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last GE PAP LIARS said Casinos IR w drive economy big, look again this GE

mortarmafia

Alfrescian
Loyal
Big Fat Lies exposed wide open.

MBS is chapter 11 in USA.

Genting lost dozens of millions.

Casino IRS are fucking sinking economies.

LHL n PAP failed like rotten CBs. Foul smells.


Meanwhile, gambles in SG gets deeper in debts, lost jobs and families, divorces, resorted to CRIMES, gone to IMH nut house, gone Violent, killed people and took suicides.

Fuck you dead LHL!

Rot in hell PAP!

CCB!
 
Last edited:

virus

Alfrescian
Loyal
It is true that casino has driven the economy.
Many familee were driven to broken homes.
Many working adults driven by greed n committed embezzlement

Thank you for SG50 gift.
 

Narong Wongwan

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset
If so easy then every government in the world would also want to build casinos in their country to solve their economic problems.
Pappies are really so simple minded?
 

xebay11

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Scrap the $100 levy, in the past Playboy magazine was banned, citing that they can cause bad influence on youngsters and public at large, these days porn is freely available and it shows no side effects at all to the nation.
 

kopiOuncle

Alfrescian
Loyal
Big Fat Lies exposed wide open.

MBS is chapter 11 in USA.

Genting lost dozens of millions.

Casino IRS are fucking sinking economies.

LHL n PAP failed like rotten CBs. Foul smells.


Meanwhile, gambles in SG gets deeper in debts, lost jobs and families, divorces, resorted to CRIMES, gone to IMH nut house, gone Violent, killed people and took suicides.

Fuck you dead LHL!

Rot in hell PAP!

CCB!

bloody nonsense
talk nonsense
post nonsense

now listen to the truth
listen and pay attention

and get your blains white washed
instead of all shit and m&d

listen!!!!!!!!!

NDR2015%20Banner%20-%201024%20x%20360%20YT.jpg
 

No_Collar

Alfrescian
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Ccb la u kopiO. Arguing just for the sake of arguement. If u want people to take u seriously, back it up with facts. In my view you are just another clueless ignorant dog... Pui.
 

syed putra

Alfrescian
Loyal
It is true that casino has driven the economy.
Many familee were driven to broken homes.
Many working adults driven by greed n committed embezzlement

Thank you for SG50 gift.

They invited casino investment, then screw up those investors with a strong currency which deter punters from coming in.
 

rusty

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Casino related crime

On 2 April 2004, Chia Teck Leng was sentenced to 42 years in jail, the longest jail term meted out for the largest case in commercial fraud in Singapore to date. Chia was a finance manager at Asia Pacific Breweries when he forged documents to swindle banks out of S$117 million over four years to feed his gambling addiction. Previously, the worst commercial fraud case was held by Singapore Airlines' employee Teo Cheng Kiat, who embezzled S$35 million from the airline for over 13 years. He was convicted in 2000 and jailed for 24 years for the crime.

Description
The accused
Chia was an accountancy graduate who began his career at the, now-defunct accounting and consultancy firm, Arthur Andersen. He moved on, attaining several top positions in various companies including the post of assistant vice-president at the United Overseas Bank, a mergers-and-acquisitions manager at Jack Chia-MPH and a financial controller at Swire Pacific Offshore Services. He then joined Asia Pacific Breweries (APB) on 20 January 1999 as its finance manager. APB is considered one of the region's largest breweries with sales of $372.7 million and an after-tax profit of $38.6 million in 2001. The job required him to travel and paid him a tidy salary of between $200,000 and $300,000 a year.

By all accounts, Chia, 44, was said to be a non-descript, mid-level executive who got along well with his colleagues. He lived with his wife, a teacher, and their two teenage sons in a St Francis Lodge condominium, off Serangoon Road. Little did his colleagues and family knew that the hard-working executive Chia was leading a double life. Chia was a frequent patron of casinos in Australia, Britain, Hong Kong, Malaysia, Cambodia and the Philippines. He was so well- known in some casinos that the casino operators would personally invite him to their betting halls and fly him there in their private jets. He was known to get the VIP treatment at the Crown Casino in Melbourne, Australia, and even stayed in its most expensive room costing A$25,000 a night on his visits there. The gambler Chia even had a Chinese national girlfriend, 23 year old, Li Jin, whom he considered his lucky charm.

