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Kinetic Green's losses balloon 11X in FY24, revenue dips 3%

EntrackrEntrackr · 4m ago
Kinetic Green's losses balloon 11X in FY24, revenue dips 3%
Medial

Kinetic Green's losses balloon 11X in FY24, revenue dips 3% Electric vehicle manufacturer Kinetic Green faced significant financial strain in FY24, with losses increasing 11X. Meanwhile, the Greater Pacific Capital-backed company's revenue declined by 3% year-on-year. Kinetic Green’s revenue from operations decreased to Rs 291 crore in FY24 from Rs 301 crore in FY23, its consolidated financial statement from the Registrar of Companies (RoC) shows. Kinetic Green manufactures electric vehicles, including two and three-wheelers such as electric scooters, rickshaws, cycles, and buggies. Collections from the sale of electric vehicles were the sole source of revenue for Kinetic Green for the fiscal year ending March 2024. The cost of procurement remains the largest cost center for Kinetic Green, forming 62% of the overall expenditure. To the tune of scale, this cost dipped by 5.4% to Rs 229 crore in FY24 from Rs 242 crore in FY23. The firm’s advertising cost spiked 8.2X to Rs 58 crore while its employee benefits saw a surge of 52.4% during the previous fiscal. Its finance, transportation, legal, travel, and other overheads increased the total expenditure by 19% to Rs 369 crore in FY24 from Rs 310 crore in FY23. The 8X surge in advertising and a sharp rise in employee benefits led Kinetic Green to widen its losses by 11X to Rs 77 crore in FY24, compared to Rs 7 crore in FY23. Its EBITDA margins stood at -20.55% while the company spent Rs 1.27 to earn a rupee of operating revenue in FY24. By the end of FY24, the Pune-based firm reported current assets worth Rs 169 crore including Rs 2.3 crore of cash and bank balance. Kinetic Green has raised a total of $27 million of funding to date, including a $25 million round from Greater Pacific Capital. According to the startup data intelligence platform TheKredible, Greater Pacific Capital is the largest external stakeholder with 5.6%. Its co-founders Sulajia Firodia Motwani and Ritesh Ramesh Mantri cumulatively hold 91.7% of the company.

Virat Kohli-backed WROGN’s revenue dips 29% in FY24

EntrackrEntrackr · 10m ago
Virat Kohli-backed WROGN’s revenue dips 29% in FY24
Medial

Virat Kohli-backed men’s apparel brand WROGN’s parent company has been struggling to grow, as the company’s revenue dropped by over 29% in the fiscal year ending March 2024. At the same time, the firm’s losses surged by 28.2%, nearing the Rs 57 crore mark during the same period. WROGN’s revenue from operations dwindled 29.2% to Rs 243.75 crore during FY24 as compared to Rs 344.3 crore in FY23, its consolidated financial statements sourced from the Registrar of Companies show. For background, WROGN reported a flat scale in FY23. The firm also generated Rs 21 crore from interest and gain on financial assets which took its overall revenue to Rs 264.8 crore in FY24. Founded in 2014 by brother-sister duo Anjana and Vikram Reddy, WROGN is engaged in the business of trading outdoor products such as apparel, footwear, and accessories among others. Leveraging Kohli’s influence, the brand has rapidly expanded its presence through exclusive brand outlets and strategic partnerships with marketplaces. On the expenses front, cost of materials formed 53.6% of the total expenses. This cost slid 29% and stood at Rs 163.91 crore in FY24. Employee benefits expenses also saw a dip by 7.5% to Rs 32.26 crore during the same period. Significantly, the employee cost also includes ESOP expenses worth Rs 1.96 crore. Commission paid to the selling agents was down by 28% in FY24 at Rs 30.83 crore while other expenses such as advertising promotions and legal & professional fees also shrank significantly. In total, the overall expenditure of the company went down by 24.7% to Rs 305.56 crore during FY24 from Rs 405.6 crore in the previous fiscal year. For the complete expense breakdown, head to TheKredible. WROGN tried to cover up its losses by taking cost-cutting measures but due to the sharp fall in collection, its losses increased by 28.2% to Rs 56.76 crore during the year against Rs 44.26 crore in FY23. Its operating cash outflows, however, improved by over 63% to Rs 5.23 crore during the year. Its outstanding swelled to Rs 636.58 crore as of FY24. As per TheKredible, the firm’s EBITDA margin and ROCE stood at -6.04% and -72.07%, respectively. On a unit level, WROGN spent Rs 1.25 to earn a rupee of operating revenue during FY24. FY23-FY24 FY23 FY24 EBITDA Margin -4.42% -6.04% Expense/₹ of Op Revenue ₹1.18 ₹1.25 ROCE -25.49% -72.07% Aditya Birla’s TMRW recently picked up a 16% stake in WROGN at a $105 million valuation by pouring in Rs 125 crore or $15 million. It’s worth noting that Aditya Birla also acquired a similar brand Bewakoof in December 2022. WROGN has raised around $90 million from the likes of Accel, Flipkart, Kohli, and Sachin Tendulkar since its inception in 2014. In November 2020, Flipkart invested an undisclosed amount in WROGN’s Series F round. The e-commerce major is also an investor in Hrithik Roshan’s HRX which competes with WROGN. According to TheKredible’s D2C report, fashion (apparel, jewelry, footwear, eyewear, and accessories) is the largest category attracting a large set of consumers. India’s fashion industry is booming, with the potential to reach $43.2 billion by 2025. But seeing how anaemic or even negative the numbers have been for most, one can only marvel at the outlier that a Zudio has been over the last two years with its triple-digit growth. Of course, the broader slowdown in the category has been blamed on multiple possible factors, including a craze for investment in the stock markets directly or indirectly. Or perhaps the prioritisation of getting an iPhone over other branded products, considering the rise in iPhone sales in India. Either way, WROGN’s numbers indicate a problem it has acknowledged for some time now, and is making efforts to manage. The challenge it faces is as tough as any pitch Kohli has played on, one suspects.

