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FarEye spent Rs 361 Cr to earn Rs 139 Cr in FY23

EntrackrEntrackr · 1y ago
FarEye spent Rs 361 Cr to earn Rs 139 Cr in FY23
Medial

SaaS-based logistics management platform FarEye showcased a modest 42% year-on-year growth during the fiscal year ended March 2023 but the firm’s losses worth Rs 243 crore flattened from the previous fiscal year but remained high. FarEye’s revenue from operations grew 41.8% to Rs 139 crore in FY23 from RS 98 crore in FY22, its consolidated financial statements filed with the Registrar of Companies (RoC) show. 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. Besides operating activities, the $150 million round helped FarEye to make Rs 27 crore from interest on investments (non-operating) which took its total collection to Rs 166 crore in FY23. Like other technology startups, its employee benefits accounted for 61.2% of the overall expenditure. This cost grew only 8% to Rs 251 crore in FY23 from Rs 232 crore in FY22. Its information technology, traveling, legal-professional, advertising, repair, rent, and other overheads catalyzed the FarEye’s overall expenditure to Rs 410 crore in FY23 from Rs 361 crore in FY22. FarEye’s prudent expense management helped the Microsoft-backed firm to register a mere 4.7% increase in its losses to Rs 243 crore in FY23. Its ROCE and EBITDA margin stood at -60% and -142.2%, respectively. On a unit level, FarEye spent Rs 2.95 to earn a rupee in FY23. FY22-FY23 FY22 FY23 EBITDA Margin -176% -142.2% Expense/₹ of Op Revenue ₹3.68 ₹2.95 ROCE -36% -60% FarEye’s total current assets stood at Rs 438 crore including current investments and cash/bank balance during FY23. FarEye has raised over $150 million across rounds and was valued at $400 million in its last fundraiser. According to the startup data intelligence platform TheKredible, TCV is the largest stakeholder with 13.74% followed by Elevation Capital. As per Fintrackr estimates, its enterprise value to revenue multiple was 21X at the end of FY23. While there are firm indications that the firm has turned, or is close to turning the corner as far as margin improvement goes, Fareye’s backers would know that much could go wrong from here as well. With FY24 over, the firm would have done well to not only maintain the growth rate from FY23, but also keep expenses in control as it did previously. Any major slip up here will lead to serious questions about it’s long term viability, leading to an adverse impact on the existing business sooner than later.

PlanetSpark posts Rs 41 Cr revenue and Rs 90 Cr loss in FY23

EntrackrEntrackr · 1y ago
PlanetSpark posts Rs 41 Cr revenue and Rs 90 Cr loss in FY23
Medial

Edtech business is hard to crack and this is evident from the balance sheets of most of the companies in the space which have shown astounding losses. Seven-year-old PlanetSpark is no exception as the firm’s losses were more than twice its revenue in the fiscal year ending March 2023. FITT-JEE-backed PlanetSpark’s revenue from operations increased 41%to Rs 42 crore in the last fiscal year (FY23) from Rs 30 crore in FY22, as per its filings with the Registrar of Companies (RoC). Founded in 2017 by Kunal Malik and Manish Dhooper, PlanetSpark offers live 1:1 classes in public speaking, creative writing, storytelling, debate, podcasting et al for the K8 generation. The sale of educational services was the only source of revenue for the company while it also made Rs 1.1 crore from interest on deposits. In the end, tPlanetSpark’s total income stood at 43.5 crore during the last fiscal year. PlanetSpark spent Rs 63.17 crore towards employee benefits which includes Rs 5.5 crore as ESOP cost (non-cash component). Similar to other ed-tech startups, it spent a significant 90 crore on marketing and teachers’ salaries. Its legal/professional, rent, information technology, and other overheads led its total cost to Rs 133 crore in FY23 from Rs 139.5 crore in FY22. Head to TheKredible for a complete expense breakdown and its YoY financial health. Expense Breakdown Total ₹ 139.53 Cr https://thekredible.com/company/planetspark/financials View Full Data To access complete data, visithttps://thekredible.com/company/planetspark/financials Total ₹ 133.02 Cr https://thekredible.com/company/planetspark/financials View Full Data To access complete data, visithttps://thekredible.com/company/planetspark/financials Employee Benefit Employee Benefit Teachers Pay Teachers Pay Marketing and Branding expense Marketing and Branding expense Software and Server Charges Software and Server Charges Payment Gateway charges Payment Gateway charges Other Expenses To check complete Expense Breakdown visit thekredible.com View full data With over 40% scale and controlled expenses, PlanetSpark managed to trim its losses by 18% to Rs 90 crore in FY23. Its ROCE and EBITDA margin also improved to -197.1% and 226% respectively. On a unit level, PlanetSpark spent Rs 3.14 to earn a rupee of operating revenue in FY23. FY22-FY23 FY22 FY23 EBITDA Margin -362% -197.1% Expense/₹ of Op Revenue ₹4.65 ₹3.14 ROCE -1065% 226% According to the startup data intelligence platform TheKredible, PlanetSpark has mopped up over $34 million to date including a $17 million round this year. Prime Venture Partners is the largest stakeholder with 32.6% followed by FIIT- JEE. Its co-founder Kunal Malik and Maneesh Dhopper cumulatively command 29.6%.

