Sundays, it’s fully packed and very crowded.” Lee said Chinese gamblers accounted for 67% of Paradise’s high-rollers and 77% of its mass market customers last year, up from 46% and 50% respectively in 2010.

Paradise was among the South Korean casino operators whose share prices took a tumble in December after Chinese government officials criticized Jeju as a “new haven” for Chinese gamblers. More recently, China warned international casinos to stop luring their citizens to gaming emporiums.

Lee said Paradise didn’t directly market to Chinese gamblers, but relied instead on “word of mouth.” Regardless, Paradise investors relation official Hyejeong Shim said the company had yet to see any negative impact as a result of Beijing’s fearmongering.

INCHEON AIRPORT TO HOST AREA’S FOURTH INTEGRATED RESORT

Paradise has teamed with Japan’s Sega Sammy Holdings to build the $1.7b Paradise City integrated resort on Yeongjongdo island in the Incheon Free Economic Zone. On Tuesday, Incheon Airport official Lim Byung Kee announced the development of a $4.6b tourism project to be modeled on Genting’s Resorts World Sentosa integrated resort in Singapore.