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FarEye spent Rs 361 Cr to earn Rs 139 Cr in FY23

EntrackrEntrackr · 1y ago
FarEye spent Rs 361 Cr to earn Rs 139 Cr in FY23
Medial

SaaS-based logistics management platform FarEye showcased a modest 42% year-on-year growth during the fiscal year ended March 2023 but the firm’s losses worth Rs 243 crore flattened from the previous fiscal year but remained high. FarEye’s revenue from operations grew 41.8% to Rs 139 crore in FY23 from RS 98 crore in FY22, its consolidated financial statements filed with the Registrar of Companies (RoC) show. FarEye provides software solutions to manage large logistics platforms’ supply chain and delivery across manufacturing, e-commerce et al. The sale of logistics services was the sole source of revenue for the company. Besides operating activities, the $150 million round helped FarEye to make Rs 27 crore from interest on investments (non-operating) which took its total collection to Rs 166 crore in FY23. Like other technology startups, its employee benefits accounted for 61.2% of the overall expenditure. This cost grew only 8% to Rs 251 crore in FY23 from Rs 232 crore in FY22. Its information technology, traveling, legal-professional, advertising, repair, rent, and other overheads catalyzed the FarEye’s overall expenditure to Rs 410 crore in FY23 from Rs 361 crore in FY22. FarEye’s prudent expense management helped the Microsoft-backed firm to register a mere 4.7% increase in its losses to Rs 243 crore in FY23. Its ROCE and EBITDA margin stood at -60% and -142.2%, respectively. On a unit level, FarEye spent Rs 2.95 to earn a rupee in FY23. FY22-FY23 FY22 FY23 EBITDA Margin -176% -142.2% Expense/₹ of Op Revenue ₹3.68 ₹2.95 ROCE -36% -60% FarEye’s total current assets stood at Rs 438 crore including current investments and cash/bank balance during FY23. FarEye has raised over $150 million across rounds and was valued at $400 million in its last fundraiser. According to the startup data intelligence platform TheKredible, TCV is the largest stakeholder with 13.74% followed by Elevation Capital. As per Fintrackr estimates, its enterprise value to revenue multiple was 21X at the end of FY23. While there are firm indications that the firm has turned, or is close to turning the corner as far as margin improvement goes, Fareye’s backers would know that much could go wrong from here as well. With FY24 over, the firm would have done well to not only maintain the growth rate from FY23, but also keep expenses in control as it did previously. Any major slip up here will lead to serious questions about it’s long term viability, leading to an adverse impact on the existing business sooner than later.

Yubi posts Rs 328 Cr revenue and Rs 482 Cr loss in FY23

EntrackrEntrackr · 1y ago
Yubi posts Rs 328 Cr revenue and Rs 482 Cr loss in FY23
Medial

