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Lui is the city’s third-richest man with a fortune of 19 billion yuan ($2.7 billion) in 2018, according to Forbes. Galaxy is one of Macau’s six casino license holders and runs three casinos in the city, including Galaxy Macau, Broadway Macau and StarWorld Macau.
- If the dinging slot machines, glowing lights and electric energy of the gaming floor call to you, press your luck at these casino hotels. Many of these winning properties go beyond the ordinary, dealing out everything from elite high-roller salons with dedicated bars in Vegas to a secret casino underneath a London hotel that shines with more gold than Versailles.
- Galaxy’s casino license is set to expire in 2022, but Lui is confident his company’s good relations with the Macau government will result in a “win-win” for Galaxy and the government.
- Forbes - Wall Street can have its casino. We’re going to look past the suits’ “common shares” and instead dial in some steady dividends—up to 10%!—that, for whatever reason, aren’t widely talked about on financial news channels and websites. We income investors could care less what the S&P 500 or, heaven.
- In May 2011, Galaxy Entertainment Group Limited opened the $2 billion Galaxy Macau casino and hotel in Macau with 2,200 rooms, 50 restaurants, 450 gambling tables, an artificial beach and a wave pool. Lui was chairman of the Tung Wah Group of Hospitals in 1981–1982.
- In a city that's perhaps best known for its local food — a unique blend of Cantonese and Portuguese styles — MGM's nine bars and restaurants offer up a range of different cuisines to suit any palate.
- Stunning from the outside, the hotel is also a vision in the inside, particularly in its fantastical lobby. Dubbed the Grand Praca, the lobby features European-style facades and multiple terraces meant to evoke Portugal, all underneath a skylight dome.
- The MGM may be primarily a casino resort, but it also plays host to art exhibitions, an ever-changing installation in the Grande Praça and plenty of festivals and celebrations, from comedy shows to Oktoberfest.
- Tria spa is an urban oasis and the perfect place to get some peace and quiet away from the gaming floor featuring a hammam, vitality pool and warming laconium with tiled-loungers, chairs and footbaths in addition to the exquisite treatment menu, salon services and wellness facility.
- Whether you’re enjoying a dip in the infinity pool or taking in the 180-degree view of the South China Sea from the Jacuzzi, poolside is the perfect place to chill out. If that wasn’t enough, sip on tropical drinks and cocktails or even enjoy a poolside spa treatment.
Lui Che-woo 呂志和博士 | |
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Lui Che-woo 呂志和 | |
Born | 1929/1930 (age 90–91)[1] |
Net worth | US$ 11 billion (June 2015) |
Spouse(s) | Married, 5 children[2] |
Lui Che Woo, GBM, MBE, JP (Chinese: 呂志和; Sidney Lau: Lui5 Ji3 Woh6) (born 9 August 1929, Jiangmen, China) is a Hong Kong business magnate, investor, and philanthropist. He is a member of the standing committee of the Chinese People's Political Consultative Conference, Jiangmen, People's Republic of China, and is a Hong Kong gambling magnate, founder and chairman of listed firms Galaxy Entertainment Group and K. Wah International Holdings Ltd.[3] In January 2014, he was reported to be worth US$21 billion and ranked the second richest man in Hong Kong.[4]
Business career[edit]
Lui established the first K. Wah company in Hong Kong in the 1950s. Its major member companies include K. Wah International Holdings Ltd. (Stock code: 173.HK), Galaxy Entertainment Group (HKSE: 27.HK), Stanford Hotels International and K. Wah Construction Materials Limited. Today, K. Wah has developed into a multi-national conglomerate involving gambling, property, entertainment & leisure, construction materials and hotels, with over 200 subsidiaries and more than 33,000 employees in Hong Kong, mainland China, Macau, North America and South-East Asia.
In the 1960s, Lui branched out from construction materials to property investment. The 1980s marked entry into hotel development and expansion into mainland China the next decade. In 2002, he ventured into Macau's gaming business and his business became one of the six gaming concessionaires in Macau.
In May 2011, Galaxy Entertainment Group Limited opened the $2 billion Galaxy Macau casino and hotel in Macau with 2,200 rooms, 50 restaurants, 450 gambling tables, an artificial beach and a wave pool.[5]
Public service[edit]
Lui was chairman of the Tung Wah Group of Hospitals in 1981–1982.
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He also holds posts in various tertiary institutions, including founding honorary president of the University of Hong Kong Foundation of Educational Development and Research, member of the board of trustees of United College of the Chinese University of Hong Kong, honorary member of the court of Hong Kong University of Science and Technology, member of the consultative committee of the Hong Kong Polytechnic University, honorary life chairman of the Hong Kong Polytechnic University Foundation, life honorary chairman of Wuyi University board of trustees.