Vedantu posts Rs 153 Cr revenue in FY23; cuts losses by 46%

EntrackrEntrackr · 1y ago
Vedantu posts Rs 153 Cr revenue in FY23; cuts losses by 46%
Medial

Edtech company Vedantu has released its financial results for the fiscal year ending March 2023. The Bengaluru-based firm faced challenges in scaling, with its revenue dropping by 7.8% in FY23. However, the company managed to control its losses by 46% during the same period. Vedantu’s revenue from operations decreased by 7.8% to Rs 153 crore in FY23 from Rs 166 crore in FY22, its consolidated financial statements accessed from the Registrar of Companies (RoC)show. Income from online tutoring of various courses accounted for 94% of its total operating revenue which declined 13.3% to Rs 144 crore in FY23. The rest of the collections comes from the sale of books, hostel fees, and e-learning project income in FY23. The company also made Rs 22 crore from interest and gain on financial assets tallying its total income to Rs 175 crore in FY23. Similar to other large edtech startups, its employee benefits emerged as the largest cost center forming 56.7% of the total expenditure which declined by 35.8% to Rs 314 crore in FY23. The firm’s spending on legal, advertising cum promotional, training, information technology, and overheads pushed its overall expenditure to Rs 553 crore in FY23 from Rs 888 crore in FY22. See TheKredible for the detailed expense breakup. Despite the decline in scale, the Tiger Global-backed company managed to control its advertising and employee benefits which led Vedantu’s losses to decrease by 46.4% to Rs 373 crore in FY23 from Rs 696 crore in FY22. Its ROCE and EBITDA margins stood at -68% and -198.9% respectively. On a unit level, it spent Rs 3.61 to earn a rupee in FY23. FY23-FY24 FY22 FY23 EBITDA Margin -356.97% -199.30% Expense/₹ of Op Revenue ₹5.35 ₹3.62 ROCE -118.31% -68.44% Vedantu has not been able to raise a new round since its last equity funding in September 2021. The company also turned unicorn in the $100 million Series E round. In 2022, the company faced back to back firings and laid off more than 1,000 employees across three-four phases. The company also took over Deeksha, Pedagogy and Instasolv in the 2021-22 period. For Deeksha’s acquisition, it spent around $40 million. In December, Vedantu announced its expansion plan to open more than 30 offline centers for JEE, and NEET in multiple cities across the country.

Yubi posts Rs 328 Cr revenue and Rs 482 Cr loss in FY23

EntrackrEntrackr · 1y ago
Yubi posts Rs 328 Cr revenue and Rs 482 Cr loss in FY23
Medial