Chia had been a habitual gambler since 1994. Over the years, he swung from being plunged deep into gambling debts to winning large sums of money. However, his luck turned for the worse in 1998. In a two-week gambling spree, he lost all his previous winnings of $1 million, and chalked up new debts. By the time he joined APB in 1999, he was heavily indebted.

The charges
Chia was accused of forging documents, cheating several banks over a period of four years, between February 1999 to March 2003. The forged documents, known as certified extracts of board resolutions, deceived the banks into extending him credit and loan facilities in the name of APB, with him as the sole signatory. He forged signatures of top APB executives, like its chief executive Koh Poh Tiong, and then-Fraser and Neave's managing director, Tan Yam Pin. Fraser and Neave owns 37.9 % of APB.

Chia was arrested on 2 September 2003 by the Commercial Affairs Department. He was first charged in court on 4 September, on two counts, one of cheating and one of forgery involving S$3 million. He was first accused of cheating a Scandinavian bank, Skandinaviska Enskilda Banken (SEB) in February 1999 of giving him $3 million in credit. As investigations continued, more charges were levelled against him.

By 11 September 2003, he faced eight new charges. He was accused of cheating four banks into giving him a total credit of about S$113 million; one Scandinavian bank, two Japanese banks, and one German bank.

On 17 September 2003, 18 more charges were added on. These included new charges of money withdrawals from banks, such as US$25 million from SEB, and US$10 million from Sakura Bank.

On 24 September, he was charged with four more counts of forgery. This time of opening a schedule of fixed deposit with Citibank, and transferring legitimate funds from APB's OCBC bank account to the fictitious Citibank account.

Thus, Chia faced 32 charges by the end of September. He was also denied bail in October, fearing he would abscond if released as he was known to have overseas personal bank accounts of which he had refused to divulge details to investigators. The charges against him did not abate and on 5 December 2003, 14 new charges were added to the existing 32, bringing the total number of charges against Chia to 46.

The 46 charges comprised 14 charges of forgery and 18 of cheating four foreign banks of about S$117 million, four charges of criminal breach of trust of S$53 million, two of money-laundering, and eight of abetting his girlfriend, Li Jin, to use a forged passport. Li, purportedly used the forged Taiwanese passport to enter and leave Singapore between November 2002 and January 2003. With the embezzled money, Chia was said to have led a high-spending lifestyle, lavishly buying branded goods for himself, his girlfriend and his friends. For instance, he bought a $150,000 Mercedes Benz, a $530,000 apartment in Grange Road, and gave gifts totalling more than $300,000 to various people.

With these 46 charges facing Chia, he was ordered to stand trial in the High Court on 26 March 2004 in what is considered the biggest case of financial fraud in the history of Singapore.

The sentence
On 2 April 2004, Chia was convicted by the High Court after pleading guilty to six charges of forgery and eight charges of cheating. Another 32 charges were considered during sentencing. High Court Judge Tay Yong Kwang sentenced him to 42 years in jail, the longest jail term ever given out for a commercial crime. In all, Chia had swindled the banks of more than S$117 million, losing S$62 million in casinos around the world. Only S$34.8 million has so far been recovered.

Judge Tay noted how Chia had managed to deceive banks undetected over a period of four years, reiterating the prosecution's stand that Chia's crime was the work of a "criminal genius". He dismissed Chia's mitigating plea that the banks were the ones who had approached him first, offering to lend him cash; that the banks had been too naive, trusting and negligent, making it easy for him to commit the crimes. Judge Tay emphasised that bankers are eager to forge business relationships, and not be the unwitting victims of forgery. Judge Tay had also presided over the case of commercial fraud by Singapore Airlines' employee, Teo Cheng Kiat which had previously been regarded as the worst case of commercial fraud.