Yubi (formerly CredAvenue) grabbed wide attention when Vivriti Capital sold a part of its stake in the digital lending company at a valuation of $1.5 billion. Even as Vivitri made a fortune after the secondary transaction, the firm’s bottom line worsened, by 8X in the fiscal year ending March 2023. We will dive deeper into the company’s expenses pattern, which is responsible for its steep losses later in our analysis. For now, let’s review its collection streams. Yubi’s revenue from operations surged 98% to Rs 328 crore in FY23 from Rs 166 crore in FY22, its consolidated financial statements filed with the Registrar of Companies show. Yubi is a debt platform that connects businesses with banks and NBFCs. The company offers six distinct products including a lending marketplace, a supply chain financing marketplace, and dedicated real estate and infrastructure financing solutions. With 6,200 investors and over 17,000 active enterprises on board, Yubi claims to have facilitated credit worth Rs 1.4 lakh crore. Income from merchant banking and other allied services provided to corporate borrowers and debt investors formed 54% of the total revenue. Commissions on debt facilitation, collection solutions and data collection were other revenue drivers for Yubi. Check TheKredible for the detailed revenue breakup. Similar to the other technology startups, Yubi’s employee benefits accounted for 48% of the overall expenses. This cost surged 4.7X to Rs 432 crore in FY23 from Rs 92 crore in FY22. This expense also included Rs 109 crore as ESOPs cost (non-cash in nature). Yubi’s business supports services, information technology, traveling, legal/professional, and marketing costs took its overall expenditure up by 314% to Rs 895 crore in FY23 from Rs 216 crore in FY22. Expenses Breakdown Total ₹ 216 Cr https://thekredible.com/company/yubi-credavenue-/financials View Full Data To access complete data, visithttps://thekredible.com/company/yubi-credavenue-/financials Total ₹ 895 Cr https://thekredible.com/company/yubi-credavenue-/financials View Full Data To access complete data, visithttps://thekredible.com/company/yubi-credavenue-/financials Employee benefit Employee benefit Business support service Business support service Information technology Information technology Travelling conveyance Travelling conveyance Legal professional Legal professional Advertising promotional Advertising promotional Others To check complete Expense Breakdown visit thekredible.com View full data Head to TheKredible for a complete expense breakdown. At the end, Yubi’s losses increased by 745% to Rs 482 crore in FY23 from Rs 57 crore in FY22. Its ROCE and EBITDA margin worsened -30% and -105%, respectively. On a unit level, the Chennai-based company spent Rs 2.73 to earn a rupee of operating revenue during FY23. FY22-FY23 FY22 FY23 EBITDA Margin -8% -105.1% Expense/₹ of Op Revenue ₹1.30 ₹2.73 ROCE -2% -30% Rs 328 crore is probably a very small, if not fraction of where Yubi wants to be, operating in a market as vast as the debt syndication market in India. While it is too early to judge it for its operating metrics, the assumption is that having arranged credit of almost $18 billion, the firm will have picking up learnings and data along the way that continue to make it better at its job. It’s a market where seasoning, or time spent in the market matters, and 3 years or more is the minimum one would give before deciding if a firm has it to last. Of course, competition is intense, as is the risk of disintermediation that always hangs in this business, even as the proliferation of platforms like Yubi, Lendingkart etc has probably proven that it is one risk that is overhyped.

BigHaat’s gross revenue nears Rs 700 Cr in FY23

EntrackrEntrackr · 1y ago
BigHaat’s gross revenue nears Rs 700 Cr in FY23
Medial

Agritech startup BigHaat registered over five-fold growth during the fiscal year ending March 2023. However, in pursuit of rapid scale its losses also rose in a similar proportion during the same period. BigHaat’s gross revenue surged 5.3X to Rs 643 crore in FY23 from Rs 120 crore in FY22, its consolidated financial statements filed with the Registrar of Companies show. Founded in 2015, BigHaat leverages technology to provide a wide range of solutions and services to farmers, helping them optimize their agricultural practices and increase productivity. Market linkages formed 92% of the overall gross revenue which increased 6.6X to Rs 594 crore in FY23. The rest of the income comes from input business, exports, commission of marketplace, and others. See TheKredible for the detailed revenue breakup. In tune with growth in scale, its cost of procurement emerged as the largest cost center accounting for 92.5% of the total expenditure. This cost rose by 5.4X to Rs 623 crore in FY23 from Rs 115 crore in FY22. Its employee benefits, selling cum distribution, legal-professional, information technology, fulfillment, and other overheads took the total expenditure to Rs 673 crore in FY23 from Rs 128 crore in FY22. Head to TheKredible for the complete expense breakup. Expenses Breakdown Total ₹ 128 Cr https://thekredible.com/company/bighaat/financials View Full Data To access complete data, visithttps://thekredible.com/company/bighaat/financials Total ₹ 673 Cr https://thekredible.com/company/bighaat/financials View Full Data To access complete data, visithttps://thekredible.com/company/bighaat/financials Cost of procurement Cost of procurement Employee benefit Employee benefit Selling and distribution Selling and distribution Legal professional Legal professional Information technology Information technology Fulfilment cost Fulfilment cost Others To check complete Expense Breakdown visit thekredible.com View full data The spurt in procurement and employee benefits resulted in a significant increase in losses, rising 5.8X to Rs 35 crore in FY23 from Rs 6 crore in FY22. Its ROCE and EBITDA margin stood at -40% and -4.3%, respectively. On a unit level, it spent Rs 1.05 to earn a rupee in FY23. FY22-FY23 FY22 FY23 EBITDA Margin -6% -4.3% Expense/₹ of Op Revenue ₹1.07 ₹1.05 ROCE -14% -40% BigHaat has raised $29 million to date and was valued at $58 million in its last round. As per the startup data intelligence platform TheKredible, JM Financial is the largest external stakeholder with 27.29% followed by Ankur Capital and Beyond Next Ventures. Its co-founders Sateesh Nukala and Sachin Nandwana cumulatively command 23.29% of the company. The numbers would indicate a business that is more about trading and arbitrage than anything else, unless BigHaat incurred some major one off expenses. But at this scale, it’s obvious that the firm has the ability and knowledge to make it count, which is what should make it an interesting agritech to track from here on.