Morgan Stanley-backed Recykal’s scale dips in FY24; losses spike 31%

EntrackrEntrackr · 4m ago
Morgan Stanley-backed Recykal’s scale dips in FY24; losses spike 31%
Medial

Morgan Stanley-backed Recykal’s scale dips in FY24; losses spike 31% While Recykal, a B2B waste management marketplace, achieved 4X year-on-year growth in FY23, the firm could not maintain the same momentum in FY24, with its gross revenue declining by nearly 5%. Moreover, the company’s losses spiked 31% in the same period. Recykal’s gross revenue declined by 4.4% to Rs 712 crore in FY24 from Rs 745 crore in FY23, its consolidated financial statements sourced from the Registrar of Companies show. Founded in 2016, Recykal offers digital solutions for waste management, assisting businesses in meeting EPR targets, sourcing recyclables, and tracking industrial waste. Its services include EPR certificates, plastic neutrality, ITAD, a digital marketplace, and circularity solutions. Gross collections from scrap and waste sales contributed 85% of the gross revenue, which declined 7.4% year-on-year to Rs 608 crore in FY24 from Rs 657 crore in FY23. The remaining revenue was generated from the sale of sustainability services, including EPR certificates. Recykal also added Rs 6 crore interest on deposits and gain on the sale of current investments which tallied the overall income to Rs 718 crore in the last fiscal year, from Rs 748 crore in FY23. For the waste management firm, scrap and waste procurement remained the largest cost center, making up 89.5% of total expenses. With a slight decline in scale, this cost decreased by 3.6% to Rs 673 crore in FY24. Employee benefits surged by 43.3% to Rs 43 crore in FY24, including Rs 3.2 crore in ESOP costs (non-cash). Provisions for doubtful debts, legal expenses, rent, communication, logistics, and other overheads drove total expenditure to Rs 752 crore in FY24. The decline in scale led Recykal to record a 30.8% increase in losses, standing at Rs 34 crore in FY24, up from Rs 26 crore in FY23. Its Return on Capital Employed (ROCE) stood at -15.66%, while its EBITDA margin was -4.04%, with an expense-to-revenue ratio of Rs 1.06. By the end of FY24, Recykal reported total current assets of Rs 317 crore, including Rs 70 crore in cash and bank balances. Recykal has raised over $38 million to date including its $13 million round led by 360 ONE Asset Management. According to the startup data intelligence platform TheKredible, Morgan Stanley is the largest external stakeholder followed by 360 One Asset Management.