In December 2006, Lui was elected to the small-circle Election Committee, in the hotels subsector, for the third term chief executive of the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region selection process. He has also been a member of the Hong Kong Government's steering committee on MICE (Meetings, Incentives, Conventions and Exhibitions) from 2007.
Philanthropy[edit]
In 1999, Lui provided funds for the Stanford University Medical Centre to set up Lui Che Woo Research Laboratory.
In 2002, the Lui Che Woo Awards for CUHK/Cornell Student Exchange Programme in Hospitality Management was established to facilitate academic exchanges of the School of Hotel and Tourism Management.
The construction of the Lui Che Woo Building at the Hong Kong Polytechnic University.
In 2012, a donation was made to the Chinese University of Hong Kong for the establishment of the Lui Che Woo Institute of Innovative Medicine.
In 2015, Lui pledged to donate HK$15.6 million to the Chinese University of Hong Kong to establish the Lui Che Woo Distinguished Young Scholars Award and the Lui Che Woo Distinguished Young Scholars Research Scholarship to support outstanding medical research students to further their studies overseas.
Marking K. Wah Group's 60th anniversary in 2015, Lui established the Lui Che Woo Prize – Prize for World Civilisation, in Hong Kong, an international prize said to honour and recognise individuals or organisations for, inter alia, 'promotion of positive life attitude and enhancement of positive energy'.[6]
Support for education and other causes[edit]
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In recognition of his support for education and contributions to worthwhile causes, Lui has been conferred with a number of honorary degrees. In 2001, he was awarded the degree of Doctor of Laws, Honoris Causa by the University of Victoria.[7]In 2002, Lui was conferred the degree of Doctor of Social Science, Honoris Causa, by the Chinese University of Hong Kong[8]and an honorary University Fellowship by the University of Hong Kong.[9]In 2004, he was awarded the degree of Honorary Doctor of Laws by Concordia University in 2004.[10]In 2005, Lui was awarded the degree of Doctor of Business Administration, Honoris Causa, by the Hong Kong Polytechnic University in 2005, as well as the degree of Doctor of Social Sciences, Honoris Causa, by the University of Hong Kong in 2016.[11]
Other achievements[edit]
In 1982, Lui was made a Member of the Order of the British Empire (MBE) by Queen Elizabeth and was appointed as a justice of the peace (JP) in 1986.[12]
In 2005, Lui was also awarded the Gold Bauhinia Star (GBS) for his contributions to the development of Hong Kong. [13]
In 2007, Lui was honoured as the Business Person of the Year at the DHL/South China Morning Post Hong Kong Business Awards.[14]
In 2012, he was awarded the Grand Bauhinia Medal by the HKSAR Government for his significant contribution to Hong Kong.[15]
References[edit]
- ^'The World's Billionaires: #98 Lui Che Woo'. Forbes. 9 January 2014.
- ^https://www.forbes.com/profile/lui-che-woo/#1d295898792b
- ^Vinicy Chan (8 November 2013). 'Galaxy Entertainment quarterly profit jumps'. Macau Daily Times.
- ^Karen Chiu (10 January 2014). 'Casino tycoons biggest winners'. The Standard. Archived from the original on 10 January 2014.
- ^'$2 Billion Casino Has Been Opened'. BBC. 16 May 2011.
- ^Zhao, Shirley (24 September 2015). 'Tycoon Lui Che-woo launches HK$60 million prize for contributors to 'world civilisation' with heavyweight council'. South China Morning Post. Retrieved 29 October 2016.
- ^'The University of Victoria'.
- ^'The Chinese University of Hong Kong'. Archived from the original on 3 August 2017.
- ^'http://hku.hk/press/press-releases/detail/4861.html'. Archived from [The University of Hong Kong the original] Check
url=
value (help) on 11 July 2013.External link intitle=
(help) - ^'Concordia University'.
- ^'The University of Hong Kong'.
- ^'SCMP'.
- ^'Recipients of Hong Kong Special Administrative Region Honours and Awards'.
- ^'K Wah chairman Lui Che-woo named Business Person of the Year'.
- ^'Recipients of Hong Kong Special Administrative Region Honours and Awards'.
Sources[edit]
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External links[edit]
Order of precedence | ||
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Preceded by Peter Woo Recipient of the Grand Bauhinia Medal | Hong Kong order of precedence Recipient of the Grand Bauhinia Medal | Succeeded by Anthony Mason Recipient of the Grand Bauhinia Medal |