China's Meituan reports quarterly loss as it expands into new area

Reuters

Published Mar 26, 2021 04:56AM ET

Updated Mar 26, 2021 08:10AM ET

By Yingzhi Yang and Ryan Woo

BEIJING (Reuters) - Chinese food delivery company Meituan reported a loss on Friday for October-December after two consecutive quarters of profit, as it expanded into the community group-buying business that relies heavily on subsidies.

It reported a loss of 2.24 billion yuan ($343 million) versus profit of 1.46 billion yuan in the same quarter a year earlier, the company said in a stock exchange filing.

Meituan, whose services also include restaurant reviews and bike sharing, said total revenue rose 34.7% in October-December from a year earlier to 37.92 billion yuan. That compared with the 39.17 billion yuan average of 14 analyst estimates, IBES data from Refinitiv showed.

Food delivery, which accounts for over half of Meituan's total revenue, posted quarterly revenue growth of 37.0% to 21.54 billion yuan.

Meituan's community group buying service, called Meituan Select, enables communities to set up groups for bulk buying. The service is part of Meituan's new initiatives that grew by 51.9% year-on-year in revenue to 9.24 billion yuan.

Operating losses from new initiatives in 2020 ballooned to 10.9 billion yuan from 6.7 billion in 2019, the company said, adding that it may continue to report overall operating losses in the next few quarters as "we ramp up our community e-commerce business."

The company's expansion has run into regulatory hurdles as China has recently stepped up efforts to rein in the growing influence of tech giants, citing the risk of abuse of market power to stifle competition, misuse of consumer data and the violation of consumer rights.

Meituan Select was among the five platforms fined by China earlier this month for "improper pricing behaviour".

The company will abide by regulators' guidelines and "work with the relevant authorities to promote the healthy, long-term growth of the internet and platform economy," Meituan chief executive Wang Xing said on an earnings call.