1/ Society benefits the most when entrepreneurs focus on solving problems before monetizing the solution.

But solving a problem doesn’t equate to creating a great business.
2/ $GRAB has unlocked tremendous consumer value in ride-hail, but their decade-long slog in the most difficult sector in consumer interment has them squeezing out just 6 dimes of revenue out of each ride (optimistically less than 2 dimes of mature profit).
3/ So how do you navigate turning an objectively terrible business characterized by fickle customers and razor thin margins into sustainable earnings power?

You have to parlay your competitive position in one of your businesses in hopes of achieving meaningful profits in another
4/ Or in Grab’s case, “positive revenues.”

No, that’s not a misprint. Until 2019, Grab paid out more in incentives for ride-hail than they generated (food delivery reached positive revenues in 2H20).
5/ Adding food delivery and payments helped build a captive consumer base which was ingeniously turned into the foundation of a “Superapp”
6/ The high frequency business drives traffic to the app and the essential services keep churn low. However, profits are still small, which means monetization needs to be driven by cross-selling.
7/ This Superapp concept is by no means exclusive to Grab - their regional competitor GoJek has been a leader here too. But with a population of 700mn+, perhaps the SEA region could be shared…
8/ While customer promiscuity between the two is common (~60% according to our survey), competition is settling and incentives could be cut…
9/ Maybe leaning on advertising services, especially with sponsored food listings, and offering a suite of financial services to their 25mn monthly users could bring meaningful earnings…
10/ But a new player, $SE, has been very disruptive.
11/ They recently entered the food delivery market with ShopeeFood, dashing Grab+GoJek hopes of being a profitable duopoly.

They’re also putting pressure on their payments businesses.

$SE isn’t just attacking Grab’s verticals, they’re attacking their entire ecosystem.
12/ But Grab has a leading market share in almost all of their markets and a very savvy management team that has a history of outcompeting numerous competitors, including $UBER when it was at the height of its powers.
13/ So how will this unfold? What is Grab’s competitive position? What does success look like? What can earnings power look like longer term? Will they be able to build a superapp atop their foundation of ride-hail, food delivery, and payments?
14/ Whether you’re interested in the stock or not, Grab has a fascinating business story that has a lot to teach. It holds lessons for operating at low margins, expanding geographically, building a Superapp foundation, and more.
End/ We discuss all this and more in our 15,000 word deep dive, which includes a survey of >100 Indonesian consumers and many discussions with regional venture capitalists and industry executives.

djyresearch.com/2021/11/09/gra…

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More from @kevg1412

12 Nov
1/ $CPNG was down 7% this morning on 3Q21 earnings.

Is this a case of investors getting ahead of themselves with high expectations or is there something wrong with the direction of the business?

A short update on Coupang below 🧵.
2/ Their 1P business, “Net Retail Sales” was +43% y/y to $4.1bn, down from +65% y/y last quarter. This 2300bps sequential deceleration is on very tough comps though and still good in absolute with $CPNG growing more than 2x as fast as the Korean ecommerce market.
3/ Active customers increased to 16.8mn, for the 15th consecutive quarter of 20%+ growth. However, active buyers in 2Q21 were 17mn. This sequential decrease is what is likely spooking the market.
Read 21 tweets
10 Nov
Image
Fun fact: my copy was a preview copy Image
See here for some of my favorite quotes:

12mv2.com/li-lu/
Read 5 tweets
6 Oct
1/ In the early 2000s, The Walt Disney Company was in a bad way…

...It fended off a hostile takeover by Comcast.
2/ Its core business—animation—released commercial flops like Brother Bear, Atlantis, and Dinosaur. Meanwhile, Dreamworks and Pixar churned out hit after animated hit...

...And Michael Eisner—Disney’s CEO of 21 years—was on his way out after a shareholder revolt.
3/ In the midst of Disney’s crisis, Bob Iger spotted an opportunity. After 30 years at one company, the mild-mannered empath from Long Island was about to shake things up…
Read 15 tweets
5 Oct
1/ Some say you can pay any price for a great company, but was $CPNG at ~$100bn too high?

Well, one things for certain: you wouldn't have paid that for what it started out as.
2/ It started as a money-losing Groupon-clone that stemmed its losses by pivoting to an eBay model, but failed to develop beyond a mediocre business.

Bom Kim recognized he had to stop emulating what was easy and took on what no one though was possible: out-Amazoning Amazon.
3/ They built out their own entire logistics network and stocked their warehouses with the largest 1P selection in Korea.

They made delighting their customers their ethos and didn't shy away from hiring all of their own drivers to speed up delivery times.
Read 11 tweets
2 Sep
1/ Nintendo $NTDOY, a multi-generational icon, with 26 of the top 50 best selling titles, an IP portfolio 2nd to only Disney, trades at just 12x ex-cash earnings.
2/ Margins have only been improving because of the shift to digital, and they have over 30mn paying online subscribers--their first recurring revenue ever.
3/ Not to mention, their initiatives with DLC extends a game’s monetizable life and drives consumer spending higher, while increasing engagement.
Read 10 tweets
1 Jul
1/ $BABA added half an $AMZN of GMV and increased top line by $PDD total revenue just last year…

Investor sentiment?

Competition is going to smoke them...
2/ But wait, I thought they were a monopoly? They were just fined by the SAMR.

Investor response: Regulation is a big concern too
3/ Well, does China really want to cripple the engine that facilitates over $1.2tn of commerce that millions of merchants’ livelihood depend on?

We don’t think so.
Read 15 tweets

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