Smallcase revenue soars over 2X in FY24; losses down 74%

EntrackrEntrackr · 7m ago
Smallcase revenue soars over 2X in FY24; losses down 74%
Medial

Following a flat growth in FY23, Amazon-backed Smallcase has reported 2.2X growth during the fiscal year ending March 2024. At the same time, the Bengaluru-based firm controlled its losses by 74% in the last fiscal. Smallcase revenue from operations surged to Rs 67.4 crore in the last fiscal year from Rs 30.6 crore in FY23, its consolidated annual figures sourced from the Registrar of Companies show. The company operates a platform for brokers to facilitate transactions in exchange-traded products. It primarily makes money through transaction fees collected from brokers which accounted for 85.8% of the total revenue. This income spiked 2.6X to Rs 57.8 crore in FY24. Revenue from the research service fees and other ancillary services stood at Rs 5.1 crore and Rs 4.5 crore, respectively. Smallcase made another Rs 7.6 crore from interest on deposits and gain on investments which tallied the overall revenue to Rs 75 crore in FY24 from Rs 43 crore in FY23. Employee benefits were the largest cost center for Smallcase which formed 64.8% of the overall expenditure. This cost dropped 15.7% to Rs 70 crore in FY24 that also includes Rs 2.9 crore as ESOP cost (non-cash). Smallcase’s advertising and promotion cost shrank by 75.8% to Rs 16 crore in FY24. Technology, legal, rent, maintenance, and other overheads pushed its overall expenditure to Rs 108 crore in FY24. Excluding the cost of net loss on fair value changes of shares subject to buyback of Rs 141 crore and Rs 32 crore in FY24 and FY23, respectively. According to the shareholder agreement, in September 2023, shareholders waived their buyback rights for certain shares, making these rights unenforceable. From September 30, the shares qualified as equity instruments under Ind AS. A fair value change of Rs 141 crore (up from Rs 31.65 crore on 31 March 2023) was recorded in profit and loss, and Rs 1,081.78 crore was reclassified to equity share capital and securities premium. The 75.8% and 15.7% drop in advertising and employee benefits enabled Smallcase to reduce its losses by 74.4% to Rs 34 crore in FY24. Its ROCE and EBITDA margins improved to -23.6% and -41.3%, respectively. On a unit level, the company spent Rs 1.60 to earn a rupee in the last fiscal. Smallcase has raised around $70 million to date including $40 million in Series C round led by Fearing Capital in 2021. According to the startup data intelligence platform TheKredible, Peak XV is the largest external stakeholder followed by Fearing Capital and Blume Ventures. While Smallcase continued a recent trend of cut backs on advertising costs, the firm is certainly not a shoo in for a profitable future yet. Typically, the impact of cut backs follows with a lag, and FY25 will show us how SmallCase emerges from the cost-cutting. Suffice to say, if growth drops significantly, it will lead to existential questions for the firm. We believe the firm has reason to be disappointed with the takings from research and other services, and now faces the choice of continuing the burn there or focus harder on the platform business.

Foxtale's revenue soars to Rs 83 Cr in FY24, losses widen

EntrackrEntrackr · 6m ago
Foxtale's revenue soars to Rs 83 Cr in FY24, losses widen
Medial

Foxtale, a direct-to-consumer (D2C) skincare brand, reported Rs 83 crore of revenue in its third full fiscal year, which ended in March 2024. However, in pursuit of scale, the losses for the Mumbai-based company crossed Rs 50 crore in the same period. Foxtale’s revenue from operations surged around 6X to Rs 83 crore in FY24 from Rs 14 crore in FY23, its annual financial statements sourced from the Registrar of Companies show. Founded in 2021 by Romita Mazumdar, Foxtale is an affordable skincare brand focused on products designed for Indian skin. Its products target issues such as acne, aging, and hyperpigmentation. The brand's products are available on its website and various marketplaces, including Nykaa, Amazon, Blinkit, Flipkart, and Myntra. The sale of skin and beauty products was Foxtale's sole source of revenue in the previous fiscal year. Similar to other D2C skincare brands, Foxtale spent Rs 50 crore on advertising and promotion, which is 36% of its overall cost. This cost saw an increase of 3.8X during FY24. To the tune of scale, its cost of procurement grew 5.8X to Rs 35 crore in the previous fiscal. Foxtale's employee benefit expenses, including salaries, provident fund (PF), gratuity, and ESOPs, surged 2.8x to Rs 20 crore in FY24. Its delivery, legal, outsourcing manpower, and other overheads pushed the overall expenditure to Rs 139 crore in FY24 from Rs 33 crore in FY23. Despite registering 6x fold in scale, higher advertising expenses and employee benefit costs drove Foxtale's losses up by 189% to Rs 55 crore in FY24, compared to Rs 19 crore in FY23. On a unit level, it spent Rs 1.67 to earn a rupee of operating revenue. At the end of FY24, its current assets were recorded at Rs 69 crore, including cash and bank balances of Rs 44 crore. Foxtale has emerged as one of the few D2C startups to secure $48 million across two funding rounds in just seven months. Its latest $30 million round was spearheaded by Japanese beauty products giant, Kose Corporation. Its major competitors include Sugar Cosmetics, WOW Skin Science, Plum, MamaEarth, Minimalist, and several others.

