Monaco, Europe’s tiny gambling paradise, is seeking to tap the Chinese’s huge appetite for games of chance in a new promotional drive — but one that targets the highest of the high-rollers.
The Societe des Bains de Mer (SBM), the principality’s gaming monopoly, has launched a hunt for China’s wealthiest punters and is even laying on complimentary all-inclusive travel and accommodation packages to get them to its famed casino.
“This is more haute couture than pret-a-porter,” the head of the SBM, Bernard Lambert, said.
“We’re not looking to attract the mass market. We have a selection of big-time gamblers who, right now, are going to Las Vegas and Macau,” he said.
In order to get those rich and risk-loving Chinese jetting into Monaco, the Mediterranean mini-state has been sending out agents over the past few months into exclusive country clubs, golf clubs and cigar dens in Shanghai, Hong Kong, Canton and Beijing to identify likely “guests”.
Specialised magazines have also been pored over, with the ideal targets being Chinese entrepreneurs who gamble a million euros or more at the felt-topped tables.
They will be the ones to benefit from the full red-carpet treatment. But, initially at least, Monaco is also prepared to lure smaller fish.
“We have an aggressive complimentary package treatment starting from [those who wager] $19Â 000,” the SBM’s marketing director, Axel Hoppenot, said.
By aiming at the exclusive end of the market, Monaco hopes to differentiate its campaign from other gambling destinations, which are also hungrily wooing China’s newly affluent gamblers.
But the competition is fierce. China’s Macau region is investing heavily to remain the preferred destination for Chinese punters, Las Vegas has long been catering to Chinese gamblers and even Singapore is planning a $3,6-billion casino complex to get in on the game.
Still, some experts believe the Chinese’s burgeoning wealth and travel options mean there are plenty of gamblers to go around — and that Monaco is uniquely suited to attracting the cream of the crop.
“Monaco has a worldwide reputation for gambling; it has always been about the mega-rich being seen in exclusive surroundings,” said Professor Mark Griffiths, a British expert on gambling at Nottingham Trent University.
“If anyone can get the ultra-rich Chinese high-rollers in, Monaco can,” he predicted.
He noted, though, that the little principality tucked into the southern coast of France near Italy could not count on loyalty.
“High-rollers don’t restrict themselves to just one place,” Griffiths said.
Monaco’s appeal — including security and five-star European luxury — has already attracted some Chinese players, and authorities boasted that they are visiting in increasing numbers.
There were 1Â 400 who checked into the ritzy hotels in the first half of 2006, an 11% rise over the same period a year earlier, said Michel Bouquier, the head of the tourism office.
Most of the Chinese entering the casino — nine out of 10, Lambert said — play punto banco, a form of the baccarat card game that involves only chance.
The principality is not putting all its money on just one spin of the roulette wheel, however.
The SBM head said it was also about to branch out into that other burgeoning economy — India. Representatives were soon to be sent to Delhi, Bombay and Bangalore.
A few things were already known about those potential new clients, namely that Indians prefer to wager in October, considered a month blessed by the gods and the stars, and that they have a penchant for three-card poker.
The stakes, though modest in comparison to other gambling destinations, are significant for Monaco.
In the last 2005/06 financial year, the state’s gaming sector raked in â,¬219,6-million from its casino and four other smaller gambling venues. Nearly two-thirds of that came from the tables, with the rest from poker machines.
Gambling accounts for 4% of the principality’s revenues and underpins its all-important tourism industry. — AFP