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ShopKirana struggles to scale in FY24, narrows losses by 30%

EntrackrEntrackr · 6m ago
ShopKirana struggles to scale in FY24, narrows losses by 30%
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B2B e-commerce platform ShopKirana has struggled to scale in the last fiscal year as the company's gross revenue fell by over 6%. However, the Info Edge-funded company reduced its losses by over 30% in FY24. Shopkirana's gross revenue decreased 6.26% to Rs 639.16 crore in FY24 from Rs 681.81 crore in FY23, according to its consolidated financial statement sourced from the Registrar of Companies (RoC). ShopKirana is a B2B e-commerce platform that connects retailers and brands directly through a mobile app and helps them in placing orders, maintaining inventory, optimising the delivery routes and making payments. Besides helping in procurement, the platform provides financial services such as banking and loan facilities. The company's revenue is predominantly derived from product sales, contributing Rs 637.32 crore (99.71% of operational revenue). The revenue from product sales declined 6.3% from Rs 680 crore in FY23. Revenue from services saw an 85.29% increase, reaching Rs 1.26 crore, while non-operating revenue added Rs 4.2 crore, bringing the total revenue to Rs 643.37 crore in the last fiscal year. On the expense side, cost of materials, its largest expense, decreased by 7.14% to Rs 627.3 crore, while employee benefit expenses fell by 17.65% to Rs 35 crore. Transportation costs and other expenses also declined by 23.57% and 24.95%, respectively. Overall, Shopkirana's total expenses dropped by 8.81% to Rs 698.63 crore in the last fiscal year. In the end, ShopKirana managed to reduce its losses by 30.5% to Rs 55.25 crore in FY24. Its ROCE and EBITDA margin stood at -69.6% and -7.85%, respectively. On a unit basis, the firm spent Rs 1.09 to earn a rupee in FY24. As of March 2024, the firm reported Rs 90.75 crore of current assets including Rs 27.8 crore of cash and bank balance. According to TheKredible, ShopKirana has raised a total of $50.46 million in funding till date. Its lead investors include Info Edge, Sixth Sense Ventures, Oman India Joint Investment fund. Shopkirana majorly competes with Jumbotail and Udaan. Lightspeed-backed Udaan is the largest player in this space which posted Rs 5,706.6 crore GMV in FY24. Jumbotail, which reported Rs 850 crore revenue in FY23, has yet to file its annual report for FY24. But with none of them close to breakeven, it remains a tough segment to be in. While the attraction is undeniable, we believe most firms have underestimated the margin pressure in the segment. B2B anywhere tends to offer a more organised market with consistent numbers, but margins are usually an issue. That has left these firms scrambling to cut losses even at the cost of growth, no surprise considering their backers are not really known to offer the kind of blank cheque funding from say, a Softbank or even a Tiger Global or Prosus. The usual recourse in the B2B segment, to offer financing solutions is also not an option here, leaving these firms to offer support to a segment that itself is under fire from quick commerce as well. All in all, a situation ripe for a major pivot or at least a search for more revenue streams.

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Exotel posts flat scale in FY24; losses shrink 61%

EntrackrEntrackr · 6m ago
Exotel posts flat scale in FY24; losses shrink 61%
Medial

