Las Vegas Sands Corp. (NYSE: LVS) is a casino resort company based in Paradise, Nevada.

Founded in 1988, the company was the owner and operator of the Sands Hotel, which was demolished in 1996 to make room for The Venetian, which opened in 1999.
In February 2008, the company announced that it has acquired two L-1011 aircraft which it plans to use to bring gamblers from Asia to its Las Vegas properties. The aircraft will be equipped with baccarat tables that can be played while over international waters using established lines of credit. According to gaming officials, the Nevada gaming tax will not apply to these wagers.[3]
How did he make his billions? Adelson made his first fortune with Comdex, a computer trade show. He sold the parent company in 1995 and pocketed $500m. By then, he'd bought the Sands Hotel and Casino, razed it, and built the revolutionary $1.5bn Venetian, complete with canals and singing gondoliers. He opened China's first Vegas-style casino in 2004. But Adelson's luck has changed. Vegas revenues are in freefall, the Chinese are restricting travel to Macau, and Sands has debts of around $10bn - Adelson had to chip in $1bn himself to prop it up.

The secret of his success? Determination and innovation. He'd had several careers before he revolutionised Las Vegas. 'If the world came to an end, there would be cockroaches and Sheldon Adelson,' said a former employee, 'and he would be smart enough to open a pest-control company.'


