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Paytm revenue grows 25% and nears Rs 10,000 Cr in FY24

EntrackrEntrackr · 1y ago
Paytm revenue grows 25% and nears Rs 10,000 Cr in FY24
Medial

One97 Communication Private Limited, the parent company of Paytm, scaled 25% year-on-year during the fiscal year ending March 2024. The Noida-based firm, however, managed to maintain EBITDA profitability before ESOP throughout the last fiscal year (FY24). Paytm’s revenue from operations grew 25% to Rs 9,978 crore in FY24 from Rs 7,990 crore in FY23, its annual financial statements disclosed through the National Stock Exchange show. Income from payment services accounted for 62.48% of the total operating revenue, which grew 25% to Rs 6,235 crore in FY24. Meanwhile, income from financial services grew by 30% to Rs 2,004 crore. The remainder income came from marketing and other sources. Paytm also made Rs 547 crore from non-operating activities mainly from interest and gain on financial assets, tallying the total income to Rs 10,525 crore in the last fiscal year (FY24). To the tune of other technology firms, its employee benefits accounted for 39.4% of the overall expenditure. This cost surged 21.5% to Rs 4,589 crore in FY24 from Rs 3,778 crore in FY23. This includes Rs 1,466 crore as share-based payment aka ESOPs cost. Its payment processing charges grew 10.9% to Rs 3,280 crore in FY2. Paytm’s software/tech, marketing cum promotional, legal, and other overheads drove its total expenditure up by 15% to Rs 11,645 crore in FY24 from Rs 10,130 crore in FY23. Note: Paytm has booked Rs 1,465 crore of ESOPs and wrote off Rs 227 crore worth of investments which was made to its associate firm Paytm Payments Bank Ltd (PPBL) after RBI’s action. The decent growth and controlled expenditure helped Paytm to reduce its net losses by 20% to Rs 1,422 crore in FY24. Meanwhile, Paytm maintained its EBITDA profitability before ESOP throughout the year which stood at Rs 559 crore in FY24.

Awfis nears Rs 900 Cr income in FY24; losses contract 62%

EntrackrEntrackr · 1y ago
Awfis nears Rs 900 Cr income in FY24; losses contract 62%
Medial

Co-working solutions provider Awfis showcased a 55.8% growth in scale during the fiscal year ending March 2024. However, the losses for the Amit Ramani-led firm contracted 61.8% to Rs 17.8 crore in FY24. On a year-on-year basis, Awfis’ revenue from operations grew 55.8% to Rs 849 crore in FY24 from Rs 545 crore in FY23, its consolidated financial statements disclosed in the stock exchange filing show. On a sequential basis, the firm posted a 5% increase in revenue to Rs 232 crore in Q4 FY24 from Rs 221 crore in Q3 FY24. Founded in 2015, Awfis offers customized office spaces for startups, SMEs, and large corporations including ancillary services like food and beverages, IT support, and infrastructure services among others. Income from co-working space rental and allied services formed 73% of the total operating revenue which spiked 47.7% to Rs 619 crore in FY24 from Rs 419 crore in FY23. Income from construction and fit-out projects, facility management, and sale of food items were other revenue drivers for Awfis in the fiscal year ending March 2024. See TheKredible for the complete revenue breakup. Awfis’s burn on subcontract stood at Rs 171 crore in FY24 while its employee benefits saw an increment of 41.7% to Rs 136 crore in FY24. Its finance, legal, depreciation and amortization, purchase of traded goods, and other overheads took the overall expenditure up by 45.8% to Rs 892 crore in FY24 from Rs 612 crore in FY23. Head to TheKredible for the detailed expense breakdown. The 55.8% surge in scale and controlled cost mechanism helped Awfis to contract its losses by 61.8% to a marginal Rs 17.8 in FY24 from Rs 46.6 crore in FY23. On a unit level, it spent Rs 1.05 to earn a rupee in FY24. The company’s stock was listed on NSE on May 30 and opened at Rs 435 with a 13.58% premium over the issue price of Rs 383. The improvement in the fundamentals pushed its share price to Rs 500.1 (as of June 19). Awfis currently holds a total market capitalization of Rs 3,472 crore.

