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Chingari crosses Rs 100 Cr revenue in FY23; losses decline 70%

EntrackrEntrackr · 1y ago
Chingari crosses Rs 100 Cr revenue in FY23; losses decline 70%
Medial

Short-video-making app Chingari made a pivot to become a paid but private live streaming app which connects users and creators in the beginning of the ongoing fiscal year. While the impact of the pivot on its top and bottom lines will be evaluated when it reports FY24 numbers, the company’s revenue soared over two-fold in FY23. Chingari’s revenue from operations spiked 2.3X to Rs 113 crore in the fiscal year ending March 2023, its annual financial statement sourced from the Registrar of Companies (RoC) shows. Significantly, the company’s losses nosedived 70% during the last fiscal year. Founded in November 2018, Chingari used to be a TikTok clone until FY23 where it allowed users to create and post short-videos. The sale of services was the only source of revenue for Chingari in the last fiscal. In August 2022, Chingari launched its crypto token called $GARI and was set to make a debut on six global exchange platforms – FTX, Huobi, Kucoin, OKEX, Gate.IO, MEXC Global. The firm also roped in Bollywood actor Salman Khan to launch the NFT marketplace and reward platform. Caveat: Chingari didn’t provide revenue break-up for FY23 but it looks like most of its collection came via advertising and crypto activities. Moving to the cost side, application development formed 32% of the overall expenditure which increased by 16.3% to Rs 50 crore in FY23. Chingari’s employee benefits cost surged 3.8X to Rs 46 crore in FY23. It’s worth noting that Chingari fired around 60% of its employees in the current calendar year and is only left with 50-60 people in the team as per media reports. Chingari’s advertising cum promotional cost declined significantly to Rs 29 crore in FY23 from Rs 113 crore in FY22. The legal professional, subscription membership, rent, traveling, and other expenditures took the company’s overall cost to Rs 156 crore in the previous fiscal year. The decent scale and effective control on advertising helped Chingari to reduce its losses by 70% to Rs 42 crore in FY23 from Rs 139 crore in FY22. Meanwhile, its EBITDA margin improved to -36.3%. On a unit level, the Mumbai-based firm spent Rs 1.38 to earn a rupee in FY23. FY22-FY23 FY22 FY23 EBITDA Margin -284% -36.3% Expense/Rupee of ops revenue ₹3.86 ₹1.38 ROCE -376% N/A Chingari has raised a total of Rs 360 crore across rounds while its total outstanding losses stood at Rs 223 crore until March 2023. Importantly, it had a total current assets of only Rs 24 crore at the end of FY23. Between short videos and crypto, it’s a tough call to pick the least promising option in hand for Chingari. While FY24 figures will reflect the impact of the Crypto winter, even as FY23 probably derived some momentum from there, it certainly makes one pessimistic about the story for FY24. On the cost front, one beauty of the Crypto business (the only one, some would argue ), is that the business no longer counts on high sales and marketing costs. In many cases, the model has moved to a revenue share with its beneficiaries , a slightly evolved version of multi level marketing schemes in fact. That might have explain the lower costs as well for FY23. Now that the firm has moved to a desi version of OnlyFans, it is anyone’s guess what kind of insights it will offer about India ‘s online audiences in due course. We are betting not many would be waiting with baited breath.

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Treebo crosses Rs 100 Cr revenue in FY24, outstanding losses climb to Rs 488 Cr

EntrackrEntrackr · 6m ago
Treebo crosses Rs 100 Cr revenue in FY24, outstanding losses climb to Rs 488 Cr
Medial

Treebo crosses Rs 100 Cr revenue in FY24, outstanding losses climb to Rs 488 Cr Treebo Hotels, a premium-budget hotel chain, crossed the Rs 100 crore revenue milestone in the fiscal year ending March 2024. Despite this growth, the Bengaluru-based company saw its losses rise by 17%, bringing total outstanding losses to Rs 488 crore. Treebo Hotels’s revenue from operations grew 22.5% to Rs 109 crore in FY24 from Rs 89 crore in FY23, its consolidated financial statements filed with the Registrar of Companies show. Income from accommodation services (taken on lease and managed properties) formed 95% of the total operating revenue which increased by 22.3% to Rs 104 crore in FY24 from Rs 85 crore in FY23. The rest of the income comes from the sale of products, and subscription services. The company also added Rs 7.22 crore as other income (non-operating) which tallied its overall revenue to Rs 116 crore in FY24 from Rs 94 crore in FY23. Treebo spent 41% of its overall expenditure on employee benefits which increased marginally by 7% to Rs 59 crore in FY24. Its cost and commission surged 70% and 48% to Rs 17 crore and Rs 43 crore in the previous fiscal year. Its cost of materials, legal, technology, traveling, and other overheads took the overall cost up by 22% to Rs 144 crore in FY24 from Rs 118 crore in FY23. The increased advertising and commission costs led Treebo to raise its losses by 16.7% to Rs 28 crore in FY24, compared to Rs 24 crore in FY23. Its ROCE and EBITDA margin stood at -540% and -18.1% respectively. On a unit level, it spent Rs 1.32 to earn a rupee in FY24. The company’s total current assets stood at Rs 34 crore with cash and bank balances of Rs 7 crore in the previous fiscal. According to startup data intelligence platform TheKredible, decade-old Treebo has secured Rs 566 crore (approximately $70 million) in funding from investors including Accor, Elevation Capital, Matrix Partners, and Bertelsmann. The company’s most recent major funding, amounting to $16 million, was raised in June 2021. Treebo competes directly with Bloom Hotels and FabHotels. In FY24, Bloom Hotels saw its operational revenue rise by 73.6% to Rs 250 crore, with a profit of Rs 14 crore. FabHotels recorded Rs 224 crore in operating revenue for FY23 but has not yet filed its FY24 annual report.