Sheldon Adelson (1933 - ), the at times controversial billionaire casino developer who made and lost fortunes in the 1960s, rode the tide of the personal computer revolution in the 1980s and 1990s with his computer trade show, and used the revenue to build The Venetian and The Palazzo on the Strip.
The son of a cab driver, Adelson grew up in a lower class section of Boston. He moved to New York for college, and majored in corporate finance and real estate at City College, but never graduated. After entering the U.S. Army in the 1950s, he worked as a courtroom stenographer on Wall Street and started thinking about how to become wealthy there.
By the early 1960s, Adelson had left the Army and attained millionaire status by charging companies fees for showing them how to start selling shares on the stock market. Now wealthy, he moved back to Boston and began investing in companies, eventually owning as many as seventy-five different ones. The price soared for shares of a tour and travel business, the American International Travel Service, his most profitable business. But he lost a fortune when the stock market declined in the late 1960s, and consequently he ran up many debt.
Adelson soon rebounded in the real estate brokerage business by arranging condominium conversions in Boston, and he bought a residential building. But he lost his cash reserve again when the condominium market faltered. Still on the lookout for opportunities, Adelson caught a big break in 1971 when he acquired a majority share of a small company that published magazines, among them a computer-oriented publication, Data Communications User. While attending a trade convention on condominiums in Anaheim, California, Adelson read that a magazine about condominiums had produced the show. He decided that he could use his own publication to produce a show about computers.
His first computer show was in Dallas in 1973. In 1975, he sold his share in the publishing company but held onto the show. He sold his condominium building, launched The Interface Group in Needham, Massachusetts, and concentrated on the computer show. The show grew slowly, garnering only $250,000 in revenues in 1979.
Adelson shifted gears and created the Computer Dealer Expo, also known as COMDEX, which took place at the MGM Grand (now Bally's) in Las Vegas in 1979. The show, intended for small computer dealers, took off, and by 1984, the Interface Group was producing forty shows. COMDEX alone grossed $20 million. COMDEX became the largest trade show produced in Las Vegas, with 100,000 attendees in 1987 and 125,000 in 1988. Adelson's show hit just as IBM, Apple and other brands of personal computers and accessories became a huge international industry. By the late 1980s, his company's net income reached $250 million, and he produced other COMDEX shows in other U.S. cities and in Europe and Japan. Interface succeeded by extracting large fees from exhibitors—as high as $50 a square foot in the Las Vegas Convention Center, for which Interface paid only fifteen cents a square foot.
In the late 1980s, Adelson and his partners from Interface, which also owned two travel companies and several passenger aircraft, decided to look for a resort property to use as a home base in Las Vegas. After overtures to owners of the Dunes, Frontier, and Aladdin hotels, they settled on the Sands, owned by casino developer Kirk Kerkorian. In 1988, Interface bought the venerable but aging Sands for $128 million.
Adelson's redesign scheme for the Sands included a $150 million new resort and shopping mall and a $60 million private convention center for Interface's and other shows. At the time, Adelson, as he would for years to come, had open disputes with the Las Vegas Convention and Visitors Authority (which operated and sold space for the Las Vegas Convention Center), over fees charged for COMDEX. Adelson later complained that the LVCVA's room taxes were too high and its shows unfairly competed with shows in his convention center. He even advocated abolishing the LVCVA, arguing it was no longer needed to promote Las Vegas.
But Adelson's plans hit a snag in 1989, when his hand-picked choice to run the Sands, Henri Lewin, ran into licensing problems with the Nevada State Gaming Control Board. Board members claimed Lewin had not been truthful with them in testimony about a lawsuit brought by a woman who charged that in 1985, he tried to assault her while he was chief executive of the Las Vegas Hilton. The board cited problems with a partner in Adelson's company as well, including past associations with alleged criminals. As for Adelson, the board's investigation revealed many past lawsuits he had filed against creditors to reduce his debts.
But Adelson took advantage of political connections with local and state politicians, who praised Lewin and the Sands project for being good for Las Vegas. While the gaming board voted 3-0 against licensing Lewin, the Nevada Gaming Commission overruled it and agreed to grant Lewin a limited license, with the caveat that he could not run the casino or share in its profits. All five of Adelson's partners received licenses.
Adelson opened the Sands in 1989 and embarked on his building plans. But he soon developed a reputation for being demanding and hard to work with. His association with Lewin quickly soured. Lewin, who said Adelson refused to invest in needed improvements to the Sands' rooms and casino, resigned less than a year later.
In the early 1990s, with the economy at a standstill and money difficult to borrow from banks, Adelson put his expansion plans on hold. He also held back on paying people to whom he owed money. Lewin sued him, alleging Adelson owned him $400,000, and later settled. Adelson's architect for the Sands also sued, and a jury awarded him $1.3 million in 1993.
But in the mid-1990s, the economy and lending markets improved. In 1995, Adelson sold COMDEX to the Japanese firm Softbank for $860 million. Now better able to raise funds from Wall Street, Adelson freed himself of his Interface partners, and built and opened the Sands Expo Center, a 1.2 million square foot convention and show room. In 1996, he demolished the Sands Hotel & Casino to make way for his planned Venice, Italy-themed Venetian, named for the place where he and his second wife had vacationed. The Venetian opened in May 1999.
The hotel proved both controversial, thanks to lawsuits over contractors and Adelson's opposition to the Culinary Union, and wildly successful. Adelson showed that while he was relatively new to the hotel-casino business, he could make big plans with the best of his competitors. Adelson's Sands company reported losses at one point in 2004, despite high revenues, after it granted stock bonuses to executives and paid for the building expenses of a newly planned 3,000-room resort, the Palazzo, north of the Venetian, set to cost $1.8 billion.
Like other Strip developers, Adelson also looked beyond Las Vegas. He became the first American developer to build a casino in Macau, the center of a newly opened, massive Asian gambling market, off the coast of China. The Sands Macau cost $265 million to build and was a big success from its opening in 2004. In Macau, on the so-called Coati Strip, he planned to build seven new casinos, including the $1.8 billion Venetian Macau. Adelson also became the first to win a casino license in Singapore, where he began another casino resort, the $3.5 billion Marina Bay Sands.
More successes led to Adelson's obsession with expansion—he was always looking for new markets, and seeking to outdo his competitors. He took his company, Las Vegas Sands Corporation, public on Wall Street in December 2004. The stock sale was an enormous success—so much so that in 2006, Forbes magazine ranked Adelson, thanks to his profits in Las Vegas and Macau and his Sands stock holdings, as the world's third-richest man, with holdings of $20.5 billion.
Meanwhile, Adelson became prominent in other ways in Las Vegas. His wife, Dr. Miriam Adelson, ran The Dr. Miriam and Sheldon G. Adelson Clinic for Drug Abuse Treatment and Research. Adelson was a major contributor to the local Jewish community and to Israel. He also was heavily involved in politics as a major contributor to the Republican Party.
 
Top