Serko shares jumped to a six-month high after the online travel booking software firm said it boosted sales and scaled back spending, allowing it to almost halve its annual loss and affirm its target of making a profit in 2018.
The loss narrowed to $3.3 million, or 5 cents per share, in the 12 months ended March 31, from a loss of $6.3m, or 10 cents, a year earlier, it said in a statement. Trading revenue rose 9 per cent to $14.3m and operating costs were trimmed by 10 per cent to $18.8m.
"Serko, which celebrates its 10-year anniversary, has made strong progress over the last financial year," chairman Simon Botherway said. "The current pipeline of new customers expected to join Serko's platform gives us confidence we will achieve positive profit in the current financial year and cash flow break even for the full year."
The company's shares jumped 21 per cent to 46 cents, having already climbed 52 per cent from a record low last month.
Grant Williamson, a director at Hamilton Hindin Greene, said the company was showing "nice growth" and had reasonable cash reserves, but was "really a speculative stock" with investors uneasy about software companies since the collapse of Wynyard Group last year.