Yubi (formerly CredAvenue) grabbed wide attention when Vivriti Capital sold a part of its stake in the digital lending company at a valuation of $1.5 billion. Even as Vivitri made a fortune after the secondary transaction, the firm’s bottom line worsened, by 8X in the fiscal year ending March 2023. We will dive deeper into the company’s expenses pattern, which is responsible for its steep losses later in our analysis. For now, let’s review its collection streams. Yubi’s revenue from operations surged 98% to Rs 328 crore in FY23 from Rs 166 crore in FY22, its consolidated financial statements filed with the Registrar of Companies show. Yubi is a debt platform that connects businesses with banks and NBFCs. The company offers six distinct products including a lending marketplace, a supply chain financing marketplace, and dedicated real estate and infrastructure financing solutions. With 6,200 investors and over 17,000 active enterprises on board, Yubi claims to have facilitated credit worth Rs 1.4 lakh crore. Income from merchant banking and other allied services provided to corporate borrowers and debt investors formed 54% of the total revenue. Commissions on debt facilitation, collection solutions and data collection were other revenue drivers for Yubi. Check TheKredible for the detailed revenue breakup. Similar to the other technology startups, Yubi’s employee benefits accounted for 48% of the overall expenses. This cost surged 4.7X to Rs 432 crore in FY23 from Rs 92 crore in FY22. This expense also included Rs 109 crore as ESOPs cost (non-cash in nature). Yubi’s business supports services, information technology, traveling, legal/professional, and marketing costs took its overall expenditure up by 314% to Rs 895 crore in FY23 from Rs 216 crore in FY22. Expenses Breakdown Total ₹ 216 Cr https://thekredible.com/company/yubi-credavenue-/financials View Full Data To access complete data, visithttps://thekredible.com/company/yubi-credavenue-/financials Total ₹ 895 Cr https://thekredible.com/company/yubi-credavenue-/financials View Full Data To access complete data, visithttps://thekredible.com/company/yubi-credavenue-/financials Employee benefit Employee benefit Business support service Business support service Information technology Information technology Travelling conveyance Travelling conveyance Legal professional Legal professional Advertising promotional Advertising promotional Others To check complete Expense Breakdown visit thekredible.com View full data Head to TheKredible for a complete expense breakdown. At the end, Yubi’s losses increased by 745% to Rs 482 crore in FY23 from Rs 57 crore in FY22. Its ROCE and EBITDA margin worsened -30% and -105%, respectively. On a unit level, the Chennai-based company spent Rs 2.73 to earn a rupee of operating revenue during FY23. FY22-FY23 FY22 FY23 EBITDA Margin -8% -105.1% Expense/₹ of Op Revenue ₹1.30 ₹2.73 ROCE -2% -30% Rs 328 crore is probably a very small, if not fraction of where Yubi wants to be, operating in a market as vast as the debt syndication market in India. While it is too early to judge it for its operating metrics, the assumption is that having arranged credit of almost $18 billion, the firm will have picking up learnings and data along the way that continue to make it better at its job. It’s a market where seasoning, or time spent in the market matters, and 3 years or more is the minimum one would give before deciding if a firm has it to last. Of course, competition is intense, as is the risk of disintermediation that always hangs in this business, even as the proliferation of platforms like Yubi, Lendingkart etc has probably proven that it is one risk that is overhyped.

PokerBaazi parent crosses Rs 400 Cr revenue in FY24; profits grew 26%

EntrackrEntrackr · 5m ago
PokerBaazi parent crosses Rs 400 Cr revenue in FY24; profits grew 26%
Medial

Fintrackr All Stories PokerBaazi parent crosses Rs 400 Cr revenue in FY24; profits grew 26% Moonshine Technology, which operates PokerBaazi, SportsBaazi, and CardBazzi, demonstrated 55% growth in its operating revenue to Rs 415 crore in FY24 from Rs 268 crore in FY23. The platform fees/service transaction fees received from the users were the sole source of revenue for Moonshine. The firm also added Rs 9 crore mainly from the interest on bank deposits which tallied its overall income to Rs 424 crore in FY24, compared to Rs 273 crore in FY23. At the time of acquisition, Moonshine disclosed that PokerBaazi accounts for over 85% of its net revenue, while its fantasy sports platform, SportsBaazi, contributes 12%. Similar to other online gaming platforms, Moonshine spent 60% of its overall expenditure on advertising. This cost surged 83% to Rs 232 crore in FY24 from Rs 127 crore in FY23. Its employee benefits also grew 62% to Rs 89 crore in FY24. Its payment gateway, website/server, customer verification, and legal costs took the overall expenditure up by 55.6% to Rs 389 crore in FY24 from Rs 250 crore in FY23. The decent surge in scale and controlled expenditure helped Moonshine to increase its profits by 26.3% to Rs 24 crore in FY24, compared to Rs 19 crore in FY23. The company's ROCE and EBITDA margin stood at 20% and 10.1%, respectively, while its expense-to-earnings ratio was recorded at Rs 0.94. During FY24, Moonshine’s total current assets stood at Rs 236 crore with cash and bank balances of Rs 196 crore. Out of Rs 982 crore ($118 million), Nazara has already invested $100 million and acquired a 47.7% stake in the company through a combination of secondary and primary share purchases.

