2Q 2020 Financial Results
Chairman Vito Xu - Profile
THE SASSEUR STORY
DIALOGUE
BETWEEN
ART
AND BUSINESS
The 1980s was a time of wonder,
dreams and romance for mainland
China, a golden age of spiritual
and philosophical enlightenment,
freedom and artistic expression.
During those days of transition
from a planned to a more capitalist
economy, life was hard and material
goods were scarce. That was when
a large number of China's most
outstanding post-modern poets,
novelists, painters and musicians
emerged and whose influence
continues to this day.
Mr Vito Xu
Founder and Chairman
We want our malls to have a soul that
creates affinity with shoppers.
ART COMMERCE
Xu Rongcan's affinity with artistry
in the practice of business (what
he termed "Art Commerce") had its
roots in Southwest China Normal
University located at Beibei, a scenic
town in the outskirts of Chongqing.
As a young man of 20, on a creaking
old bicycle, with wind caressing
his hippie styled hair, rucksack
on his shoulder, his most valuable
possessions were his youthful
passion, dreams of artistry and an
old camera. Xu, with his keen sense
of art aesthetics, captured what he
saw with his lens and expressed
Source: Sasseur REIT Annual Report 2018
what he felt with films. He
loved using black and white films
to describe his feelings about the
world. From literature, art, to music
and life, Xu was surrounded by
other young people who shared his
dreams; they would often meet over
beer while enjoying guitar music
through the night together.
To Xu, art was not two dimensional.
He believed art could be
experiential. In 1989, he invested
RMB 6,500 and started his first
brick and mortar business based on
his unique art commerce concept.
OUTLET
From grossing his first million yuan in revenue from his shop in 1992, Mr Vito Xu's Singapore-listed Sasseur Reit last week nudged a billion dollars in market capitalisation before easing to $962 million at last Friday's market close. PHOTO SASSEUR
InGoodCompany
Vito Xu, don of Asian outlet malls
While Chinese retail is
struggling, Sasseur
boss runs a bunch of
profitable outlet malls
Ravi Velloor
Associate Editor
leap by any nation
In some ways, Mr Vito Xu's life
mirrors the spectacular rise of China
and its embrace of the outside world
after the late Deng Xiaoping opened
four decader Antren investment
history's most ingin motion
economic
There's first the name, Vito,
which is a favourite among Italians
and draws its roots from the Latin
word "vita (life). Not one you
would ordinarily associate with a
person born Xu Rongeun and into a
humble farming family in
Chongqing
The chairman of Singapore -listed
Sasseur Reit gave himself that
name because he has been a lover
of all things Italian since his student.
days. That's also when he began hist
entrepreneurial journey with 6,500
yuan borrowed from his mother
and brother, when he opened a
small cafe at his university
of
It wasn't the most successf
businesses but, by then, the idea of
in the heart of the young Xu, Two
years later, while in Shenzhen, he
saw an opportunity for trading in
clothing and, with that insight,
opened a shop in his home town.
That year 1992 he grossed his
first million yuan in revenue.
Today, at a time when many
Chinese malls are struggling, Mr Xu
presides over a bunch of profitable
outlet malls that he first opened in
Chongqing, but is now taking
Farther afield in China, Four of
those malls are grouped under the
Sasseur Reit, listed in March last
year, which last week nudged a
billion dollars in marketi
capitalisation before easing to 5962
million at last Friday's market close.
"My father was illiterate, but a
village leader." Mr Xu told me
recently, reflecting on his now
businessman There was little
experience in business."
The young businessman went on
a long tour of Italy and France in
1987 and was dazzled by what he
saw. Paris and Rome were also
capitals of design and high fashion.
People waited breathlessly every
year for the latest releases from
houses such as those named after
the Parisian designer Yves Saint
Laurent and the Florentine genius.
Salvatore Ferragamo.