Fintrackr All Stories Exotel posts flat scale in FY24; losses shrink 61% Exotel’s revenue from operations increased 5.7% to Rs 444 crore in FY24 from Rs 420 crore in FY23, its consolidated annual financial statements sourced from the Registrar of Companies show. Kunal Manchanada 26 Dec 2024 11:55 IST Follow Us New Update Bengaluru-based cloud telephony platform Exotel reported flat growth for the fiscal year ending March 2024. Despite stagnant revenue, the company significantly improved its financial health, narrowing losses by more than 60%. This improvement was driven by strategic cost-cutting measures, particularly in employee benefits and advertising expenses. Exotel’s revenue from operations increased 5.7% to Rs 444 crore in FY24 from Rs 420 crore in FY23, its consolidated annual financial statements sourced from the Registrar of Companies show. Exotel provides cloud-based voice and SMS contact center solutions, enabling businesses to manage customer engagement efficiently. Its primary revenue stream comes from offering internet-enabled cloud communication services. Exotel also makes money through software licensing, chatbot services, and sales of its products, including APIs, browser extensions, software development kits, and mobile applications. Exotel has not provided the income bifurcation of above mentioned- services. However, 14% of its business came from Southeast Asia, the Middle East, and Africa in FY24. The company also added Rs 16 crore mainly from interest on deposits and investments, tallying the overall revenue to Rs 460 crore in FY24, compared to Rs 447 crore in FY23. For the cloud-based voice and SMS contact center firm, the cost of telephone and postage formed 39% of its overall cost which increased 10.2% to Rs 195 crore in FY23. Exotel managed to keep its employee benefits in check, which saw a reduction of 24% in FY24 to Rs 186 crore, as compared to Rs 245 crore in FY23. It’s worth noting that Exotel went through layoff during FY24, reducing its workforce by 15%. Its decreased advertising, legal, payment gateway, traveling, information technology, and other overheads took the total expenditure to Rs 499 crore in FY24 from Rs 555 crore in FY23. See TheKredible for the detailed expense breakup. Despite the modest growth in scale, the company managed to control its expenditures, resulting in its losses shrinking by 60.6% to Rs 43 crore in FY24 from Rs 109 crore in FY23. According to Fintrackr, Exotel’s EBITDA losses stood at Rs 16 crore in FY24. Exotel’s expense-to-revenue ratio was recorded at Rs 1.12, with ROCE and EBITDA margins of -8.9% and -3.48%, respectively. According to the annual statements, its total current assets were registered at 379 crore, with cash and bank balances of Rs 206 crore as of March 2024. The company has raised over $100 million so far including a $40 million Series D round 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. Exotel directly competes with Gupshup-owned Knowlarity, MyOperator, Ozonotel, and Tata Communications, and a few others. exotel Advertisment Disclaimer: Bareback Media has recently raised funding from a group of investors. Some of the investors may directly or indirectly be involved in a competing business or might be associated with other companies we might write about. This shall, however, not influence our reporting or coverage in any manner whatsoever. You may find a list of our investors here. Subscribe to our Newsletter! Be the first to get exclusive offers and the latest news Subscribe Now Related Articles LIVE ShopKirana struggles to scale in FY24, narrows losses by 30% LIVE LEAD hits Rs 350 Cr revenue milestone in FY24; cuts losses by 56% LIVE Simplilearn cuts losses by 56% in FY24, revenue growth stagnates LIVE Curefoods reports Rs 635 Cr income in FY24, halves losses LIVE Mintifi reports Rs 92 Cr PAT on Rs 384 Cr revenue in FY24 Read the Next Article

FarEye narrows losses by 63% amidst modest growth in FY24

EntrackrEntrackr · 2m ago
FarEye narrows losses by 63% amidst modest growth in FY24
Medial

FarEye narrows losses by 63% amidst modest growth in FY24 FarEye recorded only modest double-digit year-on-year growth in operating revenues for the fiscal year ending March 2024. However, it significantly reduced its losses, cutting them by nearly two-thirds during the same period. FarEye’s revenue from operations rose by 13% to Rs 157 crore in FY24 from Rs 139 crore in FY23, according to its consolidated financial statements recently filed with the Registrar of Companies (RoC). This marks a sharp slowdown from the 40% year-on-year growth the Tiger Global-backed company reported in FY23. 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. The cost structure saw a dramatic reset as employee benefit expenses fell 39% to Rs 153 crore in FY24. Information technology expenses decreased by 6% to Rs 46 crore, while legal charges and advertising expenses shrank by 43% and 60% to Rs 23 crore and Rs 8 crore, respectively. Other overheads also contracted by 22% to Rs 39 crore in FY24. Overall, FarEye’s total expenses dropped by 34% to Rs 269 crore in FY24, from Rs 410 crore in the previous fiscal year. The stringent cost controls helped the company to bring down its losses by 63% to Rs 89 crore in FY24, a sharp improvement from Rs 243 crore loss in FY23. Its ROCE and EBITDA margin improved to -26.82% and -45.83% respectively. On a unit basis, FarEye spent Rs 1.71 to earn a rupee of revenue in FY24, a huge improvement from Rs 2.95 in FY23. The Noida-based firm’s current assets stood at Rs 372 crore, out of which Rs 305 crore are in cash and bank balance. According to TheKredible, FarEye has raised a total of approx $152 million of funding till date, having TCV, Fundamentum, Eight Roads Ventures and Elevation Capital as its lead investors. The company’s co-founders Kushal Nahata and Gautam Kumar together own 13% of the company. An underperformer by any stretch, FarEye’s struggles will worry investors who invested on the promise of opportunities in the booming logistics sector. With its focus on last mile solutions, FarEye has picked a particularly promising niche to target, with over 30% of costs linked to the last mile delivery. However, costs have been consistently high due to a global footprint, and sales have simply not grown as fast as it would have wished. How FY25 goes, considering global disruptions in markets and consequently, with FarEye’s clients both present and potential, is anyone’s guess. We wouldn’t be expecting a sharp change in trajectory anytime soon therefore. With adequate cash balances, the firm certainly has no reason to stress, but another ordinary year will mean it has not really made a worthwhile impact even after a dozen years in the market. That will affect the possibility of further backing as well as valuations in no small way. FarEye needs to see the risks getting closer.