Chingari crosses Rs 100 Cr revenue in FY23; losses decline 70%

EntrackrEntrackr · 1y ago
Chingari crosses Rs 100 Cr revenue in FY23; losses decline 70%
Medial

Short-video-making app Chingari made a pivot to become a paid but private live streaming app which connects users and creators in the beginning of the ongoing fiscal year. While the impact of the pivot on its top and bottom lines will be evaluated when it reports FY24 numbers, the company’s revenue soared over two-fold in FY23. Chingari’s revenue from operations spiked 2.3X to Rs 113 crore in the fiscal year ending March 2023, its annual financial statement sourced from the Registrar of Companies (RoC) shows. Significantly, the company’s losses nosedived 70% during the last fiscal year. Founded in November 2018, Chingari used to be a TikTok clone until FY23 where it allowed users to create and post short-videos. The sale of services was the only source of revenue for Chingari in the last fiscal. In August 2022, Chingari launched its crypto token called $GARI and was set to make a debut on six global exchange platforms – FTX, Huobi, Kucoin, OKEX, Gate.IO, MEXC Global. The firm also roped in Bollywood actor Salman Khan to launch the NFT marketplace and reward platform. Caveat: Chingari didn’t provide revenue break-up for FY23 but it looks like most of its collection came via advertising and crypto activities. Moving to the cost side, application development formed 32% of the overall expenditure which increased by 16.3% to Rs 50 crore in FY23. Chingari’s employee benefits cost surged 3.8X to Rs 46 crore in FY23. It’s worth noting that Chingari fired around 60% of its employees in the current calendar year and is only left with 50-60 people in the team as per media reports. Chingari’s advertising cum promotional cost declined significantly to Rs 29 crore in FY23 from Rs 113 crore in FY22. The legal professional, subscription membership, rent, traveling, and other expenditures took the company’s overall cost to Rs 156 crore in the previous fiscal year. The decent scale and effective control on advertising helped Chingari to reduce its losses by 70% to Rs 42 crore in FY23 from Rs 139 crore in FY22. Meanwhile, its EBITDA margin improved to -36.3%. On a unit level, the Mumbai-based firm spent Rs 1.38 to earn a rupee in FY23. FY22-FY23 FY22 FY23 EBITDA Margin -284% -36.3% Expense/Rupee of ops revenue ₹3.86 ₹1.38 ROCE -376% N/A Chingari has raised a total of Rs 360 crore across rounds while its total outstanding losses stood at Rs 223 crore until March 2023. Importantly, it had a total current assets of only Rs 24 crore at the end of FY23. Between short videos and crypto, it’s a tough call to pick the least promising option in hand for Chingari. While FY24 figures will reflect the impact of the Crypto winter, even as FY23 probably derived some momentum from there, it certainly makes one pessimistic about the story for FY24. On the cost front, one beauty of the Crypto business (the only one, some would argue ), is that the business no longer counts on high sales and marketing costs. In many cases, the model has moved to a revenue share with its beneficiaries , a slightly evolved version of multi level marketing schemes in fact. That might have explain the lower costs as well for FY23. Now that the firm has moved to a desi version of OnlyFans, it is anyone’s guess what kind of insights it will offer about India ‘s online audiences in due course. We are betting not many would be waiting with baited breath.

Bijnis records 100% growth in FY23; losses touch Rs 100 Cr

EntrackrEntrackr · 1y ago
Bijnis records 100% growth in FY23; losses touch Rs 100 Cr
Medial

