Business Day

Lesaka reduces its net loss in third quarter

- Jacqueline Mackenzie

Lesaka Technologi­es reduced its net loss in the third quarter, as revenue rose 9% in rand terms.

Lesaka provides informal retail merchants with point-ofsales devices that allow them to pay their suppliers and sell many products, including airtime and electricit­y.

The group has a primary listing on the Nasdaq and a secondary one on the JSE. It reported revenue of R2.6bn in the quarter to end-March from R2.4bn a year ago.

Operating income improved to R15m for the quarter from an operating loss of R33.2m a year ago. Its net loss shrank to R76.4m from a loss of R104.4m before.

The merchant division reported an 8% increase in revenue and the consumer division’s revenue was 19% higher year on year in rands.

The company maintained its revenue guidance for fiscal 2024 at R10.7bn-R11.7bn, but raised group adjusted earnings before interest, tax, depreciati­on and amortisati­on (ebitda) guidance to between R685m and R705m from the previously guided R625m-R685m.

On Wednesday, Lesaka announced that it had signed a deal to buy local fintech operator Adumo for R1.6bn through a combinatio­n of stock and cash, indicating its strategy of acquisitiv­e growth remained in place.

“We are excited about the anticipate­d completion of the Adumo acquisitio­n. We believe it will facilitate an accelerati­on of our organic growth story and cement Lesaka’s position as Southern Africa’s leading Fintech,” said Lesaka group chair Ali Mazanderan­i.

The group also recently acquired Touchsides from Heineken SA for an undisclose­d sum.

That acquisitio­n is expected to boost the group’s Kazang footprint in the tavern industry in SA’s informal market. Kazang is a payments platform that includes the buying and selling of airtime and micro-lending.

This added to the buyout of the Connect Group in April 2022 through a R3.7bn deal that is set to expand its footprint in the small, medium and micro enterprise­s sector in Southern Africa.

Lesaka said that once the Adumo transactio­n was complete, its ecosystem would serve 1.7-million active consumers and 119,000 merchants, and process more than R250bn in throughput — made up of R40bn from cards, R100bn in value added services (VAS) and R110bn in cash — per year.

Additional­ly, the group would have more than 3,300 employees operating in five countries: SA, Namibia, Botswana, Zambia, and Kenya.

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