Eruditus clocks Rs 3,733 Cr revenue in FY24, narrows losses by 83%

EntrackrEntrackr · 3m ago
Eruditus clocks Rs 3,733 Cr revenue in FY24, narrows losses by 83%
Medial

Eruditus clocks Rs 3,733 Cr revenue in FY24, narrows losses by 83% Global edtech company Eruditus recorded modest year-on-year growth in its operating revenue, crossing the Rs 3,700 crore ($448 million) mark in the fiscal year ending June 2024. The Mumbai-based firm narrowed its losses by over 83% during the same period. Compared to FY23, the firm’s operating scale grew by 12% to Rs 3,733 crore, according to its annual financial statement sourced from Singapore. Eruditus follows a financial year that runs from July to June. The firm appears to be ahead of the leading edtechs, with revenue nearly 1.8 times that of PhysicsWallah and more than double that of upGrad. PhysicsWallah reported Rs 2,015 crore revenue in FY24 whereas upGrad registered Rs 1,487 crore revenue in the same period. Eruditus offers education across more than 80 countries to over a million learners. It partners with over 80 universities across the United States, Europe, Latin America, Southeast Asia, India, and China. The firm didn’t offer revenue break-up across geographies. The company deferred recognition of Rs 800 crore ($96 million) in collected revenue to the last fiscal year (FY25). Eruditus made progress in controlling its expenses as its marketing expenses dipped 18.85% year-on-year to Rs 1,007 crore in FY24 from Rs 1,241 crore in FY23. Other operating expenses were down by 32.16% year-on-year to Rs 1,045 crore in FY24 from Rs 1,541 crore in FY23. The cost optimizations led to a sharp improvement in the company’s bottom line. Eruditus narrowed its adjusted EBITDA losses by 83.45% to Rs 69 crore ($8.3 million) in FY24 from Rs 417 crore ($50 million) in FY23. With backing from investors such as TPG, the Chan Zuckerberg Initiative, SoftBank Vision Fund 2, Prosus Ventures, Accel, and Peak XV, Eruditus has the capital reserve to expand its presence and offerings across markets. In October 2024, it raised $150 million in the second-largest edtech deal of the year, after PhysicsWallah’s $210 million funding. With revenue approaching $500 million and an 83% reduction in losses, the company shows a path toward sustainable growth in the edtech industry. Heading into FY25 with deferred revenue, Eruditus is on track to achieve profitability while building on its revenue base.