The people, he felt, were
welcoming of him. Down in Sicily,
they even thought he was Japanese
because, at the time, few there had
seen a Chinese person. Mr Xu felt at
home. Like China, Italy too was an
ancient civilisation, where people
carried strong family where
Returning to Chongqing, where
of the drab clothing of the Manu
Zedong era, he started his own.
high-end fashion clothing with a
shop at the Li Ka Shing-owned mall
in the city's Liberation Square area.
Interestingly, he sold not only
but also his own brand of wom
wear, which beam of women's
The name stems from his first
business, a cafe whose moniker
translates in Chinese as "ship of
song", after a famous tune of the
time by a Taiwanese singer.
"Sasseur is apparently a French
transliteration, suggested by a
Frenchman patron who was in
Chongqing teaching the language.
ART COMMERCE
His corporate philosophy, he said,
is art commerce-artistry and
sophistication blended with
commerce. As for his company
corporate colours, the decision
didn't take too long. He horrowed
the national colours of Italy.on
That dual approach-fascination
with the foreign and an eye for the
malls have shops selling the biggest
global brand names such as
Burberrys, Chanel, Louis Vuitton
and Armani, there are plenty of
Chinese brands as well with names
like Li-Ning and Blasideng.
That leads me to wonder aloud.
why Asia, with its swiftly
expanding purchasing power and
vast pools of creativity, hasn't had
more home-grown fashion brands.
Could Sasseur play a role to
advance their growth?
"There are some good Chinese
brands and many up-and-coming
young designers," said Mr Xu, "Bur
they will take time to gain more
international recognition. Seven
out of 10 tenants in my outlets are
Chinese brands, so that's how
Sasseur can help market is
chasing global trends but he sees a
time when young Chinese will lead
fashion trends at home and display
their own unique characteristics.
In the popular perception of
China, the nation is a den of
counterfeit goods and knock-offs of
global brands with weak protection
for intellectual property. But things
may be changing.
Earlier this year, Shiseido chief
executive Masahiko Uotani tied up
with Alibaba, the Chinese
e-commerce platform company, to
sell high-end cosmetics in China.
When I expressed surprise to Mr
Uotani that such a premium brand
would link up with Alibaba, he gave
me a perfectly reasonable
explanation
Within Alibaba, he told me, there
are two channels. One is a low-end
offering like abacustomers.
including in rural China. The other i
corridor, with which he is involved.
is focused on growing high-end
brands.
"Every time I meet Jack Maor
their management agency, I find
them keen to grow the brand. So, we
give them even Cle de Peau Beaute,
our most high-end product. They do
no discounting and know their
product segment, and know how to
precisely target the affluent
segment in their 500 million
customers who buy those products."
This was news to me at the time,
So, I asked Mr Xu about how he
perceived the issue himself,
His own company, he said,
imposed stiff penalties on any store
in his outlet selling counterfeit
goods. At the same time, Chinese
increasingly preferred to beber
genuine high-end products, if they
thousands of them have been going
overseas to buy the real stuff from
fashion centres around the world.
At home, when they buy these
goods, they prefer to do it in
bricks-and-mortar outlets than on
online platforms because of the
personal touch and lifestyle
experience, he explained, shrugging
off the challenge from online rivals.
Not that Sasseur itself had not
tried online collaborations. But it
turns out that the experiment had
not gone too well and the company
discovered that the overlap in
customers of regular stores was no
more than 5 per cent at the
Fast facts
THE CHAIRMAN
Mr Vito Xu is chairman of the
Sasseur Group and its Singapore-
listed real estate investment
(S-Belt), Sasseur Reit. He is
Born into a farming family in
Erlanggang, Chongqing, Mr Xu
was educated at Southwest Nor-
mal University. In 1989, with
6,500 yuan, he started his four-
ney of "art commerce" by creat-
ing the Sasseur brand with a cof
fee house.
In 1992, he entered the cloth
ing industry, opening a garment
store and working as an agent for
international brands.
He then created his own
women's wear brand-Sasseur.
