Meituan posts another quarterly loss, though food delivery wars are beginning to abate

Meituan posts another quarterly loss, though food delivery wars are beginning to abate

Drivers of food delivery service Meituan are seen in Beijing, China April 11, 2018. Picture taken April 11, 2018. REUTERS/Stringer

Chinese food delivery leader Meituan on Monday posted a third consecutive quarterly loss and met revenue growth estimates as a year of bruising, subsidy-fuelled competition in China’s one-hour delivery space showed signs of easing.

Meituan’s revenue growth and profits have faced pressure for several quarters since e-commerce giants Taobao, owned by Alibaba, and JD.com launched new “instant retail” platforms in early 2025.

Instant retail or quick commerce refers to online purchases – often of food, bubble tea and other daily use items – that are delivered within 60 minutes.

Since early 2026 – following repeated criticism by Chinese regulators who dubbed the instant retail battle a “race to the bottom” – discounting activity on food delivery platforms has subsided as the industry enters a more normal phase of growth.

Meituan’s revenue for the quarter ended March 31 reached 91 billion yuan ($13.45 billion), a 5.6% rise from a year earlier, in line with analyst expectations.

Its adjusted net loss narrowed to 4.97 billion yuan from a 15.1 billion yuan loss in the fourth quarter. A year earlier, Meituan posted a profit of 10.9 billion yuan.

“With industry-wide subsidies finally getting more rational we are seeing a shift back to the fundamentals of operational efficiencies and user experience,” CEO Wang Xing told analysts. “This transition plays to our strengths.”

In April, China’s market regulator fined seven e-commerce platforms – including Meituan – a combined 3.6 billion yuan over food delivery safety violations.

Last week, China’s State Administration for Market Regulation instructed local regulators to carry out a special inspection campaign until December on companies operating in sectors from live-streaming to food delivery in an effort to prevent what it calls “involution”-style price wars.

($1 = 6.7647 Chinese yuan renminbi)

Reuters

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