PayU-backed Mindgate profit soars 3.6X in FY24, posts Rs 257 Cr revenue

EntrackrEntrackr · 3m ago
PayU-backed Mindgate profit soars 3.6X in FY24, posts Rs 257 Cr revenue
Medial

Payments technology company Mindgate made headlines last week after Prosus’s PayU acquired a 43.5% stake in the firm. The strategic acquisition followed Mindgate’s impressive 34.6% year-on-year growth, with revenue surpassing Rs 250 crore in FY24 and net profits surging 3.6X. Mindgate’s revenue from operations grew to Rs 257 crore in FY24 from Rs 191 crore in FY23, its consolidated financial statements accessed from the Registrar of Companies (RoC) show. Mindgate is a digital payments company specializing in real-time payment processing and enterprise payment solutions for banks, financial institutions, and businesses. Income from subscription-based SaaS services accounted for 87.7% of the total operating revenue, which rose by 35% to Rs 201 crore in FY24. Revenue from transaction processing and annual maintenance services contributed Rs 40 crore and Rs 16 crore, respectively. The company also earned Rs 4 crore from interest on current investments, bringing its total revenue to Rs 261 crore in FY24 from Rs 195 crore in FY23. Similar to other SaaS tech firms, employee benefits made up 71% of Mindgate’s overall expenditure. This cost rose by 22.6% to Rs 163 crore in FY24. Additional expenses such as rent, subscription and membership fees, travel, advertising, and overheads pushed the total expenditure up by 24.5% to Rs 229 crore in FY24, compared to Rs 184 crore in FY23. Year-on-year growth, coupled with controlled costs, enabled Mindgate to post a 3.6X surge in profits to Rs 23.2 crore in FY24 from Rs 6.5 crore in FY23. At a unit level, the company spent Re 0.89 to earn a rupee in FY24, with improved ROCE and EBITDA margins of 17.03% and 13.6%, respectively. By the end of FY24, its total current assets stood at Rs 211 crore, including cash and bank balances of Rs 74 crore.

Toothsi parent MakeO reports flat revenue in FY24; losses trim 32%

EntrackrEntrackr · 5m ago
Toothsi parent MakeO reports flat revenue in FY24; losses trim 32%
Medial

Toothsi parent MakeO reports flat revenue in FY24; losses trim 32% Following over twofold growth in FY23, MakeO, the parent company of Toothsi and skincare brand Skinnsi, reported stable revenue for the fiscal year ending March 2024, but succeeded in reducing its losses by 32%. MakeO’s revenue from operations saw a modest increase of 6.5% to Rs 179 crore in FY24 from Rs 168 crore in FY23, according to its consolidated financial statements filed with the Registrar of Companies. Founded in 2018 by Arpi Mehta Shah, Pravin Shetty, Manjul Jain, and Anirudh Kal, MakeO began as the aligner brand Toothsi and later consolidated its flagship brands, including Skinnsi, to offer dental, skin, and hair treatment solutions. The sale of tooth aligners accounted for 69.2% of the operating revenue, increasing by 7% to Rs 124 crore in FY24. The rest of the revenue came from Skinnsi services, including laser hair reduction, facials, anti-aging treatments, and skincare products. Employee benefits remained the largest cost center at 36% of overall expenditure, amounting to Rs 119 crore in FY24. Consultant fees and marketing costs were reduced by 57% and 24%, respectively, to Rs 26 crore and Rs 69 crore in FY24. Other expenses totaled Rs 332 crore in FY24, down from Rs 395 crore in FY23. The cutback in costs helped MakeO reduce its losses by 31.8% to Rs 150 crore in FY24 from Rs 220 crore in FY23. Its ROCE and EBITDA margin stood at -77.3% and -66.12% with an expense-to-earnings ratio of Rs 1.85. At the end of FY24, MakeO’s current assets were Rs 153 crore with cash and bank balances of Rs 93 crore. MakeO has raised over $90 million to date, including $16 million led by 360 One Asset and the investment office of Ashish Kacholia. Eight Roads Ventures is the largest external stakeholder, followed by Think Investment.

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