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Prosus 2024 report card: Byju’s write-off, Swiggy and PayU growth

EntrackrEntrackr · 1y ago
Prosus 2024 report card: Byju’s write-off, Swiggy and PayU growth
Medial

Prosus, (formerly Naspers) has published its 2024 annual report which includes its Indian portfolio companies. While the company wrote-off its investment in Byju’s, the South African investment conglomerate also offered performance of its bet in India. Fintrackr has analyzed the report to decode insights and nuggets into the Prosus’ portfolio which invested $8-9 billion in the country since 2018. Let’s start with Byju’s which is staring at bankruptcy. [Byju’s] During FY24, the investor wrote off its 9.6% stake in Byju’s, amounting to an investment of $493 million, due to a significant decline in the edtech giant’s equity value. They’d done the same with Zest Money in FY2023: wrote off their substantial 19.4% stake. [Swiggy] Prosus holds a 32.6% stake in Swiggy (excluding ESOP) which is set to make its public debut in the coming months. According to the report, the food delivery and quick commerce firm’s revenue from operations increased by 24%, driven by a 26% rise in its gross order value during the fiscal year ending March 2024. While the investor didn’t give revenue numbers, per our calculation, Swiggy ended FY24 with Rs 10,695 crore revenue in the fiscal year ending March 2024. Supported by a fleet of around 3,87,000 active delivery partners, Swiggy’s user base reached 104 million, according to the report. Its food delivery biz grew in double digits while the other revenue streams including restaurant advertising and platform fees helped Swiggy improve its operational profitability, the report added. Prosus also added a positive note to Swiggy’s quick commerce segment (Instamart) as its GOV increased with improved unit economics. Read: IPO Prep-Swiggy paints a healthy financial picture in the first 9 months of FY24, for more details. [PayU] Prosus operates and owns PayU (a subsidiary of Prosus) which reported a 22% year-on-year growth on a consolidated basis to $1.1 billion in FY24. PayU’s core payment gateway biz formed 88% of its overall collection which increased 23% to $975 million while the firm’s TPV (total payment value) spiked 22% in the previous fiscal year. According to the report, India is the largest market for its PSP business contributing 46% of core PSP revenue and 60% of TPV. Despite not being able to onboard new customers in FY24, this business grew 11% to $444 million in the said fiscal year. PayU’s India BNPL and personal credit revenue grew 29% to $107 million while the losses for this segment increased to $20 million followed by continuous investment in building the merchant lending portfolio, as per the report. PayU received in-principle authorization from the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) on 23 April 2024 to operate as a payment aggregator. The Gurugram-based firm also began onboarding new merchants.

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Exclusive: PayU defers IPO plan to next fiscal year

EntrackrEntrackr · 9m ago
Exclusive: PayU defers IPO plan to next fiscal year
Medial

Digital payments platform PayU has postponed its public listing plan in this fiscal year, two sources aware of the development told Entrackr. The Prosus-owned company was earlier contemplating its initial public offering in the ongoing calendar year or H2 2024. “PayU has extended its IPO plan in the current fiscal year, although the company has finalized Goldman Sach as one of its lead bankers,” said one of the sources requesting anonymity. “The firm has chalked out plan to go public sometime after first quarter of FY26.” PayU has been planning a public listing for the past couple of years but it deferred the plan as the Reserve Bank of India returned its payment aggregator license due to its complex corporate structure. However, the firm regained the payment aggregator license in April this year and started onboarding new merchants which was banned between January 2023 and April 2024. In India, PayU has a base of over 500,000 merchants across three business sectors: payments, credit, and PayTech. It also claims to generate over $60 billion in annualized transaction volume (TPV). As per sources, the company has been busy in readying itself for the public listing. “PayU may file DRHP in early 2025,” said another source who also wished not to be named. Queries sent to PayU didn’t elicit any response. We will update the story in case they do. Unlike FY23, PayU’s revenue grew only 11% to $444 million in the fiscal year ending March 2024 and also slipped into losses. The slow revenue growth and negative margin were the result of RBI’s restriction. PayU has been eyeing profitability and this is why it also laid off around 100 employees from its credit team, as per The Head And Tale report. Several senior employees also left the company in the past two years.

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