WheelsEye narrows losses by 71% to Rs 39 Cr in FY24

EntrackrEntrackr · 5m ago
WheelsEye narrows losses by 71% to Rs 39 Cr in FY24
Medial

WheelsEye narrows losses by 71% to Rs 39 Cr in FY24 Logistics SaaS firm WheelsEye experienced slower growth since FY22, with revenue growth flattening in FY24. The company reported a marginal 7% increase in revenue for the fiscal year ending March 2024 but successfully reduced its losses by 71% during the same period. WheelsEye’s revenue from operations grew to Rs 218.4 crore in the last fiscal year, from Rs 203.8 crore in FY23, according to its standalone financial statement sourced from the Registrar of Companies (RoC). WheelsEye provides trucking solutions for businesses and software, GPS tracking, and FASTag solutions for truck fleet operators. Revenue from the sale of services (trucking service) increased by 18.9% to Rs 129.6 crore, while revenue from the sale of products (software) grew by 7.85% to Rs 57.7 crore. Income from other sources added another Rs 31 crore. The company made an additional Rs 35 crore from interest income which pushed its total Income to Rs 253 crore in FY24. WheelsEye's largest cost component, employee benefit expenses, dropped by 28.72% to Rs 135 crore. The cost of materials increased slightly by 3.43% to Rs 93.6 crore, while commissions paid decreased by 9.64%, standing at Rs 7.5 crore. Miscellaneous expenses for the last fiscal year amounted to Rs 56.9 crore. In the end, WheelsEye managed to reduce its overall expenses by 17.23%, bringing them down to Rs 293 crore in FY24. This cost optimization contributed to a 71% reduction in net loss, with losses narrowing to Rs 39 crore in FY24. The company also reported improved financial ratios, with its ROCE improving to -44.85% and EBITDA margin rising to -13.76%. Cost efficiency improved as well, with the company spending Rs 1.34 to earn a rupee in FY24. On the asset side, WheelsEye recorded Rs 186 crore in current assets for FY24, which included Rs 142 crore in cash and bank balances. According to the startup data intelligence platform, TheKredible, Wheelseye's parent entity is situated in the USA holding 99.9% of the Indian entity with the name Wheelseye Technology INC. The reduction in losses would be a welcome development at WheelsEye, probably something that has caused the slowdown in growth as well. The effort indicates a push to seek public market access perhaps, even as the firm remains well placed to seek growth again soon. In the past year, seemingly improving efficiency in logistics has led to a slowdown in growth within many firms in the category, something that should correct soon for WheelsEye as well.

Ather Energy posts Rs 676 Cr revenue in Q4 FY25, narrows losses by 17%

EntrackrEntrackr · 2m ago
Ather Energy posts Rs 676 Cr revenue in Q4 FY25, narrows losses by 17%
Medial

Electric two-wheeler maker Ather Energy has announced its financial results for the fourth quarter of FY25. The company reported a 29% year-on-year jump in its operating revenue compared to Q4 FY24. Ather’s revenue from operations increased by 29% to Rs 676 crore in Q4 FY25, from Rs 523 crore in Q4 FY24, according to its consolidated quarterly report sourced from the National Stock Exchange (NSE). For the full fiscal year (FY25), Ather Energy’s operating revenue increased 29% to Rs 2,255 crore in FY25 from Rs 1,754 crore in FY24. The company’s cost of materials, driven primarily by battery and component procurement, increased by nearly 16% to Rs 564 crore in Q4 FY25 from Rs 488 crore in the same period last year. Employee benefit expenses saw a decline of 29% YoY to Rs 109 crore in Q4 FY25 compared to Rs 154 crore in Q4 FY24. Depreciation and amortization costs rose 18% to Rs 45 crore, while other operational costs jumped nearly 47% to Rs 204 crore. Overall, Ather’s total expenditure grew 13% to Rs 922 crore in Q4 FY25, up from Rs 819 crore in Q4 FY24. For the full financial year ending March 2025, total expenses rose to Rs 3,117 crore as against Rs 2,674 crore in FY24. As a result, the company’s net losses reduced by 17% to Rs 234 crore in Q4 FY25 from Rs 283 crore in Q4 FY24. On a fiscal basis, its net losses came down 23% to Rs 812 crore in FY25 from Rs 1,060 crore in FY24. Ather Energy made its stock market debut on May 6, 2025, listing at Rs 328 per share on the NSE—2.18% above its issue price of Rs 321. However, the stock closed the day at Rs 300. On Monday, it rose 2.8% to trade at Rs 308.7 before market close, bringing its total market capitalization to Rs 11,497 crore ($1.34 billion). Ather's competitor Ola Electric, which saw a nearly 20% decline in operating revenue during Q3 FY25, has yet to file Q4 results.

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