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GoTo Posts Fourth Straight Adjusted Profit, Helped by Cost Cuts

GoTo Posts Fourth Straight Adjusted Profit, Helped by Cost Cuts

Minta day ago
(Bloomberg) -- Indonesia's GoTo Group notched a fourth consecutive quarter of adjusted profit, making progress with reining in expenses and boosting revenue amid stiff competition in ride-hailing and delivery.
Adjusted earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization were 427 billion rupiah ($26 million) for the second quarter, GoTo said in a statement on Wednesday. That compares with a pro-forma loss of 64 billion rupiah a year earlier. Net revenue, which excludes incentives to driver and merchant partners and promotions to users, climbed 23% on a pro forma basis to 4.3 trillion rupiah.
GoTo has been making strides in its effort to cut costs and prove to investors it can make money. The company has slashed jobs and shuttered business units as user growth cools and competition from Singapore's Grab Holdings Ltd. and smaller regional rivals weighs on margins.
Investors remain cautious, with GoTo's stock price down about 80% since it went public in Jakarta in 2022. Still, the shares have advanced more than 20% over the past 12 months as GoTo's earnings have showed signs of improvement.
In a move that would upend the regional market, Grab has been weighing a takeover of GoTo at a valuation of more than $7 billion, Bloomberg News reported. Still, Grab has played down a potential deal, saying in June it's not in talks to buy GoTo 'at this time.'
In a bid to accelerate cost savings, GoTo handed over its loss-making e-commerce unit Tokopedia to ByteDance Ltd.'s TikTok in a $1.5 billion deal. The company also exited Vietnam to concentrate on achieving profitability in its core markets of Indonesia and Singapore, while pushing into growth areas like consumer lending.
The company reaffirmed it expects to post adjusted Ebitda of as much as 1.6 trillion rupiah for the full year.
What Bloomberg Intelligence Says
GoTo's e-commerce, once a key top-line driver, has taken a back seat after it sold 75% of that business to ByteDance's TikTok Shop. GoTo earns e-commerce fees from that deal at no incremental costs. Fintech should expand more as a closer tie-up with TikTok fuels its buy now, pay later loans, while it continues to lead in Indonesian on-demand services.
More stories like this are available on bloomberg.com
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Rude Hotels by Vir Sanghvi: Room at the top
Rude Hotels by Vir Sanghvi: Room at the top

