
Digital lending startups put off IPO plans amid muted growth
ETMarkets.com Several digital lending startups reported a slowdown in growth in financial year 2025 amid rising credit and operating expenses and tighter regulatory norms. According to people in the know, the muted performance might affect some of their plans to go public in this year.
While Moneyview and Kissht are in the process of filing their draft documents with the market regulator, Kreditbee is seeking a board approval to convert itself into a public limited company, taking one step closer to its IPO.
"Many of these fintechs are just looking to keep their regulatory clearances in place, but will eventually want to time their public listing when their financials are in a better place and overall market sentiments have changed," said a founder of a digital lending startup.
Lending platforms such as Axio, Fibe, Moneyview and Kreditbee showed divergent performance in FY25. 'Lending companies saw higher operating expenses as credit quality worsened, and regulatory tightening forced businesses to slow disbursals and grow more cautiously,' chief executive officer of a digital lending startup said on condition of anonymity.Bengaluru-based Kreditbee reported a comparatively muted net profit growth of just over 10% in FY25 at Rs 221 crore, up from Rs 200 crore in FY24, while its operating revenue jumped 56% to Rs 2,185 crore from Rs 1,399 crore.A sharp 67% year-on-year increase in expenses to Rs 1,890 crore in FY25 dented the bottom-line growth of Kreditbee, which primarily offers unsecured consumer loans.Rival Moneyview reported an improvement in the returns on its assets under management (AUM) while it slowed down disbursement growth in the last fiscal.'Since the second half of FY25, the company has consciously reduced disbursements and plans modest AUM growth in FY26,' India Ratings and Research said in a ratings document issued on April 10.The Bengaluru-based startup's return on average assets deployed went up to 6.8% in the first nine months of the last fiscal, compared to 6.65% in FY2024.FY2025 details of financial performance of the company are not available.
Fibe, which raised $90 million through a mix of primary and secondary funding in June 2024, performed better than its rivals. The Pune-based startup, which offers personal loans and instant cash loans, nearly doubled its net profit to Rs 100 crore in FY2025, up from Rs 55 crore in FY24, taking more out of its operating income of Rs 1,033 crore in FY25 against Rs 708 crore in the preceding year.Consumer lending platform Axio (formerly Capital Float), reported a pre-provisioning profit of Rs 24 crore in the first half of the fiscal year 2025, down from Rs 81 crore in FY24.
Axio is in the process of getting acquired by ecommerce major Amazon. The deal is awaiting clearance from the Reserve Bank of India. According to a rating document issued by Crisil Ratings in January, credit costs of Axio surged to 7% in the first half of FY25 from 4% in FY24.Company promoters are hopeful that despite the challenges, the sector should do better in coming months as there is stability.
IPO still some time away An Indian partner at a large US-based venture fund with multiple fintech investments said that while several digital lenders are preparing for IPOs, most are likely to wait until the December quarter before filing their final prospectus for a public listing.'For some, the IPO is a route to provide exits for existing investors. For others, it's more about testing market appetite,' he said, adding that these companies aim to complete the fundraising process while they still have venture capital in the bank.The chief executive quoted earlier said the first set of draft red herring prospectus (DRHP) filings for IPOs by digital lending startups will likely happen by the end of July. Sebi approvals could take another three months, followed by a two- to three-month window before the companies are ready to go public.'Overall, it's a nine-month process. So, timing the market becomes key for any fintech looking to list,' the CEO said. Elevate your knowledge and leadership skills at a cost cheaper than your daily tea. Punit Goenka reloads Zee with Bullet and OTT focus. Can he beat mighty rivals?
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Indian Express
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Once converted into a common currency, they found that in six of these very poor countries around the 1980s the value of the national poverty line was about $1 per day per person (in 1985 prices). This formed the basis for the first dollar-a-day international poverty line,' according to the World Bank. Over time, as prices went up in every country, the WB had to raise its poverty line. In June, they have now raised it to $3 a day. The PPP exchange rate for Indian rupees in 2025 is 20.6. As such, the poverty line delineating abject or extreme poverty for an individual in the US is an income of $3 a day, while for India it is Rs 62 a day. For the UK, the PPP conversion rate is just 0.67, while for China it is 3.45 and for Iran it is a whopping 1,65,350. India's own (domestically formulated) poverty line in 2009, before the Tendulkar recommendation, was Rs 17 a day per person for urban areas and Rs 12 a day per person for rural areas. 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The same trend of variation exists in the reduction in poverty rates — they could be steep or fairly gradual. Upshot Bizarre as it may seem, especially for a country with so many people at low levels of income and consumption, as well as a country with an enviable record of studying poverty, India's poverty lies in the eyes of the beholder. How do you know if a person is poor or not? How many are poor? Should one quote 5.75% who live in abject poverty (Rs 62 a day)? Or look at 24%, the poverty line for 'lower middle-income countries' such as India? Should one consider 20% as the rate, the proportion of Indians who voluntarily line up to offer labour instead of a paltry amount? Or 66% who are provided free food by law? TABLE 3 attempts to provide some context on the World Bank's poverty lines and how they compare with India's reality as evidenced by official government surveys and data. 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