PaisaWapas revenue nears Rs 70 Cr in FY24, remains profitable

EntrackrEntrackr · 4m ago
PaisaWapas revenue nears Rs 70 Cr in FY24, remains profitable
Medial

Fintrackr All Stories PaisaWapas revenue nears Rs 70 Cr in FY24, remains profitable Cashback and coupons app PaisaWapas has managed steady growth as its revenue from operations grew 24% year-on-year for the fiscal year ending March 2024. Moreover, the Bengaluru-based company also increased its profit by around 17% during the same period. PaisaWapas’ revenue from operations grew by 24% to Rs 68.7 crore in FY24 from Rs 55.5 crore in FY23, its financial statements sourced from the Registrar of Companies (RoC) show. PaisaWapas operates as a cashback and deals platform, linking shoppers with e-commerce partners. It generates revenue through affiliate commissions, sharing a portion as cashback with users, and also earns from promotions and s. Revenue from these services surged 25.8% to Rs 66.7 crore in FY24, contributing 97% of the operating revenue in FY24. However, revenue from the sale of goods increased marginally by 35.4% to Rs 1.53 crore. The company also generated Rs 30 lakh from other income sources, pushing its total income to Rs 69 crore in the last fiscal year. Cashback to users remained the largest expense category, decreasing 14.6% to Rs 19.5 crore. Meanwhile, payouts to users increased 2.2X to Rs 15.5 crore. Advertising costs rose 95.1% to Rs 16 crore, indicating a focus on customer acquisition and engagement. Employee benefit expenses grew 41.1% to Rs 5.22 crore. Overall, total expenses increased 25% to Rs 64.4 crore, up from Rs 51.5 crore in FY23. PaisaWapas increased its profit by 16.7% to Rs 3.5 crore from Rs 3 crore in FY23. The firm recorded an EBITDA of Rs 4.86 crore, with an EBITDA margin of 7.04% and a Return on Capital Employed (ROCE) of 41.5%. The Bengaluru-based platform reported current assets of Rs 22 crore as of March 2024, while cash and bank balances rose 75% to Rs 7 crore. According to TheKredible, PaisaWapas has raised a total of $46K in funding to date. Vividhity Ventures is the lead investor, holding 2% of the company’s stake. Meanwhile, PaisaWapas’ founders, Shankar Singh and Ashish Kumar, collectively own 94% of the company. PaisaWapas competes against the companies such as CashKaro, CouponDunia, GoPaisa and GrabOn, among several others.

BigHaat’s gross revenue nears Rs 700 Cr in FY23

EntrackrEntrackr · 1y ago
BigHaat’s gross revenue nears Rs 700 Cr in FY23
Medial

Agritech startup BigHaat registered over five-fold growth during the fiscal year ending March 2023. However, in pursuit of rapid scale its losses also rose in a similar proportion during the same period. BigHaat’s gross revenue surged 5.3X to Rs 643 crore in FY23 from Rs 120 crore in FY22, its consolidated financial statements filed with the Registrar of Companies show. Founded in 2015, BigHaat leverages technology to provide a wide range of solutions and services to farmers, helping them optimize their agricultural practices and increase productivity. Market linkages formed 92% of the overall gross revenue which increased 6.6X to Rs 594 crore in FY23. The rest of the income comes from input business, exports, commission of marketplace, and others. See TheKredible for the detailed revenue breakup. In tune with growth in scale, its cost of procurement emerged as the largest cost center accounting for 92.5% of the total expenditure. This cost rose by 5.4X to Rs 623 crore in FY23 from Rs 115 crore in FY22. Its employee benefits, selling cum distribution, legal-professional, information technology, fulfillment, and other overheads took the total expenditure to Rs 673 crore in FY23 from Rs 128 crore in FY22. Head to TheKredible for the complete expense breakup. Expenses Breakdown Total ₹ 128 Cr https://thekredible.com/company/bighaat/financials View Full Data To access complete data, visithttps://thekredible.com/company/bighaat/financials Total ₹ 673 Cr https://thekredible.com/company/bighaat/financials View Full Data To access complete data, visithttps://thekredible.com/company/bighaat/financials Cost of procurement Cost of procurement Employee benefit Employee benefit Selling and distribution Selling and distribution Legal professional Legal professional Information technology Information technology Fulfilment cost Fulfilment cost Others To check complete Expense Breakdown visit thekredible.com View full data The spurt in procurement and employee benefits resulted in a significant increase in losses, rising 5.8X to Rs 35 crore in FY23 from Rs 6 crore in FY22. Its ROCE and EBITDA margin stood at -40% and -4.3%, respectively. On a unit level, it spent Rs 1.05 to earn a rupee in FY23. FY22-FY23 FY22 FY23 EBITDA Margin -6% -4.3% Expense/₹ of Op Revenue ₹1.07 ₹1.05 ROCE -14% -40% BigHaat has raised $29 million to date and was valued at $58 million in its last round. As per the startup data intelligence platform TheKredible, JM Financial is the largest external stakeholder with 27.29% followed by Ankur Capital and Beyond Next Ventures. Its co-founders Sateesh Nukala and Sachin Nandwana cumulatively command 23.29% of the company. The numbers would indicate a business that is more about trading and arbitrage than anything else, unless BigHaat incurred some major one off expenses. But at this scale, it’s obvious that the firm has the ability and knowledge to make it count, which is what should make it an interesting agritech to track from here on.

