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Bizongo’s scale doubles to Rs 167 Cr in FY23; loss nears Rs 300 Cr

EntrackrEntrackr · 1y ago
Bizongo’s scale doubles to Rs 167 Cr in FY23; loss nears Rs 300 Cr
Medial

Ecommerce-focused packaging company Bizongo has managed to double its revenue during FY23. The growth, however, came at a cost which is evident from its losses which jumped 2.7X during the said period. Bizongo’s revenue from operations grew 98.6% to Rs 166.86 crore during the fiscal year ending March 2023 as compared with Rs 84 crore in FY22, as per the company’s consolidated financial statements with the Registrar of Companies. Founded in 2015, Bizongo offers digital vendor management, supply chain automation & supply chain financing as key services to its enterprise customers. The platform serves 450-500 enterprise customers in fashion & lifestyle, pharmaceuticals, consumer discretionary, consumer staples et al. Bizongo also provides unsecured financing to vendors and according to the company it has tied up with more than 40 banks and non-bank financial companies for loan disbursement. Co-founded by Sachin Agarwal, Ankit Deb, and Ankit Tomar, the company made 96% of its revenue via service fees whereas the remaining part came from design income and platform fees. It also made around Rs 18.15 crore via interest and gains on financial assets during the year which took its topline to Rs 185 crore at the end of FY23. Bizongo spent 32% of its expenses on finance costs which largely include interest on bill discounting, interest on working capital demand loans, and interest on debentures. This cost ballooned 3.9X to Rs 151.95 crore during FY23 from Rs 38.8 crore in FY22. Employee benefit costs went up 79.4% to Rs 113.23 crore in FY23. This cost also includes ESOP expenses worth Rs 27.12 crore. The company also booked allowance for expected credit loss worth Rs 124 crore during the year. The company’s overall expenditure surged 97.1% to Rs 476.6 crore in FY23 from Rs 241.8 crore in FY22. Head to TheKredible for a complete expense breakdown and year-on-year financial performance of the company. Amid cash burn, the company’s losses spiked 173.1% to Rs 291.57 crore during FY23 as compared to Rs 106.76 crore in FY22. Its operating cash outflows, however, improved by 29.6% to Rs 646.3 crore during the last fiscal year. The EBITDA margin and ROCE of the company stood at -73.06% and -27.60%, respectively, during the year. On a unit level, Bizongo spent Rs 2.86 to earn a rupee of operating revenue in FY23. FY22-FY23 FY22 FY23 EBITDA Margin -46.45% -73.06% Expense/Rupee of ops revenue ₹2.88 ₹2.86 ROCE -9.52% -27.60% As per the startup intelligence platform TheKredible, Bizongo has raised over $260 million to date. In October last year, it raised $50 million in a Series E funding round led by existing investor Schroder Adveq. The Tiger Global-backed company was also in the news for its acquisition of Titan Capital-backed FactoryPlus, a factory digitization app for micro, small, and medium enterprises (MSMEs), in November last year. Bizongo’s high provisions for credit loss indicate a cash-burning strategy to sort out the good, credit-worthy vendors from the bad, or worse, operational deficiencies that the firm must get a grip on to ensure its long-term survival. It remains in a promising segment to build a business at scale, but throwing money at the challenge to build a business is certainly not the answer. That investors have backed it as recently as last year indicates the possibilities they see for the firm to make a salutary impact on its segment, but we believe the time to show growth with improving margins is here.

Droom's revenue plummets 66% to Rs 85 Cr in FY24

EntrackrEntrackr · 5m ago
Droom's revenue plummets 66% to Rs 85 Cr in FY24
Medial

Droom is set to raise Rs 1,000 crore through an initial public offering (IPO) at a valuation of $1.2 to $1.5 billion. However, the company’s financial health has declined, with its revenue from operations nosediving by two-thirds in the last fiscal year. According to its consolidated financial statements filed with the Registrar of Companies (RoC), Droom Technologies reported a 66% decline in revenue from operations, dropping to Rs 85.3 crore in FY24. Droom's primary revenue sources were selling service fees, which included commissions on vehicle sales and related services on its marketplace platform, as well as fees from pro-seller subscriptions. The company has not disclosed a detailed revenue breakup. However, it generated Rs 4.6 crore from non-operating sources, including interest on investments and excess provisions for write-offs. This brought its total income to Rs 90 crore in FY24, down from Rs 262 crore in FY23. On the cost front, the Sandeep Aggarwal-founded company allocated 65.3% of its total expenses to promotions and incentives. With the decline in scale, this expenditure fell by 67.3% to Rs 85 crore in FY24. Employee benefit expenses also saw a reduction of 39.5% during the year. Overall, the company’s total expenditure dropped by 60%, declining to Rs 130 crore in FY24 from Rs 325 crore in FY23. Despite a 66% drop in revenue, Droom managed to reduce its overall burn, lowering losses by 34.8% to Rs 40.4 crore in FY24. The Gurugram-based company spent 1.52 to earn every rupee in FY24. Droom’s financial metrics worsened, with its ROCE (Return on Capital Employed) declining to -304% and EBITDA margins to -41.56%. By the end of FY24, the company’s total current assets stood at Rs 30 crore, including cash and bank balances of Rs 3.5 crore.

BillDesk’s growth slows in FY24; PAT drops to Rs 121 Cr

EntrackrEntrackr · 2m ago
BillDesk’s growth slows in FY24; PAT drops to Rs 121 Cr
Medial

BillDesk’s revenue from operations decreased to Rs 2,334 crore during the fiscal year ending March 2024 from Rs 2678 crore in FY23, as per the company’s consolidated financial statements with the Registrar of Companies. BillDesk makes money by charging fees for processing and settling electronic transactions, which contributed over 70% of its total operating revenue of Rs 1,591 crore in FY24. Around 16% of its earnings came from managing loyalty programs for clients, while the remainder was generated through the sale of products such as PINS and e-top-up subscriptions, along with other operating activities. Billdesk earned Rs 112 crore in non-operating income from interest and gains on financial assets. Its total revenue stood at Rs 2,446 crore in FY24, down from Rs 2,765 crore in FY23. For the payment company, bank fees and services had been the largest cost center, accounting for 78.8% of the overall expenditure. In line with the drop in scale, this cost declined by 16% to Rs 1,804 crore in FY24. Despite the reduced scale, employee benefit expenses rose by 22.4% to Rs 300 crore. Spending on data, communication, legal, and information technology pushed the company’s total expenses to Rs 2,289 crore during the fiscal year. The decline in scale, coupled with higher employee expenses, led BillDesk to report a 14.8% drop in profit to Rs 121 crore in FY24 from Rs 142 crore in FY23. Its Return on Capital Employed (ROCE) and EBITDA margins also dipped slightly, settling at 5.77% and 9.24%, respectively. On a per-unit basis, the company spent Rs 0.98 to earn every rupee during the year. By the end of FY24, BillDesk's total current assets stood at Rs 2,612 crore, which included Rs 930 crore in cash and bank balances.

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