Author
Nureza Ahmad
 

frenchbriefs

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset
Scrap the $100 levy, in the past Playboy magazine was banned, citing that they can cause bad influence on youngsters and public at large, these days porn is freely available and it shows no side effects at all to the nation.

birthrate going down,thats a side effect.soon we will be like japan making love to dolls and pillows.
 

laksaboy

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset
If so easy then every government in the world would also want to build casinos in their country to solve their economic problems.
Pappies are really so simple minded?

Greed makes people do irrational things. It's like the kid who wonders why he can't get his fist out of a candy jar when he has grabbed a full handful of candies.

Lee Hsien Loong has not been brought up properly. He was not taught how to be a decent, proper human being. :wink:
 

laksaboy

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset
Scrap the $100 levy, in the past Playboy magazine was banned, citing that they can cause bad influence on youngsters and public at large, these days porn is freely available and it shows no side effects at all to the nation.

The casino levy is for providing an additional revenue stream for the PAP, it does nothing to prevent problem gambling. The more hardcore ones would simply buy the annual membership.

Additional revenue stream to line their own pockets and perhaps expand the feeding trough for the cronies and buffoons at the Casino Regulatory Authority.

It's like setting up ERP gantries everywhere. It diminishes the net effect of the price-based traffic regulation, but not the money-collecting opportunities. :wink:
 

laksaboy

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset
birthrate going down,thats a side effect.soon we will be like japan making love to dolls and pillows.

I can always donate my virile sperm to menopausal career women pining to 'experience the joys of motherhood'. But raise the kid by yourself, and don't call me the baby daddy. Good luck in arresting the declining birth rates. :cool:
 

Kuailan

Alfrescian
Loyal
It is true that casino has driven the economy.
Many familee were driven to broken homes.
Many working adults driven by greed n committed embezzlement

Thank you for SG50 gift.

Yes my Pinoy colleague went to MBS lost S$10K, indebted

he wanted to borrow $1K from me without telling me the reason,

some how I found out! but I no more working there!!

How to loan him? if he leave the company without my knowledge and

go back Pinoyland, I will be L.L. looking at the ceiling!! Some how he managed

to pilfer $1K from cash register but was caught his same race, and let him go!

I made good the $1K return to company!

Good Pinoy no need to pay admission fee $100.00 BUT Sinkie 2nd class got to pay admission

fee $100.00 for 24 hours!

You vote PAP they make you pay, but benefited Foreign Trash!!

Like friend from US says: Your Gahmen really discriminate you Sinkies while they
bring in more Foreign Trash & provided them with PMET jobs!!
 

tonychat

Alfrescian (InfP)
Generous Asset
This statement needs to be highlighted:

Good Pinoy no need to pay admission fee $100.00 BUT Sinkie 2nd class got to pay admission

fee $100.00 for 24 hours!

You vote PAP they make you pay, but benefited Foreign Trash!!

Like friend from US says: Your Gahmen really discriminate you Sinkies while they
bring in more Foreign Trash & provided them with PMET jobs!!
 

motormafia

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http://www.ggrasia.com/genting-singapore-reports-us12-mln-loss-in-2q/






Genting Singapore reports US$12-mln loss in 2Q
Aug 14, 2015 Newsdesk Latest news, Singapore, Top of the deck *


Genting Singapore Plc, operator of the Resorts World Sentosa casino resort in Singapore, swung into the red with a loss attributable to shareholders of SGD16.9 million (US$12.1 million) in the second quarter of 2015, from a profit of SGD102.3 million in the prior-year period.

Including SGD29.4 million apportioned to holders of perpetual securities, the casino firm made a net profit of SGD12.5 million, down by 91 percent from SGD131.7 million a year ago.

Revenue for the period fell 23 percent year-on-year to SGD578.1 million, Genting Singapore said in a filing on Thursday. The firm attributed the decline to a “downturn of the gaming industry in Asia”.

