Deliveroo, the meal delivery company that saw demand boom during the pandemic, said it would make up to £50m in core earnings this year as it focuses on profitability in a tougher consumer environment.
The 10-year old company for the second half of 2022 reported adjusted core earnings of £6.6m, rebounding from a £84.6m loss a year earlier and a £51.6m loss in the first half.
CEO Will Shu said Deliveroo had made "a lot of progress on its path to profitability" despite a challenging consumer environment, noting it had reached core earnings breakeven in the second half.
"This is obviously one of the milestones to becoming more profitable, but I think we're really proud of this because we reached it 12 to 18 months before we said we would, and then in '23 we expect to make continued progress," he said today.
Shu said the improvement was driven by optimising consumer fees, lower marketing spend and new revenue from advertising on its platform.
Deliveroo said in January that the number of orders dropped by 2% in the final quarter, although inflation had helped the total value increase 6% to £1.8 billion.
Shu said it was "not the easiest time" for consumers, although sentiment "had improved slightly in the few weeks".
But the outlook remained volatile, he added.
Deliveroo said the first quarter of 2023 was expected to be broadly flat before improving, with gross transaction value for 2023 expected to grow by low to mid single digits.
Adjusted core earnings were expected to be about £20-50m, it said.
The group, which competes with Uber Eats and Just Eat Takeaway, said last month that it was cutting 9% of its workforce as order growth slowed.