Africa’s e-commerce group, Jumia, cut down its operating losses by 71% year over year to $8.3 million in the first quarter (Q1) of 2024 as against $28 million recorded in the same period of 2023.
The company revealed this in its Q1 2024 report released on Tuesday. Jumia said it was able to cut down its losses through significant cost reductions and improved gross margins as it continues to implement strategic plans toward profitability.
The company also posted a 19% revenue growth year-on-year in Q1 2024 to $49 million, despite a 5% decline in active customer base in the same quarter. Jumia’s gross merchandise value (GMV), that is, the total amount customers paid before deductions like fees, discounts, or returns, also surged by 5% year-on-year to $181 million.
The quarterly active customers of the e-commerce group declined from 2 million to 1.9 million due to cost-cutting measures such as reduced customer incentives and free shipping expenditures. However, this helped the company to retain a higher-quality customer base with increased repurchase rates.
A strong start
Jumia Group’s CEO, Francis Dufay, believes the company is off to a great start this year as it continues to execute strategic priorities focused on strengthening Jumia’s core business and improving cash efficiency while establishing a leaner organization primed for growth.
“Our efforts drove a 5% year-over-year and 39% constant-currency improvement in GMV in the quarter, while order growth and AOV also expanded, a clear sign that our strategy is working.
“Disciplined expense management and further streamlining of our logistics network reduced our quarterly cash burn1 to $19.1 million from $22.0 million in the first quarter of 2023.
“Efforts to orient spending toward more efficient marketing channels along with reductions in customer discounts also helped attract a stickier and higher quality customer base, driving a 300 basis-point improvement in repurchase rates versus the prior year,” Dufay said.
Growth in Nigeria, Ghana
Despite the tough economic conditions, Dufay said Jumia is seeing growth in two of its major markets, Nigeria and Ghana.
According to him, the company’s success is more notable when considered against the challenging macro environment in Africa.
Significant currency devaluations in some of its largest markets impacted both purchasing power and supply availability, making for a difficult operating environment. However, Dufay said Jumia’s ability to secure sufficient inventory and offer a diversified product assortment at competitive prices continues to keep consumers engaged on its platform.
“Importantly, we are also beginning to see early signs of general stabilization in select markets, leaving us hopeful that conditions will continue to improve,” he said.
As part of strategies to cut its perennial losses and move to profitability, Jumia in the fourth quarter (Q4) of 2022 slashed its workforce by 20% in an exercise that saw the exit of 900 people from the company. The company also discontinued its unprofitable food business.
With all these, Dufay said Jumia is now a much leaner, more agile, and more focused company to achieve its goals for 2024.
The loss is not a surprise. But it can even be further cut if they do due diligence investigation before blocking customers. My daughter and I were blocked because by agreement she tried to pay in dollar using her sister’s debit card to pay for an item to be shipped to me. To them it is fraudulent forgetting that Africans have more active social interactions and such use of debit card can be legitimate. Wish them well if they investigate well and reverse such unwarranted blockages.