Gaming revenue at its Resorts World Sentosa fell by 28 percent year-on-year to SGD428.3 million for the three months ended June 30. “The contraction is a result of the unfavourable global VIP premium business and rolling win percentage,” the casino operator said.

The company last week had already warned investors that it expected to report “a significant decline in net profits” for the quarter ended June 30.

Genting Singapore reported adjusted earnings before interest, taxation, depreciation and amortisation (EBITDA) of SGD296.5 million, down by 6 percent from a year earlier.

The firm said its net profit for the quarter was also affected by fair value loss from its portfolio investments, which “is related to unfavourable market conditions in the gaming industry”.

The company reported fair value loss of equity linked instruments of SGD95 million in the second quarter, which includes investment in other gaming and leisure listed companies, and unrealised foreign exchange losses of SGD84 million.

Genting Singapore said it continues to exert caution in extending credit to VIP players. “The gaming industry remains weak. We maintain a cautious approach in granting credit under this market condition and continue to focus on the foreign premium mass and mass-market segments in the region. Our mass gaming business continues to remain steady,” it said.

Brokerage Sanford C. Bernstein Ltd said in a note on Thursday that Genting Singapore’s VIP gross gaming revenue (GGR) was approximately SGD236 million for the second quarter, down by 55 percent year-on-year. “VIP GGR was low partly due to a low hold of 2.1 percent versus 3.0 percent in the second quarter of 2014,” said analysts Vitaly Umansky, Simon Zhang and Bo Wen.

The bad debt impairment loss was SGD56.6 million in the second quarter of 2015, compared to SGD81.6 million a year ago.

“Bad debt expense is stabilising as the company makes continued efforts measures to unwind the poor credit quality associated with its past extensions of VIP credit,” said the Sanford C. Bernstein team.

The brokerage said mass GGR – including revenue from tables and slots – was approximately SGD270 million, a drop of 4 percent from a year earlier. “Mass and premium mass both showed sequential resilience (supported by the local South East Asian customer base),” it added.

Although the mass segment remained stable for Genting Singapore, a note from Morgan Stanley Research Asia Ltd said mass revenue could come down “if Malaysian/Indonesian customers spend less should [their]*currency continue to depreciate” against the Singapore dollar.

In February, Genting Singapore broke ground*on the US$1.8 billion Resorts World Jeju development, which is slated to open in multiple phases between 2017 and 2019.

The firm said on Thursday the construction work for Resorts World Jeju is progressing as scheduled. “Soil works is expected to be completed before end of this year and building works is targeted to commence early next year, subject to relevant approvals from the Jeju authorities,” it said.
 

motormafia

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http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?sid=a.znUFOQFG44&pid=newsarchive


Las Vegas Sands Plunges on Default, Bankruptcy Risk (Update4)
By Beth Jinks - November 6, 2008 16:15 EST

Nov. 6 (Bloomberg) -- Las Vegas Sands Corp., billionaire Sheldon Adelson's casino company, fell the most in New York trading since going public after saying it may default on debt and face bankruptcy.

The casino owner, which had $8.8 billion in long-term debt at the end of June, said in a regulatory filing today that it probably won't meet the requirements of loans arranged by Citigroup Inc., Goldman Sachs Group Inc. and Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. unless it cuts spending on developments, boosts earnings at its Las Vegas Strip casinos and raises more capital.

The reversal of fortune is a black eye for the 75-year-old Adelson, who was once America's third-richest man on the strength of his Las Vegas Sands holdings. The Las Vegas-based company's dwindling cash flow is threatening $16 billion worth of developments in Macau, China, and Singapore, where Las Vegas Sands is building resorts to cater to wealthy Asian gamblers.

``They need to raise money,'' said Keith Foley, a New York-based analyst at Moody's Investors Service Inc. ``It's getting to the point where they need to do something now.''

The shares dropped $3.81, or 33 percent, to $7.85 at 4:04 p.m. in New York Stock Exchange composite trading, the biggest decline since its initial share sale in December 2004. Las Vegas Sands had tumbled 91 percent before today this year as investors dumped the stock, worried that falling casino winnings and the global financial meltdown would leave the company without enough cash.

