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Since Byju's FY21 results were released over 18 months after the coverage period ended in March 2021, they have been the focus of intensive scrutiny and speculative discussion.

Digital Desk: Byju's, the most valuable start-up in India and a provider of educational technology, reported today that its fiscal year 2020–21 (FY21) sales was Rs 2,428 crore, leading to a loss of Rs 4,500 crore.

This is comparable to the Rs 2,434 crore in sales from the prior year, but the difference is that the 2019–20 fiscal year's bottom line revealed a profit of Rs 51 crore.

The company's auditor, Deloitte Haskins & Sells, issued an unqualified report about the FY21 data.

Byju Raveendran, the company's founder, and CEO, stated in an interview with Business Standard that the company experienced significant business growth in FY 21. Though expenses were not deferred, over 40% of the income was because this was the first year that new revenue recognition began as a result of changes to the Covid business model.

"A significant portion of the FY21 revenue was postponed due to changes in revenue recognition over the time of consumption and collection. Roughly 40% of the revenue was postponed. Otherwise, the rate of growth would have been between 60 and 65 percent. The expenses for the revenue that was delayed have already been deducted from the revenue in FY21, so the loss has grown, according to Raveendran.

High-voltage purchases that have yet to start appearing as assets on the balance sheet also had an impact on Byju's. The number of acquisitions grew this year, Raveendran noted, adding that these were loss-making, fast-growing additions that were escalating the consolidated deficit.

Since Byju's FY21 results were released over 18 months after the coverage period ended in March 2021, they have been the focus of intensive scrutiny and speculative discussion.

"There was an 18-month delay, which made everyone uneasy. For me and everyone else involved, the past six months have been the hardest. The good thing is that's done with now, said Raveendran.

 The corporation published unaudited figures that show close to Rs 10,000 crore in gross revenues, raising hopes for the next year, 2021–2022. Its K-12 education division is rapidly expanding. The company reported that it generated Rs 4,530 crore in revenue in the period between April and July 2022 alone.

Due to the pandemic's acceleration of the adoption of online education, Byju's is currently on an acquisition binge both in India and beyond. One of these agreements last year involved the $600 million purchase of Singapore-based Great Learning, a major participant in professional and higher education, and the $1 billion purchase of New Delhi-based Aakash Educational Services.

Other notable transactions were the $300 million acquisition of the Mumbai-based coding start-up WhiteHat Jr in 2020 and the $500 million purchase of the US-based digital reading platform Epic last year.

The business asserted that acquisitions in all categories had increased dramatically during the previous year. Aakash's exam preparation sector revenues and Great Learning's higher education segment revenues have both increased twofold since the acquisition.

The two purchases that are outperforming are Aakash and Great Learning, according to Raveendran. "We are underperforming at WhiteHat Jr (acquisition). There is a good market fit, but we still need to address the acquisition costs.

 

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