Prosus profit jumps 84% as deal spree sets stage for European push


Prosus' logo is pictured on a smartphone in this illustration taken, December 4, 2021. REUTERS/Dado Ruvic/Illustration

June 29 (Reuters) - Dutch ⁠digital services operator Prosus reported an 84% leap in full-year adjusted core ⁠profit on Monday as it looks to expand its successful Latin ‌American business model across Europe following a run of aggressive dealmaking.

Prosus deployed some $8.5 billion for acquisitions over the past year. That included the purchase of Just Eat Takeaway.com, which it will use as the ​foundation of a European business bringing together food ⁠delivery, groceries and fintech, mirroring its ⁠Latin American strategy.

Adjusted earnings before interest, tax, depreciation and amortisation (EBITDA) rose 84% to $1.3 ⁠billion ‌as revenue increased 57% to $9.7 billion. Prosus posted record free cash flow of $1.5 billion, up from $1 billion a year earlier, and raised its full-year ⁠dividend by 40% to €0.28 per share.

Prosus is developing a large ​commerce model, an AI ‌shopping assistant trained on transaction data from its platforms to recommend products ⁠and help users ​complete purchases across its services.

With cost emerging as a leading concern for companies implementing AI, Chief Financial Officer Nico Marais told Reuters that Prosus is turning to open-source options ⁠rather than relying on remote-access American models, arguing they ​are cheaper and deliver comparable results.

REPLICATING LATAM SUCCESS IN EUROPE

Following its deals push, Marais said the focus for the year ahead would shift toward integrating those acquisitions and ⁠improving profitability across existing services, with bolt-on M&A continuing though at a reduced pace.

Just Eat Takeaway.com, which Prosus acquired for €4.1 billion ($4.7 billion) last year, contributed $1.9 billion in revenue and $83 million in adjusted EBITDA despite a 7% volume decline.

Prosus has installed new ​management at Just Eat tasked with turning the business ⁠around with a focus on marketing and efficiencies as it positions the unit as ​a European linchpin.

The company's Latin American food delivery platform ‌iFood grew adjusted EBITDA by 178% to $400 ​million while European online marketplace OLX's adjusted EBITDA rose 61% to $481 million.

(1 euro = $1.1392)

(Reporting by Leo Marchandon in GdanskEditing by David Goodman and Joe Bavier)

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