Trade Me group, the online marketplace and classified advertising business, has seen three years of investment pay off with its general items marketplace restoring revenue growth after a two-year absence.
The Wellington-based company reported a 9.2 per cent revenue uplift to $218 million for the year ended June 30 while its general items marketplace had revenue growth of 3.5 per cent compared to the prior year to $65.7m, with a bigger upswing in the second half.
"We've had over the last 15 months a return to growth in activity in that part of the business and in the last half we've restored revenue growth," said chief executive John Macdonald. That's been driven by design and functionality changes such as making photos free on all listings which initially dropped overall yield but lifted sales activity. A simplified pricing structure in February then delivered back that yield on higher sales, he said. The new Book a Courier service, launched in April to make it easier to buy and sell on the site, reached a milestone of 1,000 daily deliveries in July.
The company's net profit after tax fell 6.5 per cent to $74.9m including a one-off impairment charge of $8.1m from its online dating business FindSomeone which, along with its Travelbug site, is struggling against international competitors. Underlying profit was up 3.5 per cent to $83m.
Net profit was lowered by 1 per cent due to accounting for losses from the group's 12.4 per cent stake in lending platform Harmoney, New Zealand's first peer-to-peer lender. Harmoney reported a $14.2m loss in the 2016 financial year, compared to $6.3m the prior year and Trade Me's share of the loss from continuing operations was $1.6m, double the amount the prior year. Macdonald said the investment is a good fit as the two online platforms have a lot in common and he had confidence in the long-term it will pay off as the new model for the lending industry gains traction.