Vedantu income nears Rs 200 Cr in FY24; losses cut by 58%

EntrackrEntrackr · 7m ago
Vedantu income nears Rs 200 Cr in FY24; losses cut by 58%
Medial

After a slight decline in operating scale in FY23, edtech unicorn Vedantu reported a 21% year-on-year revenue growth for the fiscal year ending March 2024. Significantly, the Bengaluru-based company reduced its losses by 58% during the same period. Vedantu's revenue from operations grew to Rs 185 crore in the last fiscal year from Rs 153 crore in FY23, its consolidated financial statements sourced from the Registrar of Companies show. Vedantu's core offerings include online classes for grades 6 to 12, along with study materials for grades 1 to 12 and JEE preparation. In May 2020, the company expanded into the kids' coding space for ages 6-12 and has also launched several offline coaching centers in recent years. Income from online tutoring accounted for 90% of Vedantu's total operating revenue, increasing 11.4% to Rs 166 crore in FY24 from Rs 149 crore in FY23. Book sales tripled to Rs 9 crore, while the remaining revenue came from hostel fees and e-learning project income in FY24. Vedantu also added Rs 14 crore, primarily from non-operating income such as interest on deposits, increasing its overall revenue to Rs 199 crore in FY24, as compared to Rs 175 crore in FY23. Similar to other edtech firms, employee benefits were the largest cost component, which accounted for 47% of Vedantu's total expenditure. However, following significant layoffs in FY24, these costs dropped by 43.8% to Rs 176 crore in FY24. Vedantu's advertisement cum promotional spend was also reduced by 70% to Rs 23 crore in FY24. Expenses for outsourcing teachers, internships, book procurement, legal services, and other overheads brought the firm's total expenditure to Rs 368 crore, marking a 33.5% decline compared to FY23. The significant reduction in employee benefits and advertising along with 20% growth in scale led Vedantu's losses to be reduced by 58% to Rs 157 crore in FY24. Its ROCE, and EBIDDA margins improved to -37% and -51.8%, respectively. Its expense-to-earning ratio stood at Rs 1.99 in the said fiscal. During FY24, Vedantu's current assets recorded at 174 crore with cash and bank balances of Rs 54 crore. Vedantu has struggled to secure substantial external funding in recent years. In September, the firm raised Rs 19.25 crore (approximately $2.3 million) through a mix of debt and equity from Stride Ventures, marking its first investment in over three years. To date, Vedantu has raised over $300 million from major investors, including Tiger Global, Coatue, GGV Capital, and Westbridge. While edtech funding has declined significantly compared to its peak, 2024 shows signs of recovery. According to startup data intelligence platform TheKredible, edtech firms have raised $613 million across 37 deals so far this year, surpassing the $456 million raised in 2023. However, this is still a steep drop from the $2.3 billion raised in 2022 and $5.8 billion in 2021.

Allen nears Rs 3,500 Cr revenue in FY24, profit shrinks 44%

EntrackrEntrackr · 7m ago
Allen nears Rs 3,500 Cr revenue in FY24, profit shrinks 44%
Medial