Ripplr posts Rs 740 Cr gross revenue in FY23; controls losses

EntrackrEntrackr · 1y ago
Ripplr posts Rs 740 Cr gross revenue in FY23; controls losses
Medial

Ripplr, a tech distribution and logistics platform secured $40 million in May 2023. The substantial funding was driven by its impressive 2.7X growth during the fiscal year ended March 2023. Moreover, the Bengaluru-based company also managed to reduce its losses by 32% in the same period. Ripplr’s gross revenue increased 2.7X to Rs 740 crore in FY23 from Rs 275 crore in FY22, its annual financial statements filed with the Registrar of Companies show. The four-year-old Ripplr offers a plug-and-play distribution network as a service (DaaS) to digitize and manage brand operations. It services over 80,000 tier 2-based retailers having partnerships with FMCG brands like HUL, Britannia, ITC, Nestle, Mondelez, Colgate Reckitt Benckiser, Godrej, Dabur, and Nivea, among others. Goods sales accounted for 89% of Ripplr’s total gross revenue, which surged threefold to Rs 656 crore in FY23. Income from logistics and warehousing were other revenue drivers for Ripplr. See TheKredible for the complete revenue breakdown. Coming over to the cost sheet, the cost of material consumed comprised 77.5% of the overall expenditure. This cost surged 3X to Rs 624 crore in FY23 from Rs 203 crore in FY22. Its employee benefits, rent, transportation, legal, subcontractors, and other overheads took the overall expenditure to Rs 805 crore in FY23 from Rs 285 crore in FY22. View TheKredible for the complete expense breakup. The 2.7X growth and controlled expenditure helped the Fireside Ventures-backed company to reduce its losses by 32% to Rs 62 crore in FY23 from Rs 91 crore in FY22. It’s ROCE and EBITDA margin stood at -29% and -7.4% respectively. On a unit level, it spent Rs 1.09 to earn a rupee in FY23. FY22-FY23 FY22 FY23 EBITDA Margin -32% -7.4% Expense/₹ of Op Revenue ₹1.04 ₹1.09 ROCE -101% -29% Ripplr has raised over $50 million across rounds including its $40 million in a Series B round led by Fireside Ventures in May last year. According to the data intelligence platform TheKredible, 3One4 Capital is the largest external stakeholder with 17.87% followed byZephyr Peacock India and Sojitz Corporation. Focused on a critical if unloved area of the business, Ripplr’s offerings ensure that clients once onboarded stay for a long time. Considering the level of integration it offers with their distribution for instance with its DMS. That might mean longer sales cycles, but once in, a very sustainable model, intrinsically tied to the growth and well being of its clients. The current scale indicates the quality of headway it has made, which has clearly enthused its investors as well.

Waycool posts Rs 1,251 Cr revenue and Rs 686 Cr loss in FY23

EntrackrEntrackr · 11m ago
Waycool posts Rs 1,251 Cr revenue and Rs 686 Cr loss in FY23
Medial

