Singapore
Singapore’s Grab misses quarterly revenue estimates, shares tumble 5pc
Grab Holdings missed second-quarter revenue estimates due to slower growth in its mainstay food-delivery business and foreign exchange headwinds, sending its US-listed shares down 5 per cent yesterday. — Reuters pic

SINGAPORE, Aug 16 — Grab Holdings missed second-quarter revenue estimates due to slower growth in its mainstay food-delivery business and foreign exchange headwinds, sending its US-listed shares down 5 per cent yesterday.

Growth has been slowing at the Southeast Asian tech company after the pandemic-era surge in food-delivery demand, with Grab laying off 11 per cent of its workforce last year in a major restructuring aimed at narrowing losses.

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Sales from the deliveries business — its largest — grew 11 per cent to US$356 million (RM1.6 billion), lower than Visible Alpha estimates of US$362.1 million. That compares to growth of 19 per cent in the first quarter, and a doubling of the business in certain quarters of 2023 and 2022.

Ride-share revenue grew a worse-than-expected 14 per cent.

Grab took a hit of more than 500 basis points on both revenue and gross merchandise value as Southeast Asian currencies weakened against the US dollar in the recent past, CFO Peter Oey told Reuters.

"We’re very bullish (on the business )... travel has bounced back strongly, especially after the rainy season here,” he said.

The company retained its full-year revenue forecast of US$2.70 billion to US$2.75 billion.

Grab, which competes with Gojek, now part of Indonesia’s GoTo Gojek Tokopedia, said in February revenue growth will accelerate in the years beyond 2024 as investments in new products bear fruit.

In the quarter ended June 30, revenue rose 17 per cent to US$664 million, missing analysts’ estimates of US$673.3 million, according to LSEG data.

Adjusted core earnings were US$64 million, compared with a loss of US$17 million last year. Analysts had expected US$62.8 million.

Grab had repurchased about US$131 million in company stock as of June-end, part of a US$500 million buyback announced in February. — Reuters

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