Brands
Discover
Events
Newsletter
More

Follow Us

twitterfacebookinstagramyoutube
Youtstory

Brands

Resources

Stories

General

In-Depth

Announcement

Reports

News

Funding

Startup Sectors

Women in tech

Sportstech

Agritech

E-Commerce

Education

Lifestyle

Entertainment

Art & Culture

Travel & Leisure

Curtain Raiser

Wine and Food

YSTV

ADVERTISEMENT
Advertise with us

BYJU'S, PharmEasy among Prosus’s ‘underperformers’ in India portfolio

Prosus earned profitable returns from other Indian firms, including Swiggy (7%), Eruditus (22%), PayU India (30%), Meesho (32%) and Elastic Run (31%).

BYJU'S, PharmEasy among Prosus’s ‘underperformers’ in India portfolio

Wednesday November 29, 2023 , 2 min Read

Edtech firm BYJU'S and healthtech startup Pharmeasywere among the biggest 'underperformers' in Prosus’s India portfolio, hitting the Netherlands-based investment major’s internal rate of return (IRR) in the first half of 2024. 

According to the company’s presentation, Prosus reported a significant fall in its IRR across its portfolio, at 5% in the first half of FY24, compared with 18% in the first half of FY22, because of a few large underperformers. 

Prosus said its IRR for BYJU'S stood at -24% while for PharmEasy, it was at -41%. 

Meanwhile, Prosus earned profitable returns from its other Indian portfolio firms, including Swiggy (7%), Eruditus(22%), PayU India (30%), Meesho (32%) and ElasticRun (31%). 

Prosus

Valuation markdowns 

Further, the firm marked down the valuation of the underperformers, starting with BYJU'S to less than $3 billion, a senior Prosus executive said, during a post-earnings call with reporters. In November last year, Prosus first slashed the fair value of BYJU'S to $5.97 billion from its peak valuation of $22 billion in October 2022 when it raised $250 million. 

“We have written it (BYJU'S) by a further $315 million. We do that from time to time. It does not reflect our long-term view of the business. It reflects current trading circumstances,” he said.

Prosus has invested $536 million in the edtech startup since 2018.

PharmEasy was marked down to half from $5.6 billion.

“Another is a write down in PharmEasy of about $118 million, and that's really driven by the need for Pharmeasy to raise money to settle debt. We actually participated in that round which expresses our confidence in the business going forward,” the spokesperson said. 

“PharmEasy is still an early-stage business in India, a market that is ripe for tech startups, and we have conviction that Pharmeasy will become more valuable as it executes on its strategy, which has been refocused on the B2B operations and profitability," he added.


Edited by Affirunisa Kankudti