B2B food and agritech platform Waycool claims Rs 1,600 crore in revenue with the goal of operational break even in FY24. While the company is yet to release its financial statements for FY24, it recently disclosed its results for the fiscal year ending March 2023 after an 11-month delay. Entrackr has sifted through the firm’s regulatory filings to understand its financial health in FY23. Waycool’s revenue from operations grew by 62% to Rs 1,251 Crore in FY23 from Rs 772 Crore in FY22, its consolidated financial statements sourced from the Registrar of Companies show. The difference in the revenue figures for FY22 was due to the adoption of IND AS by the company. The firm reported Rs 927 crore revenue in FY22. Waycool is a full-stack supply chain player working with farmers and clients who source agricultural and dairy products from the company. The company has its 7 own consumer brands namely Madhuram, KitchenJi, DeziFresh, AllFresh and others. The collection from the sale of goods formed 98% of the total operating revenue which surged 60% to Rs 1,228 crore in FY23. Out of the total sale of goods, the finished goods ( the sale of its own brands) contributed 10% only while the rest of the sales came from traded goods. Income from commissions and cold storage management were some co-revenue drivers for Waycool. The company also added Rs 11 crore from interest on fixed deposits and non-current investments, tallying the overall income to Rs 1,262 crore in FY23. See TheKredible for the detailed revenue breakup. Since Waycool follows an inventory-led model, the cost of procurement of materials accounted for 61.51% of the total expenditure. In line with scale, this cost grew 58.2% to Rs 1,200 crore in FY23. The firm’s expenses on employee benefits, doubtful debts, advertising, transportation, and other overheads took its overall cost up by 71.3% to Rs 1,951 crore in FY23 from Rs 1,139 crore in FY22. Check TheKredible for the detailed expense breakdown. Note: We have excluded the expense of Rs 1,906 crore and 828 crore from FY23 and FY22 respectively which were incurred against the loss of fair value of the preference shares, the company’s spokesperson confirmed, after sending queries. Despite the decent scale, the company didn’t manage to control its costs, resulting in its losses surged by 89% to Rs 685 crore in FY23. The company spent Rs 1.56 to earn a rupee in FY23. FY22-FY23 FY22 FY23 EBITDA Margin -149.68% -199.66% Expense/₹ of Op Revenue ₹1.47 ₹1.56 ROCE N/A N/A While operational break-even might seem too ambitious in FY24 with these numbers, it is not impossible, considering Waycool is well past the investment stage now. However, the Chennai-based company has been struggling to find new investment and closed several initiatives in a bid to cut costs and extend the runway. According to sources, things aren’t looking great for Waycool and it would be exciting to watch whether it bounces back or wilts away on the lines of several promising venture-backed agritech startups.

Baazi Games’ revenue crossed Rs 200 Cr in FY23; profit grew nearly 4X

EntrackrEntrackr · 1y ago
Baazi Games’ revenue crossed Rs 200 Cr in FY23; profit grew nearly 4X
Medial

Baazi Games—which runs skill-based real money gaming platforms PokerBaazi, SportsBaazi, and CardBaazi—saw its scale jump nearly five-fold between FY21 and FY23. With this, the company joins the list of leading players in the space that have earned over Rs 200 crore in topline and are also profitable. Some of the top profitable companies in the real-money gaming space are Dream11, Gameskraft, A23, and Gameberry Labs. Baazi Games’ revenue from operations grew 2.8X to Rs 232 crore during the fiscal year ending March 2023 in sharp contrast with Rs 83 crore in FY22, as per the company’s consolidated financial statements with the Registrar of Companies. Established in 2014, Baazi Games operates skill gaming platforms including PokerBaazi, SportsBaazi, and CardBaazi. PokerBaazi is an online poker platform, while CardBaazi offers a variety of card games. SportsBaazi, formerly BalleBaazi, allows users to play live games while watching sports. The company also has other ventures like CasinoKart, PB School, Baazi Poker, and Tour. It made 99% of its revenue through gaming while the remaining part came from the sale of traded goods and services. To get some visibility in the market, Baazi Games also spent most of its expenses on advertising, similar to the other players in the space. This cost jumped 3.4X to Rs 118 crore during FY23 from Rs 34.41 crore in FY22. Outsourcing and subcontracting costs for the company also ballooned multi-fold to Rs 46.68 crore in FY23. Spending on employee benefits spiked 2X to Rs 20.88 crore during the year from Rs 10.16 crore in FY22. The company also spent a significant amount on the payment gateway, website, server charges, and more. Overall, the total expenditure of the company surged 2.7X to Rs 210 crore in FY23 from Rs 78 crore in FY22. Head to TheKredible for a complete expense breakdown and year-on-year financial performance about the company. Despite rising expenses, the company managed to grow its bottom line by a significant margin. Its profits grew 3.8X to Rs 17.46 crore during FY23 as compared to Rs 4.53 crore in FY22. However, the operating cash flows of the company declined 68% to Rs 15.28 crore during the last fiscal year. The EBITDA margin and ROCE of the company also improved to 10.36% and 67.45%, respectively, during the year which can be ascribed to the up trend in scale. FY22-FY23 FY22 FY23 EBITDA Margin 7.63% 10.36% Expense/₹ of Op Revenue ₹0.94 ₹0.91 ROCE 36.91% 67.45% On a unit level, the Baazi Games spent Re 0.91 to earn a rupee of operating revenue in FY23.