More Capital

Spending declines on the Vegas Strip and restrictions on visas in Macau have stemmed the flow of cash into Las Vegas Sands. Today's admission comes after Adelson, who holds a stake of more than 64 percent, invested an additional $475 million in September to avoid violating the terms of a loan, and hired an unidentified investment bank to raise more capital with his help.

Las Vegas Sands' rush to raise capital ``points to the deterioration of fundamentals, not just for the company, the fundamentals of Las Vegas,'' said Dennis Farrell, a debt analyst with Wachovia Capital Markets LLC in Charlotte, North Carolina.

The casino owner said it doesn't expect to meet a maximum leverage ratio covenant in the fourth quarter. That would trigger defaults that might force it to suspend development projects and ``raise a substantial doubt about the company's ability to continue as a going concern.''

``Sheldon still has considerable resources, and we doubt he will sit on the sidelines and watch LVS go bankrupt,'' Robert LaFleur at Susquehanna Financial Group LLLP, said today in a client note he titled ``Scary Post-Halloween 8-K Filing.'' ``The question is how much dry powder does he have, and what can he do?''

Deep Pockets

In a July conference call, Adelson suggested he would step in to help the company with any financing it might need, saying a friend described him as ``the tallest person I know when you stand on your wallet.''

``And I'm saying right now, the company will not have liquidity problems,'' he said at the time.

Ron Reese, a spokesman for Adelson, didn't return an e-mail seeking an interview.

Las Vegas Sands made a filing with regulators today to allow it to quickly sell stocks or bonds if it finds investors.

``The offering shows what their intent is, but it doesn't mean they'll be successful,'' said Foley. ``How and when is uncertain, and their ability to successfully do that is uncertain.''

Adelson founded the Comdex computer expo in 1979, later selling the business and using the proceeds to build the Venetian Resort Hotel Casino in Las Vegas.

U.S. Projects

He is also building a $600 million condominium in Vegas and a $600 million casino resort in Bethlehem, Pennsylvania. The risk of default applies to some of Sands' U.S. unit loans.

``It would be prohibitively expensive to raise outside debt capital at this time,'' said Farrell. The company will probably sell more stock, which would hurt existing shareholders including Adelson.

Other alternatives might be another investment from Adelson, an injection of cash from an outside investor or a loan from foreign banks, said Farrell.

The filing, which affects its U.S. unit's debt, sparked new concerns that Las Vegas Sands won't finish Singapore's first casino or a 20,000-room complex of hotels and casinos in Macau. The Chinese territory overtook the Vegas Strip as the world's biggest gambling market in 2006.

`Other Alternatives'

Should Sands fail to raise capital, ``we would need to immediately suspend portions, if not all, of our ongoing global development projects and consider other alternatives,'' the company said in the filing.

Las Vegas Sands owns the Venetian and Palazzo casino resorts on the Las Vegas Strip, plus the Macau Venetian, Sands and Four Seasons, and had expected sufficient earnings from the properties to fund its expansion and pay loans.

Las Vegas Strip casino gambling revenue slid 6.7 percent this year through August, on track for its biggest annual decline on record, as airlines cut back capacity and consumers, battling declining home values, job losses and the worst financial crisis since the Great Depression, spent less.

China increased visa restrictions on some mainland residents traveling to Macau, causing casino gambling revenue in the former Portuguese colony to fall to 26 billion patacas ($3.28 billion) in the third quarter from 28.9 billion patacas in the second.

Adelson plans to sell Sands' Four Seasons apartment hotel in Macau as a co-operative and wants to sell the attached mall space.

To contact the reporter on this story: Beth Jinks in New York at [email protected]

To contact the editor responsible for this story: Michael Nol at [email protected]
 

motormafia

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http://m.reviewjournal.com/business/cover-over-las-vegas-sands-moving-past-million-dollar-tarp



‘COVER-UP’ IS OVER: LAS VEGAS SANDS MOVING PAST ‘MILLION-DOLLAR’ TARP


The unfinished tower is seen in the shadows of The Palazzo, known as the St. Regis Residences condominiums, is covered with giant sheets of cloth printed with the image of a completed building on Saturday, March 29, 2014. (David Becker/Las Vegas Review-Journal)

image
****
By HOWARD STUTZ
LAS VEGAS REVIEW-JOURNAL
An unfinished Strip condominium tower between The Venetian and Palazzo may soon see a new life.