Games24x7 crosses Rs 2,000 Cr income in FY23; controls losses

EntrackrEntrackr · 1y ago
Games24x7 crosses Rs 2,000 Cr income in FY23; controls losses
Medial

Real money gaming platform Games24x7 has continued to grow its scale: their collection grew 70% year-on-year in FY23. The controlled spending on employee benefits and advertising helped the Mumbai-based firm keep its losses in check during the same period. Games24x7’s revenue from operations grew 70.1% to Rs 1,988 crore in FY23 from Rs 1,169 crore in FY22, its consolidated financial statements filed with the Registrar of Companies show. Games24x7 mainly runs RummyCircle and the fantasy sports platform, My11Circle. The platform fee deducted for joining tournaments or contests is the primary source of revenue for Games24x7 which accounted for 99% of the operating income. The rest of the operating revenue comes from selling virtual items in freemium games. The company also added Rs 35 crore from the interest and gain on current investment tallying the overall income to Rs 2,023 crore in FY23. For the gaming platform, advertisement and business promotion expenses accounted for 66% of the overall expenditure, which surged by 61.7% to Rs 1,421 crore in FY23 from Rs 879 crore in FY22. The firm’s burn on employee benefits, legal, traveling, training, recruitment, subscription membership, and other overheads took its overall expenditure up by 43.4% to Rs 2147 crore in FY23. The 70% growth in scale and controlled cost helped the firm’s losses go down to Rs 199 crore in FY23 from Rs 282 crore in FY22. Its ROCE and EBITDA margin improved to -18% and -4.6%, respectively. On a unit level, it spent Rs 1.08 to earn a rupee in FY23. FY22-FY23 FY22 FY23 EBITDA Margin -24% -4.6% Expense/₹ of Op Revenue ₹1.28 ₹1.08 ROCE -48% -18% Games 24×7 has raised over $107 million to date including its $75 million round led by Malabar Investment at a valuation of $2.5 billion. According to the startup data intelligence platform TheKredible, Tiger Global is the largest external stakeholder with 22.39%. In March, Games24x7’s My11Circle became the new fantasy sports official partner for IPL (Indian Premier League) for five years, outbidding its rival Dream11. Games24X7 also said that it has tripled its marketing investment this year. This will reflect in the company’s financial performance in FY25.

Info Edge crosses Rs 2,500 Cr revenue and Rs 500 Cr profit threshold in FY24

EntrackrEntrackr · 1y ago
Info Edge crosses Rs 2,500 Cr revenue and Rs 500 Cr profit threshold in FY24
Medial

Info Edge, the parent company of Naukri and 99acres, published its financial statements on Thursday. The consolidated figures showcased a modest 8% increase in revenue for FY24. However, the company made a turnaround in its bottom line, transitioning from a loss of Rs 70 crore in FY23 to a profit of Rs 594 crore in FY24. Info Edge’s revenue from operations grew 8% to Rs 2,536 crore in FY24 from Rs 2,345 crore in FY23, its consolidated financial statements disclosed with the stock exchange shows. Meanwhile, the company posted a 4.8% increase in revenue to Rs 657 crore in Q4 FY24 from Rs 627 crore in Q3 FY24. The Sanjeev Bikchandani-led firm operates through different segments. Income from Naukari.com and related portals formed 74.1% of its total revenue which increased 7.49% to Rs 1,880 crore in FY24. Its other segment 99acres saw a 23.6% growth to Rs 351 crore in FY24. Jeevansathi and Shiksha combined participated with Rs 305 crore of revenue during FY24. Info Edge made Rs 414 crore from non-operating activities tallying its total revenue to Rs 2,950 crore in FY24. Akin to other internet companies, its employee benefits accounted for 61% of its total expenditure which grew only 2.83% to Rs 1,128 crore in FY24 from Rs 1,097 crore in FY22. Info Edge’s network/internet, advertising cum promotional, legal, traveling and other overheads push the total expenditure to Rs 1830 crore in FY23 from Rs 1,858 crore in FY23. Note 1: The company recorded exceptional items of Rs 110 crore and Rs 509 crore in FY24 and FY23 respectively due to the decrease in the carrying value of investments. This was the primary reason for the significant loss posted in FY23. Note 2: The company has 15 joint ventures including Makesense, Happily Unmarried’s Ustraa (now acquired by VLCC), Shopkirana, Juno, Sploot and others during FY24. Info Edge recorded a share loss of Rs 131 crore and 231 crore in FY24 and FY23 respectively in its joint ventures which also makes a part of its consolidated figures and reflects losses in the financial statements. At the end, Indo Edge posted a net profit of Rs 594 crore in FY24 where the figures stood at a loss of Rs 70 crore in FY23 (refer note 1 and 2). On a unit level, it spent Rs 0.72 to earn a rupee in FY23.

