MobiKwik

News, The Morning Context

MobiKwik can see light at the end of the tunnel

The worst may be over for MobiKwik. The Gurugram-based fintech company ended the 2024–25 fiscal year with a loss of ₹121 crore, down from a profit of ₹14 crore in the previous year. Higher losses are a result of its risky lending business, which ran into trouble after the Reserve Bank of India’s nudge last year to slow down unsecured lending. The company has pivoted its focus to higher-ticket, longer-term loans. Its payments business remains strong, with non-UPI payments making up 68% of processed payments, up from 37%.

News, The Morning Context

Post-IPO Mobikwik is walking on a knife’s edge

It reported losses in Q2 and Q3, its financial services business is reeling and its payments business is growing but earning less. The Gurugram-based fintech needs a turnaround. Since its mid-December initial public offering (IPO), MobiKwik’s shares have fallen by just under 40%. The company’s losses are largely due to its financial services business being severely impacted, despite healthy growth in its payments business. This financial trouble is attributed to sectoral headwinds and a debacle in its P2P lending product with partner Lendbox, which virtually shut down after an RBI circular.

News, The Morning Context

RBI’s crackdown on P2P lending casts a cloud over MobiKwik’s IPO plans

As investors in MobiKwik’s P2P lending scheme cry foul over the handling of an RBI rule change, uncertainty looms over the fintech company’s lending business—its strongest growth driver. Many users of a lending scheme offered by MobiKwik are rattled. The Gurugram-headquartered digital payments company, which earlier allowed “anytime withdrawals”, seems to have locked in their investments after the central bank changed a key rule.

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