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Bakingo crosses Rs 200 Cr revenue in FY24 with marginal losses

EntrackrEntrackr · 6m ago
Bakingo crosses Rs 200 Cr revenue in FY24 with marginal losses
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Fintrackr All Stories Bakingo crosses Rs 200 Cr revenue in FY24 with marginal losses Online bakery brand Bakingo recorded a 43% year-on-year growth during the last fiscal year ending March 2024. However, in pursuit of expansion, the losses for the Gurugram-based company increased marginally in the same period. Bakingo’s revenue from operations grew by 43% to Rs 208.7 crore in FY24, compared to Rs 145.7 crore in FY23, its consolidated financial statements sourced from the Registrar of Companies (RoC) show. Founded by Himanshu Chawla, Shrey Sehgal, and Suman Patra, Bakingo offers a variety of cakes and desserts, including its signature Cheesecake, Gourmet Cakes, Jar Cakes, and over 100 SKUs. The sale of these products was the only source of revenue for Bakingo. For the bakery firm, the cost of product procurement accounted for 42.2% of its overall expenditure. To the tune of scale, this cost increased 43% to Rs 90 crore in FY24. Its employee benefit grew by 40% to Rs 31.6 crore, while advertising expenses rose by 38% to Rs 27.7 crore. Platform commission fees also saw a jump of 65% to Rs 26.2 crore. Overall, Bakingo’s total expenses rose by 46% to Rs 213.8 crore in FY24 from Rs 146.3 crore in FY23. The surge in employee benefits, advertising, and procurement costs outpaced the revenue growth, resulting in its losses to increase to Rs 5.3 crore in FY24. Its ROCE and EBITDA margin stood at -6.05% and -0.98% respectively. Bakingo’s expense-to-revenue ratio was recorded at Rs 1.02 with total current assets of Rs 96.5 crore during FY24. Bakingo has raised $16 million (Rs 130 crore) to date, which was its maiden round led by Faering Capital last year at a valuation of Rs 571 crore. According to Fintrackr’s estimates, its enterprise value to revenue multiple stood at 2.7X. The growth in the last year seems to be an outcome of being able to optimise operations to a higher level. In a discretionary category with very high competition, we believe Bakingo still has work to do on the brand, quality perception and distribution to keep growing. For now, it seems to be simply a branded offering for those looking to buy from one, rather than the neighborhood shop or bakery. Signature offerings, better word of mouth, and perhaps even packaging are all gaps that need work.

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.

Porter reports Rs 2,734 Cr revenue in FY24; losses dip 45%

EntrackrEntrackr · 10m ago
Porter reports Rs 2,734 Cr revenue in FY24; losses dip 45%
Medial

On-demand intra-city logistic company Porter has maintained its growth trajectory in FY24 as its revenue spiked 56%, and crossed the Rs 2,700 crore threshold. At the same time, the firm controlled losses by 45% and brought it under Rs 100 crore in the same period. Porter’s revenue from operations grew 55.9% to Rs 2,733.8 crore during the fiscal year ending March 2024, the company’s consolidated financial statements sourced from the Registrar of Companies (RoC) show. For context, Porter’s revenue shot up 2X to Rs 1,753.8 crore in FY23. Porter company provides a full-stack logistics platform to help businesses optimize their last-mile delivery operations. It generated 99% of its total operating revenue via the goods transportation services while the remaining came from platform fees and other operating activities. The firm also topped up Rs 32.64 crore from interest and gain on financial assets which took its overall revenue to Rs 2,766 crore in FY24. On the expenses side, fleet operator costs (including all vehicle-related and delivery personal costs) formed 82.8% of the total expenses. This cost grew 50% and stood at Rs 2,369 crore in FY24. Employee benefits expenses also went up 24.3% to Rs 237.36 crore during the same period. Significantly, the employee cost also includes employee stock compensation (ESOP) expenses worth Rs 6.69 crore. Advertising-promotions, information technology, and legal & professional fees were other major expenses of the company during the year. Adding to that, the total expenditure of the company inclined 45.7% to Rs 2,862 crore during FY24 from Rs 1,964 crore in the previous fiscal year. For the complete expense breakdown, head to TheKredible. Despite rising expenses, Porter managed to cut down its losses by 45% to Rs 95.7 crore during the year against Rs 174.6 crore in FY23. Its operating cash outflows also improved by 48.5 to Rs 96.7 crore during the year. Porter’s outstanding losses stood at Rs 771.5 crore as of FY24. As per TheKredible, the firm’s EBITDA margin improved by 638 BPS to -2.89% in FY24. On a unit level, Porter spent Rs 1.05 to earn a rupee of operating revenue during the previous fiscal year. FY23-FY24 FY23 FY24 EBITDA Margin -9.27% -2.89% Expense/₹ of Op Revenue ₹1.12 ₹1.05 ROCE -33.31% -21.36% Porter managed to grow its scale without any fundraise in FY24 and FY23. Its $100 million Series E round led by Tiger Global and Vitruvian Partners came in October 2021 (FY22). The firm reportedly turned unicorn in an internal round which also included secondary components. However, the Bengaluru-based company has yet to announce it officially. Being on the brink of profitability adds a lot of reassurance for present and future investors of course, although Porter remains in a market that is particularly competitive even now. The fading away of Dunzo has also helped no doubt, and Porter has done well to step in almost seamlessly for many users. Investor fatigue that is setting in for the logistics sector also means future competition from startups will be limited, allowing Porter and larger players in the segment to target margin improvements. Expect Porter and many other firms to gradually turn into the kind of boring and predictable profit churners that public markets love.