In 2008, he built Sasseur
(Chongqing) Western Outlets,
the first such outlet. It won that
year's Top 10 Fashion Landmark
of Chongqing. Mr Xu was also
named Chongqing Fashion Icon
by the aur Group today has
10 outlet
Source: The Sunday Times 10 Nov 2019
maximum. The middle-income
households that Sasseur outlets
serve live within 30km of the
facilities and look for lifestyle
activity alongside their shopping.
Online shoppers, on the other
hand, tend to buy cheaper and
more standardised products and
tend to live farther away.
WHY SINGAPORE?
Most Chinese companies looking
for overseas investments tend to
use Hong Kong if they need a
convenient window to the world
and I am curious to know why
Sasseur picked Singapore to list its
real estate investment trust. Mr Xu
said he did so on the advice of a key
investor, consumer-focused
private equity firm 1. Catterton
veteran Anthony Ang, an Imperial
College and Insead-educated
technocrat whose 35-year career
Included senior positions in ARA
Group, GIC Real Estate and the
Economic Development Board.
Mr Ang explains that, while the
Hong Kong stock market i
significantly larger than
Singapore's, its Reit market is
smaller, with just 11 of the entities
listed there compared with about
45 in Singapore. The S-Retts are
also more international, tending to
attract global investors seeking an
Asian play.
On a personal level. Mr Xu enjoys
the island's orderliness and is
Mr Xu was awarded Knight of
the Order of the Italian Star by
the Italian government in 2015.
Married to Ms Sasseur Yang, he
has three children, one of them
X'savus marriage. Mr
Xu's favourite hobby is tennis
THE COMPANY
Sasseur Reit is a Singapore-listed
real estate investment trust that
started trading on the Singapore
Exchange in March last year
The first listed outlet mall Reit
in Asia, its initial portfolio com-
prises four retail outlet malls in
China, located in Chongqing, Bis-
han, Hefei and Kunming, with a
combined lettable area of
312,844 sq m and an occupancy
rate of about 96 percent.
Sasseur Reit is managed by
Sasseur Asset Management,
which is an indirect wholly
owned subsidiary of Sasseur Cay
man Holding as a market ca
isation of $962 million, ha
, based on
its closing price
Friday.
frequently in Singapore over
weekends. Indeed, he chose to send
his three children here to give them
international exposure, enrolling
them at Stamford American School.
His fashion-expert wife Yang Xue,
on whom he bestowed the name
Sasseur as a mark of affection and
gratitude, lives here.
Sasseur Reit has had a good run in
the year past, clocking sales growth
of 20 percent. Mr Xu sees no
difficulty in maintaining that pace,
more so since three of the four
properties in it are new. And he
plans to add more assets to the Reit
in time to come.
As for concerns that a falling yuan
could hurt profits when translated
into Singapore dollars, he said there
has been enough currency hedging
dollar itself has slid in recent
months. The lone-term
yuan Singdollar rate, he said.
should be fairly stable
The wider Sasseur Group has 10
outlet malls, including the four
bunched in the Reit. The group, he
said, is looking at unprecedented
growth opportunity. The next
decade will be the golden era for
the outlet business in China and the
many distressed retail assets of
traditional retailers offer his firm a
tremendous opportunity to go
asset-light and turn around the
ones it picks.
fewer
In the past 18 months, no few
than 140 potential deals have been
placed in front of him. The Sasseur
team has been picky, signing fewer
than 10 new malls, and these will be
up and running in the next two to
three years to know his views on
retail, now
that he w
the island so regularly.
"The Singapore retail sector is
well developed but it suffers from a
common problem with retail the
world over most establishments
are not differentiated and are
lacking in the life and spirit that can
excite shoppers," he said. "Retail
should reflect more of local
cultures and flavours so as to create
an emotional connect."
The mother of the tennis-loving
Mr Xu died 13 years ago and his
father, now 83, lives in their home
village of Erlanggang. Among his
many blessings, he said, is that his
work meshes so much with his love.
for art, while having his lady love as
a business partnerold
asked the dapper 54-
clothing Bourite brand of
"Tom Ford," he said
unhesitatingly. "Somehow, their
suits are cut in a way that fits me
better than any other brand!
know.
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