Bangkok Post

Oyo’s annual loss widens six-fold to $335 million

-

BENGALURU: SoftBank Group Corpbacked Oyo Hotels and Homes said yesterday that loss widened more than six-fold in the year to March 2019, as the India-based hotel chain spent heavily to expand into China.

The news comes weeks after Oyo began laying off roughly 2,000 employees in India, as it inches toward profitabil­ity, and days after its major investor SoftBank Group reported dismal quarterly results.

The Japanese firm owns about 46% of Oyo.

Quarterly profit at SoftBank Group was almost wiped out as it faced loss at its $100 billion Vision Fund, its results last week showed, which came months after its bailout of loss-making startup WeWork.

Oyo’s consolidat­ed net loss after tax widened to $335 million in the year ended March 31, 2019, the company said in a statement. Its loss a year earlier was about $50 million, according to data from business intelligen­ce firm Tofler.

Gurugram-headquarte­red Oyo, which says it is the world’s fastest-growing hotel chain, expanded aggressive­ly into China — now its second-biggest market after India — during the 2018/19 financial year.

“Since China and other internatio­nal markets were in developmen­t and investment mode during that time, they contribute­d to 75% of the loss,” Oyo said.

However, the company’s gross margin in India improved year-over-year, it added.

Consolidat­ed revenue for the same period surged to $951 million from $211 million a year earlier, Oyo said.

“Oyo has changed the way it calculates revenue,’’ Rohit Kapoor, OYO’s chief executive officer for India and South Asia, said on a conference call with reporters.

The company had earlier reported revenues of around $58 million for the year ended March 2018, according to its annual report and regulatory filings, but its statement and Tofler data showed revenue during that year was above $200 million.

“We had earlier accounted for revenue on a net basis ... including net realizable value (NRV) as a key metric, representi­ng the total money paid by the guests,” Kapoor said in response to a question from Reuters.

“We’ve moved to gross basis ... we’ve discontinu­ed using NRV as a metric, and replaced it with revenue which is net of taxes and loyalty discounts.”

The company’s internal projection­s showed in November it may not make a profit in India and China until 2022.

 ?? BLOOMBERG ?? A person enters an Oyo hotel, operated by Oyo Hotels Japan G.K., in
Tokyo.
BLOOMBERG A person enters an Oyo hotel, operated by Oyo Hotels Japan G.K., in Tokyo.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Thailand