RailYatri posts Rs 274 Cr revenue in FY23; losses shrink 58%

EntrackrEntrackr · 1y ago
RailYatri posts Rs 274 Cr revenue in FY23; losses shrink 58%
Medial

Train ticketing platform RailYatri has demonstrated strong financial health in the past couple of years. The growth can be witnessed from its topline which inched close to touching the Rs 300 crore mark. Along with this, the Noida-based company also managed to bring down its losses during FY23. RailYatri’s revenue from operations grew 2.3X to Rs 273.73 crore during the fiscal year ending March 2023 as compared with Rs 117.21 crore in FY22, as per the company’s consolidated financial statements with the Registrar of Companies. Founded in 2014, RailYatri offers train ticket information along with intercity bus service — IntrCity SmartBus which runs on routes such as Delhi–Lucknow, Delhi–Kanpur, Mumbai–Pune, Bengaluru–Hyderabad, and Chennai–Coimbatore among others. RailYatri has also launched a ‘flexi-ticket’ feature that allows users to make last-minute changes to their plans when finding a reservation on trains isn’t available. Co-founded by Kapil Raizada, Manish Rathi, and Sachin Saxena, the company made 93% of its revenue via roadway operations while the remaining part came from erectioning commissioning, and advertising publicity. It also made around Rs 6 crore via interest and gains on financial assets during the year which took its topline to Rs 279.75 crore at the end of FY23. RailYatri spent 11% of its expenses on employee benefits during the period. This cost went up 26.7% to Rs 32.9 crore during FY23 from Rs 25.97 crore in FY22. This cost also includes expenses on the employee stock option scheme and employee stock purchase plan worth Rs 24 lakh and Rs 3.71 crore in FY23 and FY22, respectively. Advertisement & promotional costs declined 21.8% to Rs 6.4 crore whereas Information technology expenses grew to Rs 1.82 crore during FY23. Notably, RailYatri booked Rs 242 crore of its expenditure under miscellaneous expenses which is likely to include outsourced support, cashback & discounts, and other operational and admin expenses during FY23. In total, the overall expenditure surged 83.4% to Rs 298 crore during FY23 from Rs 162.5 crore in FY22. Head to TheKredible for a complete expense breakdown and year-on-year financial performance of the company. Despite rising expenses, the company managed to control its bottom line by 58.5% during the year. Its losses shrank to Rs 18.2 crore in FY23 from Rs 43.87 crore in FY22. Also read: Decoding the financial performance of India’s top OTA players The stability of operations can also be witnessed from its operating cash outflows which improved by 45% to Rs 19.96 crore in FY23. Amid an improved financial performance, the EBITDA margin and ROCE of the company also strengthened to -5.55% and 13808.33%, respectively, during the year. On a unit level, RailYatri spent Rs 1.09 to earn a rupee of operating revenue in FY23. FY22-FY23 FY22 FY23 EBITDA Margin -35.96% -5.55% Expense/₹ of Op Revenue ₹1.39 ₹1.09 ROCE -475.11% 13808.33% As per the startup intelligence platform TheKredible, RailYatri has raised over $50 million to date. A few days back, it raised $3.44 million in a mix of equity and debt funding round led by Mirabilis Investment Trust. Entrackr exclusively reported this development.

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.

PlanetSpark posts Rs 41 Cr revenue and Rs 90 Cr loss in FY23

EntrackrEntrackr · 1y ago
PlanetSpark posts Rs 41 Cr revenue and Rs 90 Cr loss in FY23
Medial