Hindustan Times

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  • Hindustan Times

Rude Hotels by Vir Sanghvi: Room at the top

It is one of the most famous stories in luxury hoteliering. Adrian Zecha, a former publisher who had revolutionised deluxe hotels in Asia by founding the Regent chain, decided to build a home for himself in Phuket, Thailand, after selling his Regent stake. The Amanpuri's residences-plus-hotel model has been copied all over the world A few friends joined him and they found a location outside the city to build their villas. But, as construction commenced, they realised that the area lacked the basic infrastructure required to support luxury homes. So, Zecha decided he would build a small hotel next to their homes that would provide the generators, boilers, laundry, security, etc needed to provide support services to their homes. He called the hotel Amanpuri, and by the time it opened in late 1987, a business model had emerged. Zecha and his friends sold more land around the hotel to other millionaires who built their own luxury homes. Amanpuri managed the properties and, if the millionaires so chose, they could offer their homes up for rent when they were not using them for their own vacations. Adrian Zecha built Phuket's Amanpuri in 1987 to offer support services to his friends' luxury homes. The Amanpuri experience had two consequences. The residences-plus-hotel model began to be copied all over the world. It was good for guests because they got to spend holidays by renting the homes of millionaires. It was good for the millionaires because they earned money from their vacation homes when they were not using them. And it was good for hotel developers because they made an immediate return on their investment by selling luxury residences on the hotel site. But there was also a second consequence. Zecha priced the hotel rooms in Amanpuri at such high rates that most hoteliers thought he was crazy. The hoteliers were wrong. Amanpuri became a rage and guests flocked to Phuket. Zecha had found a new niche: Super-rich travellers who were willing to pay a fortune for small, luxury hotels. Zecha got back into hoteliering full-time and created the Aman chain of exclusive, expensive hotels. He started out with many Asian locations (he is Indonesian) but expanded to such unlikely destinations as Jackson Hole, Wyoming. I did a TV show on Aman hotels at the height of Zecha's success and stayed at many of the hotels. I was struck by several things. One: The hotels were all very different and were united only by Zecha's whims, quirks and fancies. Two: Though some of the hotels had great exteriors designed by such brilliant architects as Ed Tuttle, the interiors and rooms could be sparse, boring and impractical for guests. Once you checked in, you didn't always find super-luxury experiences. And three: The food was usually disappointing. Aman has developed the Japanese restaurant Nama, and the Italian Arva in-house. Though Aman became a hugely influential chain in concept terms, it struggled financially and many of the quirkier hotels lost money. At one stage, aggressive investors removed Zecha. He returned only to eventually sell the company to India's DLF (which retained his management) before finally losing control completely when DLF sold it to a group of investors led by Vladislav Doronin, a Swedish citizen of Russian extraction who had made a fortune in property and trading, and had dated such glamorous figures as Naomi Campbell. Though the transition to the new regime was rocky within the old Aman team, Doronin has proved to be good for Aman. He has moved from Zecha's quirkiness to providing a solid luxury experience, stabilised the company's finances, expanded to new locations, attracted corporate investors and turned Aman, which is the preserve of a small number of wealthy guests ('Amanjunkies') into the international hotel group of choice for the global super-rich. The food is finally worth the prices the hotels charge (Arva and Nama, new, high-quality Italian and Japanese restaurant brands have been developed in-house). The managers are trained professionals, which they weren't always in the Zecha era. The newer hotels offer a consistent luxury experience. Vladislav Doronin (who once dated Naomi Campbell) now owns the chain and is shaking things up. Most important, Aman has finally succeeded in moving beyond the resorts category. The old regime screwed up with its first city hotel (now The Lodhi in Delhi; DLF held on to it when it sold Aman) and its Tokyo property was stuck in limbo until it opened, post-takeover, to win fame as one of the world's best hotels. The Aman in New York is the city's most expensive and exclusive hotel. 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Of course the design is outstanding (the lobby in Bangkok designed by Jean Michel Gathy is breathtaking) and the rooms are super luxurious. But it's more than that: The hotels smell of restrained elegance and good taste. Aman is less in the business of selling hotel rooms and more in the business of creating a sophisticated environment, where every detail is perfect. The super-rich think that they are different from the rest of us. Aman reminds them that they are absolutely right to feel that way. In keeping with that philosophy, Aman now has several brand extensions. In 2018 a skincare line was successfully launched. In 2020 came Aman fragrances. In 2022 a clothes line became available. A few years ago, as prices of hotel rooms skyrocketed, Aman created a new hotel brand, Janu, at a lower price point, but with the same sensibility as the flagship. It's all a long way from the original conception of Amanpuri as a place for Zecha and his friends. The world has changed. But Aman has kept pace with the changes and to its credit, it is now better than it has ever been. From HT Brunch, Aug 16, 2025 Follow us on

New Instagram location sharing feature sparks privacy fears
New Instagram location sharing feature sparks privacy fears

The Hindu

time7 hours ago

  • The Hindu

New Instagram location sharing feature sparks privacy fears

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Aravind Srinivas' net worth: How much does Perplexity CEO earn as it makes bid to buy Chrome browser for $34.5 billion?
Aravind Srinivas' net worth: How much does Perplexity CEO earn as it makes bid to buy Chrome browser for $34.5 billion?

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time8 hours ago

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Aravind Srinivas' net worth: How much does Perplexity CEO earn as it makes bid to buy Chrome browser for $34.5 billion?

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