Smartworks crosses Rs 700 Cr revenue in FY23; losses up 44%

EntrackrEntrackr · 1y ago
Smartworks crosses Rs 700 Cr revenue in FY23; losses up 44%
Medial

Co-working platform Smartworks has been demonstrating strong growth in the last two fiscal years — its scale grew two-fold to cross Rs 710 crore in revenue in the fiscal year ending March 2023. However, the company’s losses also crossed the Rs 100 crore mark. Smartworks’ revenue from operations surged 97.5% to Rs 711 crore in FY23 from Rs 360 crore in FY22, its consolidated financial statements sourced from the Registrar of Companies (RoC) show. Smartworks provides managed office spaces by leasing properties from real estate developers and subsequently subleasing them to enterprises or companies. The company has a presence across Delhi-NCR, Kolkata, Bengaluru, Chennai, Pune, Hyderabad, and others. Revenue from lease rental accounted for 97% of the total operating revenue which increased 97.4% to Rs 687 crore crore in FY23. The rest of the collections came from allied services. On the expense side, the cost of depreciation and amortization turned out to be the largest cost center accounting for 40.5% of the overall expenses. This cost surged by 67.9% to Rs 356 crore in FY23. Its employee benefits, finance, repairs, electricity, safety, custodial fees, and other overheads catalyzed the firm’s overall expenditure by 80.3% to Rs 880 crore in FY23 from Rs 488 crore in FY22. Head to TheKredible for the detailed expense breakup. Expense Breakdown Total ₹ 488 Cr https://thekredible.com/company/smartworks/financials View Full Data To access complete data, visithttps://thekredible.com/company/smartworks/financials Total ₹ 880 Cr https://thekredible.com/company/smartworks/financials View Full Data To access complete data, visithttps://thekredible.com/company/smartworks/financials Employee benefit Employee benefit Finance costs Finance costs Depreciation and amortisation Depreciation and amortisation Repairs to building Repairs to building Electricity Electricity Safety security Safety security Custodial fees Custodial fees Others To check complete Expense Breakdown visit thekredible.com View full data The increase of 80% in overall expenses resulted in a 44.29% surge in losses which reached Rs 101 crore in FY23 as compared to Rs 70 crore in FY22. On a unit level, it spent Rs 1.24 to earn a rupee in FY23. Gurugram-based Smartworks has raised over $50 million to date including its $25 million Series A round from the Singapore-based Keppel Land. The company is also reportedly in talks to raise $70-90 million. With its focus on managed office spaces besides co-working, Smartworks has sought to serve a larger segment of the market, particularly larger firms that are not so enamored with a co-working option. However, as evident, that can drive up costs a lot more, leaving the firm to travel an extended runway to profitability. With strong revenue momentum and a commercial market that is in very healthy condition, it does look like the firm will be in the black soon, and seeking newer avenues and markets for growth.

Exotel crosses 400 Cr revenue in FY23; losses jump 2.5X

EntrackrEntrackr · 11m ago
Exotel crosses 400 Cr revenue in FY23; losses jump 2.5X
Medial

