Content aggregator Qutoutiaoโ€™s significant user base growth in the third quarter powered solid but markedly slower revenue growth beating the mid-range of analyst consensus estimates while net losses narrowed.

Why it matters: Qutoutiaoโ€™s ability to monetize its lower-tier city-focused content services helped the company post a solid increase in advertising revenue for the quarter in a slowing economy that has significantly crimped growth for some of Chinaโ€™s biggest internet companies.

โ€œWe believe the lower-tier cities remain the most attractive space today with unmatched structural potential for growth and monetization. During the Double 11 Shopping Festival, GMVs generated by Qutoutiao users on e-commerce platforms increased more than 10-fold in comparison to last year.โ€

โ€”Tan Siliang, Qutoutiao chairman and CEO

Details: Qutoutiaoโ€™s net revenues for the third quarter grew 44.0% year on year to RMB 1.41 billion ($197 million), a significant slowdown from 187.9% annual growth it saw in Q2 and a steep drop from 520.3% year-on-year growth it earned in the same quarter a year ago.

  • Revenues from advertising and marketing increased 54.1% year on year to RMB 1.38 billion, driven primarily by increases in the platformโ€™s user base, user time spent, and ability to monetize traffic.
  • Combined average monthly active users (MAUs) more than doubled compared with the same period last year, reaching 134 million. The figure includes users from Qutoutiao, the companyโ€™s online reading app Midu Novels, and lightweight version Midu Lite.
  • Combined average daily active users (DAUs) also jumped 98% year on year to 42 million.
  • User engagement expenses rose 11.5% year on year driven by the increase in user base size, but spending per DAU per day for the two apps dropped 43.6% year on year.
  • The company shrank its net loss 14.0% year on year to RMB 888.2 million, with net loss margin improving to 63% from 106% in the third quarter of 2018.

Context: Qutoutiaoโ€™s online reading unit Midu, which includes Midu Novels and Midu Lite, closed a $100 million Series B in October.

  • Midu said it would use the proceeds for acquiring content, constructing a content creator ecosystem, and marketing purposes.
  • Midu Novels was suspended in July along with two other heavyweight reading apps for not removing lowbrow and sexually suggestive content.

Tony Xu is Shanghai-based tech reporter. Connect with him via e-mail: tony.xu@ovau.ip-ddns.com

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