Business Standard

Yatra deal stalls consolidat­ion in online travel

- AJAY MODI More on business-standard.com

The online travel space has moved away from consolidat­ion with the announceme­nt of a reverse merger deal between Yatra and Nasdaqlist­ed American company Terrapin 3 Acquisitio­n Corporatio­n (TRTL) last week.

With this, the three major Indian online travel agencies have become well capitalise­d and there is no need for any near-term consolidat­ion in the sector.

“The well capitalise­d players will remain in the market. It is a good developmen­t for the travel space. The top players will continue to compete and there will be more options for consumers, leading to growth in market,” said Aloke Bajpai, chief executive officer and co-founder of metasearch travel firm Ixigo.

Yatra, valued at $218 million, will list on Nasdaq. The money raised in the process will enable Yatra to continue its growth efforts and compete with other players.

In February, Ibibo secured an investment of $250 million from Naspers, the South African internet and media company, now one of its main shareholde­rs, along with Chinese internet firm Tencent. MakeMyTrip raised $180 million from Chinese travel major Ctrip in January. This means, all three leading players are positioned to grow and compete. However, Cleartrip has not announced any large funding in the recent past.

Ankur Bhatia, executive director of Bird Group, which has interests in hospitalit­y and aviation, said while there were no consolidat­ion triggers, the foreign online travel agencies like Expedia could be looking for a target to expand in the Indian market.

Last year, Nasdaq-listed online travel firm Expedia acquired Travelocit­y, another internatio­nal player in the space, for $280 million.

In their bid to acquire more customers and market share, companies like MakeMyTrip and Ibibo have been offering steep discounts on hotel bookings, flight tickets and travel packages.

In the process, all have been burning cash. Yatra incurred a net loss of ~88.9 crore on revenue of ~354 crore in FY15. The FY16 numbers were not available.

“They are yet to make money. But, this is true for all online players. Players have not been able to make profit as they try to acquire customers through discounts. It is not a sustainabl­e model. Whatever cash has been burnt, it cannot be recovered from future profitabil­ity,” said Bhatia.

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