Livspace revenue crosses Rs 1,200 Cr in FY24; losses shrink by 48%

EntrackrEntrackr · 10m ago
Livspace revenue crosses Rs 1,200 Cr in FY24; losses shrink by 48%
Medial

After an 85% year-on-year growth in FY23, omnichannel home interior and renovation platform Livspace saw a modest 14.78% growth in scale during the fiscal year ending March 2024. The Singapore-headquartered firm, however, kept its losses in check during the same period. Livspace’s revenue from operations increased to Rs 1,185.7 crore (SGD 192.48 million) in FY24 from Rs 1,033 (SGD 167.7 million) crore in FY23, according to its group company’s consolidated annual financial statements in Singapore. Livspace allows homeowners to discover pre-designed rooms, kitchens, and storage areas on its platform. Revenue from its interior projects biz formed 94% of the overall revenue which increased 16.5% to Rs 1,110.65 crore in FY24 from Rs 953.32 crore in FY23. The Bengaluru-based company generated additional revenue of Rs 69 crore from the sale of products and allied contractual services in FY24. It also added Rs 48.4 crore in income, mainly from interest on fixed deposits, bringing the total income to Rs 1,234 crore in FY24, up from Rs 1,058 crore in FY23. For the home interior brand, the cost of sales, including project materials, inventories, and materials consumed, accounted for 35.6% of the overall expenditure. Despite a 14% surge, this cost remained steady at Rs 586.8 crore in FY24. Its employee benefits decreased by 16.1% to Rs 579 crore in FY24, which includes Rs 124 crore in ESOP expenses. Marketing, rent, brokerage, and technology expenses contributed to an overall expenditure of Rs 1,647.8 crore (SGD 267.5 million) in FY24, down from Rs 1,861.6 crore (SGD 302.2 million) in FY23. FY23-FY24 FY23 FY24 EBITDA Margin -69% -27% Expense/₹ of Op Revenue ₹1.80 ₹1.39 ROCE -98% -79.5% Modest growth in scale, along with controlled spending on employee benefits and marketing, helped Livspace reduce its losses by 48.48% to Rs 413.8 crore (SGD 67.1 million) in FY24, down from Rs 803.3 crore (SGD 130.4 million) in FY23. Its ROCE and EBITDA margins improved to -79.5% and -27%, respectively. On a unit level, Livspace spent Rs 1.39 to earn a rupee in FY24. Livspace is all set to shift its domicile to India from Singapore and the firm has also received approval from its board, according to the company’s founder Ramakant Sharma. It has plans to go public in the next 18-24 months. The company, for all its all out efforts to reduce losses without giving up on growth faces a tough challenge to sustain these efforts. More often than not, there is a point where cost cuts become counter productive, or worse make you wonder what you were doing with them in the first place. Livspace is on course to discover either of those two realities soon. *Currency converted from Indian rupees to Singapore dollars: SGD 1 = 61.6 rupees.

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

EntrackrEntrackr · 1y 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.

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