Cloud telephony platform Exotel has been bleeding in pursuit of growth, as evident from its financials for the fiscal year ending March 2023. The company released its annual results this week, originally due on September 30, 2023. Exotel’s revenue from operations grew 32.1% to Rs 420 crore in FY23 from Rs 318 crore in FY22, its consolidated financial statements sourced from the Registrar of Companies (RoC) show. The 13-year-old company offers voice and SMS contact center capabilities for businesses to manage their customer engagement over the cloud. The rendering of internet-enabled cloud communication services was the primary source of revenue for Exotel. Income from software license, chatbot services, and the sale of its products including API(s), browser extension, software development kit, and mobile phone applications were other co-revenue channels for Exotel. The Blume Ventures-backed firm generated 81% of its operating revenue from domestic services, with the remaining revenue coming from Southeast Asia, the Middle East, and Africa in FY23. Moving towards the cost side, employee benefits accounted for 44.2% of the overall expenditure which increased 43.3% to Rs 245 crore in FY23 from Rs 171 crore in FY22. The company’s spending on telephone-postage, legal, marketing (advertising cum promotional), hosting, and other overheads inflated its overall cost by 51.8% to Rs 554 crore in FY23 as compared to Rs 365 crore in FY22. See TheKredible for the complete expense breakdown. The 45% and 65% surge in employee benefits and telephone/postage, respectively, led Exotel to post a 2.5X increase in losses to Rs 109 crore in FY23 from Rs 45 crore in FY22. Notably, the company was making profits during FY21 and FY20. Its ROCE and EBITDA margin worsened to -21.9% and -18.3%, respectively. On a unit level, it spent Rs 1.32 to earn a rupee in FY23. Exotel certainly had a lot of hype and hopes around its future back in 2020, but those hopes seem to have been belied, if we consider the story since then. Slipping into losses aside, the firm has also grown below estimates at the time. Notably, the company had claimed at the time of its last fund raise in 2022 that it is growing at an annualized rate of 70% on a revenue run rate of $50 million, or almost 400 crores. Competition in the cloud telephony business might be one thing, but margins is a bigger issue. FY22-FY23 FY22 FY23 EBITDA Margin -4.88% -18.34% Expense/₹ of Op Revenue ₹1.15 ₹1.32 ROCE -4.70% -21.90% Exotel has raised over $100 million to date including $40 million led by Steadview Capital in 2022. According to the startup data intelligence platform TheKredible, A91 Partners is the largest external stakeholder with a 25.7% stake followed by Blume Ventures. Head to TheKredible for the complete shareholding pattern.

FabHotels gross revenue crosses Rs 550 Cr in FY24, losses widen 23%

EntrackrEntrackr · 5m ago
FabHotels gross revenue crosses Rs 550 Cr in FY24, losses widen 23%
Medial

FabHotels gross revenue crosses Rs 550 Cr in FY24, losses widen 23% Casa2 Stays, the parent firm of FabHotels, reported a 34% increase in gross revenue for the fiscal year ending March 2024. However, its loss rose by 23%, driven by a twofold increase in employee benefit expenses. FabHotels’ gross revenue increased to Rs 552 crore in FY24 from Rs 412 crore in the previous fiscal year (FY23), according to its financial statement sourced from the Registrar of Companies (RoC). The revenue for FY23 appears different this year as it marks FabHotels’ first set of financial statements prepared in compliance with Indian Accounting Standards (Ind AS). FabHotels, a budget hotel chain with over 600 properties across more than 50 cities in India, generated 99.4% of its gross revenue from accommodation bookings. Gross revenue increased by 33.35% to Rs 549 crore in FY24. Meanwhile, other revenue sources contributed Rs 3.3 crore. The company also recorded an additional income of Rs 11 crore from interest on deposits and liabilities written off, which pushed its overall revenue to Rs 563.6 crore in the last fiscal year. Accommodation expenses remained the largest cost component forming 74% of the overall cost, which grew by 32% to Rs 435 crore. FabHotels’ employee costs shot up 2X to Rs 92 crore in FY24. This includes Rs 15 crore as ESOP cost. Its commission expenses rose by 8% to Rs 27 crore, while other costs added Rs 34 crore. Overall, total expenses grew by 38.5% to Rs 588 crore in FY24 from Rs 424.7 crore in FY23. The two-fold jump in employee benefits led FabHotel to increase its losses by 23% to Rs 114 crore in FY24, compared to Rs 93 crore in FY23. Its ROCE and EBITDA Margin were recorded at -84.09% and -19.52%, respectively. On a unit basis, the company spent Rs 1.06 to earn a rupee of revenue. At the end of FY24, FabHotel’s current assets stood at Rs 172 crore, including cash and bank balances worth Rs 94 crore. FabHotel has raised around $70 million to date. Accel is the largest external stakeholder with 21.39% followed by Goldman Sachs. FabHotels competes directly with Treebo and Bloom Hotels. In FY24, Treebo surpassed Rs 100 crore in revenue, while Bloom Hotels achieved a 73.6% increase in operational revenue to Rs 250 crore and recorded a profit of Rs 14 crore. FabHotels, with its budget offerings and reach, faces a moment of truth to deliver sustainable profitability that can power future growth. The hospitality sector leaves very little margin for major misses now. FabHotels has placed its bets, with little leeway to change much now. Judgement awaits in the next few months and year, perhaps.

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