Offline coaching institutes have been finding it tough to scale their profits, and Allen Career Institute is no exception. The Bodhi Tree-funded firm reported a 44% year-on-year decline in profit for the fiscal year ending March 2024. In the second half of this story, we’ll delve into the expense patterns that led to this decline. For now, let’s focus on its revenue and sources. Allen’s revenue from operations increased 42% to Rs 3,244.7 crore in FY24, as compared to Rs 2280.8 crore in the previous fiscal year, its financial statement filed with the Registrar of Companies shows. This growth was driven by a 42.2% increase in service income, reaching Rs 3,215 crore, which accounted for 99% of the revenue, and a 51% rise in product sales to Rs 8 crore. Income from product sales vertical grew by 51.4% year-on-year in the last fiscal year. With a 98.9% increase in interest income, the company’s total revenue reached Rs 3,473.2 crore in the last fiscal year. Employee benefit costs were the largest expense for the company, rising 68% to Rs 1958 crore in FY24. The cost of materials increased by 74.2% to Rs 123.5 crore. However, its marketing expenses spiked by 2.3X to Rs 117.9 crore. Overall, the company’s total expense surged 63% to Rs 3252 crore in FY24 from Rs 1993 crore in FY23. Due to higher spending and relatively lower revenue growth, the company’s profit declined by 44%, falling to Rs 135.9 crore in FY24 from Rs 243.7 crore in FY23. While its EBITDA remained stable at Rs 629.8 crore, margins declined to 18.13% in the last fiscal year. Further, the firm’s ROCE declined to 9.26% from 14.7% in FY23. On a unit basis, Allen spent Re 1 to earn a rupee of operating revenue in the fiscal year ending March 2024. Allen's financial position remained stable, with total assets rising by 10.8% to Rs 5,759 crore and cash and bank balances improving by 19.8% to Rs 1,958 crore. Current assets also grew by 8.2% to Rs 2,795 crore, while capital employed expanded by 15.9% to Rs 3,630 crore. While Allen maintained revenue growth and a stable financial position, the significant rise in costs and a drop in margins underline the challenges of scaling in the offline coaching industry. The decline in profitability signals a need for further optimization as the company navigates an evolving education sector landscape. Allen Career Institute is reportedly in early discussions to acquire Unacademy amid a 31% year-on-year decline in admissions to Kota-based institutes in 2024. The waning popularity of the city-based coaching culture is set to impact the top and bottom lines of Allen, and FIITJEE(FY25). However, they remain better positioned compared to their online counterparts, Byju's and Unacademy. FIITJEE, Allen's closest competitor, operates at approximately one-fourth of Allen's scale. While FIITJEE has yet to disclose its FY24 financials, it reported a 21% year-on-year revenue growth to Rs 542 crore in FY23. In the same fiscal year, Allen's income stood at Rs 2,277 crore. Another competitor, Aakash, which was acquired by BYJU'S, anticipated crossing the Rs 3,000 crore revenue mark in FY23. However, its audited financials for FY23 and FY24 are yet to be released. Allen’s PE deal in some ways marked the peak of the edtech boom, as the last of the large firms that had held out until then before taking the plunge. It is showing signs of the same, with pressure to spend their way to some sort of leadership, even at the cost of margins that the firm always had before the funding. The Unacademy deal, if it works out, will be yet another investor-backed deal no doubt, to beef up the balance sheet size. Will that really be the solution the firm is looking for to combat future risks? One has to wonder, considering just how fast the market is evolving, and the challenges of integrating such a firm within the Allen culture.

Groyyo’s gross revenue nears Rs 500 Cr in FY23

EntrackrEntrackr · 1y ago
Groyyo’s gross revenue nears Rs 500 Cr in FY23
Medial

B2B manufacturing and automation startup Groyyo grew at a rapid clip with 19X growth during the fiscal year ending March 2023. But in the pursuit of chasing scale, the Tiger Global-backed company’s losses zoomed 13.6X during the same period. Groyyo’s gross revenue surged 18.9X to Rs 492 crore in FY23 from Rs 26 crore in FY22, its consolidated financial statements filed with the Registrar of Companies show. Founded in July 2021 by Subin Mitra, Pratik Tiwari, and Ridam Upadhyay, Groyyo is a supply chain enablement platform that helps digitize manufacturing small and medium businesses and match demand and supply from national and international clients. The sale of products is the main source of revenue for Groyyo which increased 17.8X to Rs 452 crore in FY23. Income from commission and subscription are other revenue drivers for the Delhi-based company. See TheKredible for the detailed revenue breakup. For the B2B manufacturing and automation startup, the cost of procurement of goods accounted for 82.17% of the overall expenditure. With growth in scale, this cost surged 18.2X to Rs 475 crore in FY23. Its employee benefits, traveling, legal, doubtful debtors, business consultancy, samples, and other overheads took the overall cost to Rs 578 crore in FY23 from Rs 31 crore in FY22. See TheKredible for the full expense breakup. Expenses Breakdown Total ₹ 296 Cr https://thekredible.com/company/groyyo/financials View Full Data To access complete data, visithttps://thekredible.com/company/groyyo/financials Total ₹ 296 Cr https://thekredible.com/company/groyyo/financials View Full Data To access complete data, visithttps://thekredible.com/company/groyyo/financials Cost of procurement Cost of procurement Employee benefit Employee benefit Travelling conveyance Travelling conveyance Legal professional Legal professional Business consultancy Business consultancy Sample purchased Sample purchased Others Others Provision for doubtful debtors To check complete Expense Breakdown visit thekredible.com View full data The mounting growth in employee benefits and provisions for doubtful debtors led Groyyo’s losses to increase by 13.6X to Rs 68 crore in FY23 from Rs 5 crore in FY22. Its ROCE and EBITDA margin stood at -35% and -11.4% respectively. On a unit level, it spent Rs 1.17 to earn a rupee in FY23. FY22-FY23 FY22 FY23 EBITDA Margin -204% -11.4% Expense/₹ of Op Revenue ₹1.19 ₹1.17 ROCE -265% -35% Groyyo has raised $32.6 million across rounds. According to the startup data intelligence platform TheKredible, Alpha Wave is the largest external stakeholder with 23.64% followed by Tiger Global. A large head of expenses under doubtful debtors is hopefully a one off, but Groyyo will need to avoid taking the route of easy credit to get buyers on board. It usually doesn’t end well, and certainly doesn’t end profitably. With a market that is becoming more complex in terms of supply chain compliances, the firm certainly has a massive opportunity to support both buyers and sellers across the categories it is focused on. Handholding both through those issues will matter in the coming future, and will ensure the kind of value add that ties in customers for much longer.

