|
Macau
casino tycoon delays Hong Kong listing
(Credit:AFP)

HONG KONG (AFP) — The casino
firm owned by Macau billionaire Stanley Ho said
Wednesday it would list next week following a
delay as his sister lost a legal challenge to
block the float.
Stanley
Ho put off the initial public offering of Sociedade
de Jogos de Macau Holdings (SJM) after Winnie
Ho launched a last-minute bid earlier this week
to seek a full judicial review of the listing
decision.
SJM
told in a supplemental prospectus to the Hong
Kong Stock Exchange that it would delay the long-awaited
listing from July 10 to July 16.
"The
directors are of the opinion that the judicial
review proceedings constitute significant new
information which might be material to investors'
ability to make an informed assessment of the
company," SJM had said.
Winnie
Ho had claimed the listing was "contrary
to the public interest and the longstanding policy
of the Hong Kong government not to promote gambling,"
according to court documents.
But
Anselmo Reyes, the judge presiding over the last-ditch
bid, dismissed her arguments.
Ambrose
So, SJM's chief executive officer, welcomed the
ruling and said SJM would stick with the new listing
date, according to local broadcaster RTHK.
All
potential shareholders who had applied for stock
in the firm, a subsidiary of Ho's Macau gaming
empire holding company, had been told they could
withdraw if they had changed their mind in light
of any court action, SJM's statement said when
released early Wednesday.
However,
Hong Kong's Court of First Instance rejected Winnie
Ho's attempt to get a review of the stock exchange
and the Securities and Futures Commission's decision
to green light the IPO.
"To
put it starkly, if persons outside Hong Kong wish
foolishly to lose money by gambling outside Hong
Kong and thereby generate sizeable profits for
a company, why should people in Hong Kong not
be entitled to share in that company's profits
from the foolishness of others?" Reyes said
in a written judgement.
He
also said there was a contradiction in Winnie
Ho's public interest argument if she was benefitting
from gambling as an existing shareholder in the
Macau-based parent company.
Stanley
Ho, 86, for decades held a monopoly on casinos
in the former Portuguese colony, but the market
was liberalised in 2002, allowing huge US operators
like Las Vegas Sands and Wynn Resorts to eat into
his market share.
SJM
had initially hoped to raise one billion US dollars
when the IPO was first proposed in January in
an effort to compete with cash-rich rivals, but
postponed the plan due to a weak Hong Kong market.
It
then placed its shares on subscription offer from
June 26 to July 2, and reports said it had raised
less than 500 million US dollars.
Winnie
Ho worked for the firm's parent company STDM for
25 years until 2002 and still retains a stake
in the company, although Stanley Ho has tried
to eject her as a shareholder since the spat began.
|