But Las Vegas Sands Corp. President Michael Leven said it was still unclear what the company plans to do with the building that has been covered the past three years by a “million-dollar” tarp.

“We’re going to do something. We just don’t have the answer,” Leven said, discussing the St. Regis-branded 400-unit, $600 million condominium project that was halted in November 2008 during the company’s financial crisis.

At the time, Las Vegas Sands, facing a potential bankruptcy, said it would save $1.8 billion by stopping the St. Regis construction and delaying developments in Macau.

Today, money is not an issue for Las Vegas Sands, which produced $13.77 billion in net revenue in 2013 and has a market capitalization of more than $67 billion.

“It’s not a financial decision anymore, but we want to do the right thing,” Leven said.

Restarting the building as a condominium project doesn’t seem likely, he said, since the high-end, high-rise residential market remains a challenged business model.

Leven said the company paid for a study that looked into converting the tower into a time share, “but the numbers didn’t work out.”

He said the building could be finished as a third hotel-casino, with its own entrance. But that idea is also considered a long-shot option.

The company even considered making the building a hotel room expansion for The Venetian and Palazzo, which have a combined 7,000 hotel rooms and suites.

For now, the empty and unfinished building sits above the high-end fashion retailer Barney’s New York.

In 2011, Las Vegas Sands pulled down a construction crane and covered the unfinished steel and concrete structure with a specially designed tarp that makes the building look finished from far away.

Leven said the cover cost $1 million.

“I couldn’t stand looking at that steel,” said Leven, whose third-floor office has a view of the tower.

“One day I was out at the pool and I realized our guests were looking up and staring at the steel,” Leven said. “We put the cover on it and it’s held up well. You sometimes forget it is there if you walk by.”

But Las Vegas Sands doesn’t want an unfinished building. Neither does Clark County, Leven said.

“They may make us take it down if we don’t do something,” Leven said.

The St. Regis tower is just one of several unfinished buildings on the Strip.

The former Echelon site is expected to be converted into the $4 billion Resorts World Las Vegas by 2017. Malaysia-based Genting Group is expected to begin construction sometime this year.

Financial issues halted work on the Fontainebleau Las Vegas in April 2009 when the proposed 3,889-room project was 70 percent complete. Corporate raider and investor Carl Icahn purchased the site out of bankruptcy in 2010 for $150 million, but never restarted the development.

Icahn sold off room furnishings and items and many Strip real estate analysts expect the building will eventually be demolished.

Two older casinos — the Sahara and Bill’s Gamblin’ Hall — are being converted into the SLS Las Vegas and The Cromwell.

Leven said the St. Regis Tower “has a very expensive foundation” and Las Vegas Sands needs to find a use for the tower that makes financial sense for the company.

“It stares us in the face all the time,” Leven said.

Contact reporter Howard Stutz at [email protected] or 702-477-3871. Follow @howardstutz on Twitter.
 

motormafia

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http://www.democraticunderground.com/discuss/duboard.php?az=view_all&address=389x4401811




Las Vegas Sands Plunges on Default, Bankruptcy Risk


This topic is archived.
ben_meyers (1000+ posts) | |
Las Vegas Sands Plunges on Default, Bankruptcy Risk


Not that there was much doubt, but we are truly in the crapper now! What with Disneyland in the dumps and now this, bend over, grab your ass, and kiss it goodbye.

Las Vegas Strip casino gambling revenue slid 6.7 percent this year through August, on track for its biggest annual decline on record, as airlines cut back capacity and consumers, battling declining home values, job losses and the worst financial crisis since the Great Depression, spent less.


http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601087&sid=aws...
 
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