Hong Kong’s biggest cosmetics retailer Sa Sa says business still losing money after coronavirus, protests spark record slump
- Sa Sa International reported a record loss of HK$515.9 million for the year ending March 31
- Retail sales in Hong Kong and Macau continue to slide through this month, company says in post-results update
![View of a Sasa shop in Causeway Bay, Hong Kong, which was closed in February because of the coronavirus outbreak. The city’s biggest cosmetics retailer has terminated 51 stores since March 2018 amid falling sales. Photo: Nora Tam](https://cdn.i-scmp.com/sites/default/files/styles/1020x680/public/d8/images/methode/2020/06/18/c01ba2d6-b135-11ea-953d-a7ecc5cbd229_image_hires_173233.jpg?itok=bs65VDN7&v=1592472762)
The firm incurred a net loss of HK$515.9 million (US$66.6 million) for the year ending March 31 versus a profit of HK$470.8 million a year earlier, it said in an exchange filing on Thursday. The loss is also the company’s first since 2002, prompting deep cost-cutting measures for survival.
![Sa Sa’s founder and CEO Simon Kwok Siu-ming. Photo: Jonathan Wong Sa Sa’s founder and CEO Simon Kwok Siu-ming. Photo: Jonathan Wong](https://img.i-scmp.com/cdn-cgi/image/fit=contain,width=1024,format=auto/sites/default/files/d8/images/methode/2020/06/18/866e1298-b13b-11ea-953d-a7ecc5cbd229_972x_173233.jpg)
Business establishments in Hong Kong expected the situation to worsen this quarter, showing the highest degree of pessimism in at least three years, according to government quarterly surveys.
Sa Sa is not alone as Hong Kong’s economy shrank 8.9 per cent last quarter from a year earlier, the worst on record. Carrier Cathay Pacific, restaurant chain Cafe de Coral and a slew of property developers have also reported deep losses or warned of more pain in store.
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