Xero, the cloud-based accounting firm, widened its annual loss in line with is guidance while using cash reserves to double revenue and paying customers.
The net loss was $14.4 million in the 12 months ended March 31, from a loss of $7.9 million a year earlier, the Wellington based company said in a statement. Operating revenue rose 102 per cent to $39 million.
Shares of Xero have climbed from just 85 cents in May 2008 to $13.90 today, rewarding shareholders who have subscribed for some $180 million of equity including its 2007 initial public offering. The company now has a market value of $1.6 billion, putting it is the same league as Fisher & Paykel Healthcare and leaving some investors struggling to apply conventional valuation models.
Operating expenses grew 97 per cent to $55.95 million. Wages and salaries accounted for the biggest share of operating expenses, jumping 93 per cent to $34.5 million including share-based payments, as Xero took on workers to drive sales growth.
The company's accounts show Xero's biggest sales gains came from Australia, where revenue from external customers jumped to $13.9 million from $5 million. To achieve that, the company's operating expenses in Australia rose to $12.7 million from $5.6 million. Pretax earnings were $1.2 million across the Tasman.