PDD Holdings profit slides 11% amid reinvestment push

PDD Holdings, the operator of Pinduoduo and Temu, reported an 11% drop in quarterly profit to 24.5 billion yuan on Wednesday, despite higher sales, as it shifts toward greater reinvestment. Full-year net profit fell 12% to 99.3 billion yuan, while revenue rose 10% to 431.8 billion yuan.

PDD Holdings, the Chinese e-commerce group behind Pinduoduo and the global budget marketplace Temu, reported an 11 per cent drop in quarterly profit on Wednesday amid higher sales as the company pivots to greater reinvestment. Net profit for the quarter fell to 24.5 billion yuan (US$3.6 billion), missing a consensus analyst estimate of 29.1 billion yuan. Meanwhile, revenue rose 12 per cent year-on-year to 123.9 billion yuan, aligning with estimates of 123.7 billion yuan. For the full year, net profit declined 12 per cent to 99.3 billion yuan, while revenue increased 10 per cent to 431.8 billion yuan. The results mark a pivotal year for PDD, shifting from breakneck growth—in 2024, revenue jumped 59 per cent and net income grew 87 per cent—to a more stable pace. Factors include weak consumer demand in China, rising tariff and regulatory uncertainty for Temu, and a deliberate management pivot to reinvestment, such as a 100 billion yuan merchant support programme launched in April. “Over the past year, we stayed firmly committed to our strategic focus on high-quality development,” said co-chairman and co-CEO Chen Lei. “We will continue to uphold our long-term philosophy, channelling greater resources into the stakeholders we serve, as we look ahead to the next decade of growth.”

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Realistic illustration depicting a Porsche sports car in a rainy lot amid financial decline charts, symbolizing the company's 91% profit drop in 2025.
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Porsche reports sharp profit decline in 2025

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Sports car maker Porsche reported a 91.4 percent profit drop for 2025, reducing net profit to 310 million euros. Revenue fell by about ten percent to 36.3 billion euros, weighed down by strategic shifts, challenges in China, and US tariffs. New CEO Michael Leiters plans a company realignment.

Hong Kong's CK Hutchison Holdings reported a 7% rise in underlying profit to HK$22.3 billion (US$2.85 billion) for last year, despite 'unforeseen challenges' including a legal conflict over Panama ports. Net profit fell 31% to HK$11.84 billion due to a one-time non-cash loss from the 3UK-Vodafone merger. Chairman Victor Li Tzar-kuoi highlighted the group's diversified business as a mitigating factor.

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Shiseido's shares rose the most in nearly eight years after its fourth-quarter earnings and full-year forecast beat analyst estimates. The stock surged as much as 15% in Tokyo trading on Thursday, marking the biggest intraday gain since May 2018. The cosmetics giant is cutting costs and prioritizing core brands amid its toughest business conditions in decades.

Samsung Electronics reported a 21% increase in third-quarter net profit to 12.22 trillion won on October 30. The semiconductor division's record performance, driven by the AI boom, led the gains. Operating profit surged 32.5% to 12.16 trillion won, beating market expectations.

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Robinhood Markets reported fourth-quarter 2025 revenue of US$1,283 million, surpassing the previous year's US$1,014 million but falling short of expectations due to a 38% decline in crypto transaction revenue. Net income decreased to US$605 million from US$916 million. The results have raised questions about the company's diversification strategy amid ongoing share repurchases and product expansions.

Tesla reported record quarterly revenue of $28.1 billion and vehicle deliveries of 497,099 units in the third quarter of 2025, driven by a surge in sales before the expiration of federal EV tax credits on September 30. However, profits plunged 37 percent to $1.4 billion amid rising operating costs and reduced regulatory credit income. CEO Elon Musk highlighted future growth in autonomy and robotics during the earnings call.

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Tesla reported Q3 2025 revenue of $28.1 billion, beating expectations, but adjusted EPS of $0.50 missed estimates amid a 37% drop in net income. Vehicle deliveries reached a record 497,099 units, boosted by U.S. buyers rushing before EV tax credits expired. The energy storage segment grew sharply, with deployments hitting 12.5 GWh.

 

 

 

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