Bizongo’s scale doubles to Rs 167 Cr in FY23; loss nears Rs 300 Cr

EntrackrEntrackr · 1y ago
Bizongo’s scale doubles to Rs 167 Cr in FY23; loss nears Rs 300 Cr
Medial

Ecommerce-focused packaging company Bizongo has managed to double its revenue during FY23. The growth, however, came at a cost which is evident from its losses which jumped 2.7X during the said period. Bizongo’s revenue from operations grew 98.6% to Rs 166.86 crore during the fiscal year ending March 2023 as compared with Rs 84 crore in FY22, as per the company’s consolidated financial statements with the Registrar of Companies. Founded in 2015, Bizongo offers digital vendor management, supply chain automation & supply chain financing as key services to its enterprise customers. The platform serves 450-500 enterprise customers in fashion & lifestyle, pharmaceuticals, consumer discretionary, consumer staples et al. Bizongo also provides unsecured financing to vendors and according to the company it has tied up with more than 40 banks and non-bank financial companies for loan disbursement. Co-founded by Sachin Agarwal, Ankit Deb, and Ankit Tomar, the company made 96% of its revenue via service fees whereas the remaining part came from design income and platform fees. It also made around Rs 18.15 crore via interest and gains on financial assets during the year which took its topline to Rs 185 crore at the end of FY23. Bizongo spent 32% of its expenses on finance costs which largely include interest on bill discounting, interest on working capital demand loans, and interest on debentures. This cost ballooned 3.9X to Rs 151.95 crore during FY23 from Rs 38.8 crore in FY22. Employee benefit costs went up 79.4% to Rs 113.23 crore in FY23. This cost also includes ESOP expenses worth Rs 27.12 crore. The company also booked allowance for expected credit loss worth Rs 124 crore during the year. The company’s overall expenditure surged 97.1% to Rs 476.6 crore in FY23 from Rs 241.8 crore in FY22. Head to TheKredible for a complete expense breakdown and year-on-year financial performance of the company. Amid cash burn, the company’s losses spiked 173.1% to Rs 291.57 crore during FY23 as compared to Rs 106.76 crore in FY22. Its operating cash outflows, however, improved by 29.6% to Rs 646.3 crore during the last fiscal year. The EBITDA margin and ROCE of the company stood at -73.06% and -27.60%, respectively, during the year. On a unit level, Bizongo spent Rs 2.86 to earn a rupee of operating revenue in FY23. FY22-FY23 FY22 FY23 EBITDA Margin -46.45% -73.06% Expense/Rupee of ops revenue ₹2.88 ₹2.86 ROCE -9.52% -27.60% As per the startup intelligence platform TheKredible, Bizongo has raised over $260 million to date. In October last year, it raised $50 million in a Series E funding round led by existing investor Schroder Adveq. The Tiger Global-backed company was also in the news for its acquisition of Titan Capital-backed FactoryPlus, a factory digitization app for micro, small, and medium enterprises (MSMEs), in November last year. Bizongo’s high provisions for credit loss indicate a cash-burning strategy to sort out the good, credit-worthy vendors from the bad, or worse, operational deficiencies that the firm must get a grip on to ensure its long-term survival. It remains in a promising segment to build a business at scale, but throwing money at the challenge to build a business is certainly not the answer. That investors have backed it as recently as last year indicates the possibilities they see for the firm to make a salutary impact on its segment, but we believe the time to show growth with improving margins is here.

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