Edtech business is hard to crack and this is evident from the balance sheets of most of the companies in the space which have shown astounding losses. Seven-year-old PlanetSpark is no exception as the firm’s losses were more than twice its revenue in the fiscal year ending March 2023. FITT-JEE-backed PlanetSpark’s revenue from operations increased 41%to Rs 42 crore in the last fiscal year (FY23) from Rs 30 crore in FY22, as per its filings with the Registrar of Companies (RoC). Founded in 2017 by Kunal Malik and Manish Dhooper, PlanetSpark offers live 1:1 classes in public speaking, creative writing, storytelling, debate, podcasting et al for the K8 generation. The sale of educational services was the only source of revenue for the company while it also made Rs 1.1 crore from interest on deposits. In the end, tPlanetSpark’s total income stood at 43.5 crore during the last fiscal year. PlanetSpark spent Rs 63.17 crore towards employee benefits which includes Rs 5.5 crore as ESOP cost (non-cash component). Similar to other ed-tech startups, it spent a significant 90 crore on marketing and teachers’ salaries. Its legal/professional, rent, information technology, and other overheads led its total cost to Rs 133 crore in FY23 from Rs 139.5 crore in FY22. Head to TheKredible for a complete expense breakdown and its YoY financial health. Expense Breakdown Total ₹ 139.53 Cr https://thekredible.com/company/planetspark/financials View Full Data To access complete data, visithttps://thekredible.com/company/planetspark/financials Total ₹ 133.02 Cr https://thekredible.com/company/planetspark/financials View Full Data To access complete data, visithttps://thekredible.com/company/planetspark/financials Employee Benefit Employee Benefit Teachers Pay Teachers Pay Marketing and Branding expense Marketing and Branding expense Software and Server Charges Software and Server Charges Payment Gateway charges Payment Gateway charges Other Expenses To check complete Expense Breakdown visit thekredible.com View full data With over 40% scale and controlled expenses, PlanetSpark managed to trim its losses by 18% to Rs 90 crore in FY23. Its ROCE and EBITDA margin also improved to -197.1% and 226% respectively. On a unit level, PlanetSpark spent Rs 3.14 to earn a rupee of operating revenue in FY23. FY22-FY23 FY22 FY23 EBITDA Margin -362% -197.1% Expense/₹ of Op Revenue ₹4.65 ₹3.14 ROCE -1065% 226% According to the startup data intelligence platform TheKredible, PlanetSpark has mopped up over $34 million to date including a $17 million round this year. Prime Venture Partners is the largest stakeholder with 32.6% followed by FIIT- JEE. Its co-founder Kunal Malik and Maneesh Dhopper cumulatively command 29.6%.

Mylab’s op revenue nosedives to under Rs 100 Cr in FY23, slips into losses

EntrackrEntrackr · 1y ago
Mylab’s op revenue nosedives to under Rs 100 Cr in FY23, slips into losses
Medial

Adar Poonawalla-backed Mylab thrived during the pandemic (FY21 and FY22) when the demand for covid related testing and other services skyrocketed. In the subsequent fiscal year ending March 2023, however, MyLab’s scale nosedived around 64% as the world returned to normalcy. Furthermore, a steep fall in demand also led the Pune-based firm to book sizable losses in FY23 against profits in FY21 and FY22. While the company achieved a 100X growth to Rs 825 crore in FY21, its scale dwindled to Rs 95 crore in FY23, Mylab’s consolidated financial statements filed earlier this week with the Registrar of Companies show. Mylab Even as the company remained profitable in FY22, Mylab’s scale has been on a downward trajectory since then. In FY22, the operating revenue was already down 68.4% to Rs 260.71 crore. Founded in 2016, Mylab develops and sells diagnostic kits for clinical diagnostics. Similar to FY21 and FY22, the sale of such kits continued to be the sole source of operating revenue for Mylab in FY23 The company also added Rs 29 crore from interest and miscellaneous sources tallying the total income to Rs 124 crore in FY23. On the cost side, the manufacturing of kits formed 27% of the total expenditure. In the line of decreasing scale, this cost was reduced by 60% to Rs 50 crore in FY23. The firm’s burn on employee benefits, legal fees, advertising, royalty, conveyance, and other overheads took its total expenditure to Rs 185 crore in FY23 from Rs 250 crore in FY22. See TheKredible for the detailed expense breakup. The decline in scale and fixed overheads led Mylab into losses for the first time in the last three reported fiscals. The company recorded a loss of Rs 47 crore in FY23, compared to a Rs 16 crore profit in FY22. Its ROCE and EBITDA margin worsened to -18% and -24.19%, respectively. On a unit level, it spent Rs 1.95 to earn a rupee in FY23. FY22-FY23 FY22 FY23 EBITDA Margin 14.81% -24.19% Expense/₹ of Op Revenue ₹0.96 ₹1.95 ROCE 11.42% -18.01% Much like online edtechs, online healthcare also seems to have vastly underestimated the fight in offline firms that missed out during the pandemic. Be it schools and other institutions in the case of edtech, in healthcare too we have seen offline diagnostic labs and institutions fight hard to claw back share and revenues from the diagnostics market that online firms had grabbed during the pandemic. It’s a battle they understand well with first access to patients in many cases, and we are already hearing of cases where many clinics and hospitals insist on their test lab result. Doubts have also been raised on the credibility of test lab results that are picked up at home and analysed subsequently. Mylabs test kits and ancillary services model has faced these problems, and come up severely short, going by the look of things. The firm needs a better diagnosis for its own survival, and growth plans.

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