Stanley Ho, the billionaire dubbed the “King of Gambling,” officially
retired last April. Since then, several of his children and one of his
wives have been feuding for control of his casino empire in Macau.Ho,
97-years-old, has been married to four different women who have birthed
17 of his children. Fifteen are still alive, and some of them are
jockeying for power of SJM Holdings, the casino group Ho founded in
1962.To get more news about stanley ho children, you can visit shine news official website.
Pansy has made a fortune in her own right – along with operating a Hong
Kong shipping and ferry business, she was responsible for forming MGM
China with the late billionaire Kirk Kerkorian.
The Straits Times says Pansy’s goal is to ensure stability in the wake of her father’s departure. She also wants to prevent Angela Leong, Ho’s fourth wife, from taking control. SJM is valued at $6 billion.SJM Holdings lost its monopoly on commercial gambling in Macau soon after Portugal returned the enclave to the People’s Republic in 1999.
The only place in China where casinos are permitted, Macau today has six licensed operators. Along with SJM, Las Vegas Sands, MGM, Wynn, Melco, and Galaxy Entertainment operate gaming floors.
SJM and MGM Resorts will see their licenses expire in 2020. The four others are scheduled to terminate two years later.Melco Resorts was founded by Ho’s ninth child Lawrence. The 42-year-old originally founded the organization as Melco Crown Entertainment with fellow billionaire James Packer.
Lawrence severed his relationship with the Australian casino giant after Chinese authorities arrested numerous Crown Resorts employees on “gambling crimes.” Ho would later state that Crown was “deliberately spitting” on Chinese law.Ho’s career began in the importing and exporting business. He allegedly smuggled food and luxury goods into China from Macau to initially create his fortune. In 1962, he convinced the Macau government to grant him a license to operate casinos. He was Macau’s only permitted gambling operator for the next 40 years.
SJM has continued to see its market share shrink over the last 15 years. As multibillion-dollar integrated resorts spread across Macau and the Cotai Strip, Ho failed to follow suit. Only now is the company building in Cotai – more than a decade after Sands opened The Venetian.
The Wall