Bijnis, a B2B (business-to-business) marketplace for the unorganized retail segment has registered 100% year-on-year growth during the fiscal year ending March 2023. However, the losses for the Delhi-based company also rose almost 75% touching Rs 100 crore mark during the same period. The revenue from operations for Bijnis surged to Rs 52 crore in FY23 from Rs 26 crore in FY22, its annual financial statements filed with the Registrar of Companies show. Bijnis is a B2B marketplace which connects manufacturers, suppliers, traders, and retailers, enabling them to expand their businesses effectively. Commission charged from the sale of supplies on its platform formed 90% of the total operating revenue which increased 2.1X to Rs 47 crore in FY23. Collection from freight and sale of goods are other revenue drivers for Bijnis. The Peak XV-backed firm also added Rs 13 crore from interest and gain of investment bringing its total income to Rs 65 crore during FY23. View TheKredible for a detailed revenue breakup. Similar to other technology startups, its employee benefits accounted for 50% of the overall expenditure. This cost grew by 82.2% to Rs 82 crore in FY23 from Rs 45 crore in FY23. In tune with scale, its freight cost increased 60% in FY23. The company’s cost of procurement, advertising, traveling, information technology, legal and other overheads catalyzed the overall expenditure up by 84.3% to Rs 164 crore in FY23 from Rs 89 crore in FY22. Expenses Breakdown Total ₹ 89 Cr https://thekredible.com/company/bijnis/financials View Full Data To access complete data, visithttps://thekredible.com/company/bijnis/financials Total ₹ 164 Cr https://thekredible.com/company/bijnis/financials View Full Data To access complete data, visithttps://thekredible.com/company/bijnis/financials Employee benefit Employee benefit Freight Freight Advertising promotional Advertising promotional Travelling conveyance Travelling conveyance Information technology Information technology Cost of material consumed Cost of material consumed Others To check complete Expense Breakdown visit thekredible.com View full data Head to TheKredible for a detailed expense breakdown. The surge in employee benefits, freight, and advertising outpaced the revenue growth, leading to a 74.6% increase in losses, which amounted to Rs 100 crore in FY23 compared to Rs 57 crore in FY22. Its ROCE and EBITDA margin stood at -70% and -150% respectively. On a unit level, it spent Rs 3.15 to earn a rupee in FY23. FY22-FY23 FY22 FY23 EBITDA Margin -170% -150% Expense/₹ of Op Revenue ₹3.42 ₹3.15 ROCE -26% -70% Bijnis has raised around $42 million across rounds including its $30 million round led by Westbridge Capital in September 2021. According to the startup data intelligence platform, TheKredible Info Edge is the largest external stakeholder with 26.3% followed by Matrix Partners and Peak XV Partners with 14.21% each. A B2B firm dominating in only one segment is relatively rare, and Bijnis just has seen a particularly accessible opportunity in footwear to do so. Or perhaps used the exposure here to build further. With a firm like Zetwerk on a similar track to look up to, the firm seems to be seeking the wider, but tougher opportunity in smaller firms with factories. It will need a longer runway to get traction here, and that will make support from existing investors well worth tracking in the coming quarters.

Uber India made Rs 807 Cr from ride-hailing in FY24

EntrackrEntrackr · 3m ago
Uber India made Rs 807 Cr from ride-hailing in FY24
Medial

Online mobility platform Uber India recorded a 41.1% year-on-year surge in revenue, which surpassed Rs 3,700 crore in the fiscal year ending March 2024. However, despite this growth, the company's losses shrank by 71.4% during the same period. According to the consolidated financial statements of Uber India System Private Limited, its revenue from operations increased to Rs 3,762 crore in FY24 from Rs 2,666 crore in FY23. Moving to revenue recognition, collection from Uber rides (ride-hailing) accounted for 21.45% of the total operating revenue which increased by 18.9% to Rs 807 crore in FY24 from Rs 679 crore in FY23. The remaining income came from Uber BV, generated through engineering support services, back-office, and other support services, billed under a cost-plus model. The company also added Rs 99 crore from interest on current investment and other miscellaneous sources (non-operating) which tallied the overall revenue to Rs 3,860 crore in FY24 from Rs 2,744 crore in FY23. According to its consolidated statements, Uber India spent 67.6% of its overall cost on employee benefits. This cost grew by 29.4% to Rs 2,690 crore in FY24, compared to Rs 2,079 crore in FY23. Its cost of consumables amounted to Rs 657 crore in the previous fiscal year (FY24). Legal/professional fees, advertising, rent, repairs, safety security, and other overheads took the total expenditure up by 26.4% to Rs 3,977 crore in FY24 from Rs 3,146 crore in FY23. Uber India’s over 40% growth and controlled expenditure led its net losses to shrink by 71.4% to Rs 89 crore in FY24, compared to Rs 311 crore in FY23. On a unit level, it spent Rs 1.06 to earn a rupee in FY24. While continuing to play out like a mid-tier software firm with low margins and a division that is a drag (the cab services), Uber India seems the closest it will ever get to profitability, especially if it acquires Blusmart mobility, as some reports will have it. Even without that, for most lay observers, it's a wonder that the firm continues to make losses, when we consider that its best in terms of service quality and ‘partner morale’ or driver satisfaction, is well behind it. Granted, the firm has had to virtually create and make up a business model as it has gone along, but considering the not insignificant role it plays in many cities in India as a service provider, the numbers are underwhelming. Selling software services to its parent has been a good fix to cover up for what has surely been a very rough ride in India so far, but the bigger tragedy is that very few people or customers will sympathise. It is frankly incomprehensible that the firm has to struggle to make enough here, and get earn nothing but criticism most of the time. As it completes a dozen years in India this year, one can only hope that the firm makes a breakthrough financially, morally and efficiency wise.

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