| QUICK TAKE : |
|
Libas, the Delhi-headquartered ethnic wear brand operated by Zivore Apparel Private Limited, reported revenue from operations of Rs 609.1 Cr in FY25 — up 25.2% from Rs 486.5 Cr in FY24 — while swinging to a net loss of Rs 16.5 Cr from a profit of Rs 4.8 Cr, as expenses outpaced revenue for the first time in the brand’s decade-long D2C journey.
The numbers reveal a company at an inflection point. Bootstrapped for nearly a decade and cashflow-positive through FY24, Libas is now deliberately spending into its next phase — offline retail, quick commerce, and category expansion — using the Rs 150 Cr from ICICI Venture raised in May 2024. The Rs 21.3 Cr swing from profit to loss is not a distress signal; it is the cost of building a Rs 1,000 Cr brand.
| STARTUPFEED INSIGHT |
| The key number: Expenses grew 28.6% (Rs 482.4 Cr to Rs 621.2 Cr) while revenue grew 25.2% — a 340 bps gap that tells you precisely how hard Libas is investing right now.
What is improving:
What is concerning:
Profitability math: At current expense trajectory, Libas will need revenue of Rs 750-800 Cr at current margin structure to return to breakeven — achievable by FY26 end if ARR momentum holds. |
Revenue Breakdown
| Metric | FY24 | FY25 | Growth |
|---|---|---|---|
| Revenue from Operations | Rs 486.5 Cr | Rs 609.1 Cr | +25.2% |
| Other Income (est.) | Rs ~4.1 Cr | Rs ~3.1 Cr | — |
| Total Revenue | Rs 490.6 Cr | Rs 612.2 Cr | +24.8% |
Revenue from operations — primarily driven by online marketplaces (Myntra, Flipkart) and the brand’s own D2C channel — accounts for nearly all top-line, with online channels contributing 80-85% of gross sales. The 25% jump marks the brand’s fastest single-year scale-up since Sidhant Keshwani relaunched it as a digital-first label in 2014.Expense Analysis
| Category | FY24 | FY25 | Change | % of Rev (FY25) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Total Expenses | Rs 482.4 Cr | Rs 621.2 Cr | +28.8% | 102.0% |
| Employee Benefit Costs (est.) | ~Rs 48 Cr | ~Rs 82 Cr | +70%+ | ~13.5% |
| Marketing & Platform Fees (est.) | ~Rs 96 Cr | ~Rs 122 Cr | +27% | ~20% |
| COGS / Material & Logistics (est.) | ~Rs 290 Cr | ~Rs 360 Cr | +24% | ~59% |
| Other OpEx (est.) | ~Rs 48 Cr | ~Rs 57 Cr | +19% | ~9.4% |
Note: Segment-level expense breakdown is estimated from total MCA figures and company disclosures; audited line-item detail is not publicly available for Zivore Apparel Private Limited.
The headline story is employee costs: headcount grew 71% YoY to ~1,553, suggesting an aggressive build-out of offline store operations teams and technology infrastructure. Marketing as a percentage of revenue appears stable — Libas has historically relied on its competitive price-point (Rs 600-700) rather than heavy paid acquisition.
Key Metrics Dashboard
| Metric | FY24 | FY25 | Change |
|---|---|---|---|
| Revenue from Operations | Rs 486.5 Cr | Rs 609.1 Cr | +25.2% |
| Net Profit / (Loss) | Rs +4.8 Cr | Rs (16.5) Cr | Reversed |
| Loss as % of Revenue | N/A (profit) | 2.71% | — |
| Total Employees | ~907 | ~1,553 | +71.2% |
| Revenue per Employee (est.) | Rs 53.6 Lakh | Rs 39.2 Lakh | -26.9% |
| Last Known Valuation | — | Rs 954 Cr (~$113 Mn) | May 2024 |
| Total External Funding | Nil | Rs 150 Cr (ICICI Venture) | First round |
The revenue-per-employee dip from Rs 53.6 Lakh to Rs 39.2 Lakh reflects the frontloaded cost of hiring for offline stores before those outlets generate full-year revenue — a normal lag in omnichannel build-outs. The metric should recover to FY24 levels as the offline fleet reaches maturity.
Historical Trend
| Metric | FY23 (est.) | FY24 | FY25 | Direction |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Revenue | ~Rs 390 Cr | Rs 486.5 Cr | Rs 609.1 Cr | UP |
| Net Profit/(Loss) | ~Rs 5-8 Cr | Rs +4.8 Cr | Rs (16.5) Cr | DOWN |
| Loss / Profit % | ~+1.5% | +0.99% | -2.71% | Reversed |
| Employees | ~600 (est.) | ~907 | ~1,553 | UP |
Revenue has compounded at roughly 25% CAGR over the visible period — disciplined, capital-efficient growth that is the envy of most funded D2C peers. Profitability, however, has been narrowing since FY23 as offline ambitions intensified. FY25 marks the first year the brand entered net-loss territory — deliberately.
How It Compares
| Company | Revenue (Latest) | Profit/(Loss) | Funding Raised | Status |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Libas (Zivore Apparel) | Rs 609.1 Cr (FY25) | Rs (16.5) Cr | Rs 150 Cr (ICICI Venture) | Investing for scale |
| Purple Style Labs (Berrylush) | Rs ~220 Cr (est.) | Loss-making | Rs ~100 Cr+ raised | Growing |
| Fashor | Rs ~150 Cr (est.) | Loss-making | Raised multiple rounds | Online-first |
| Fabindia | Rs 1,800 Cr+ (FY24) | Profitable | Listed company | Omnichannel leader |
Libas sits in a unique position: too large to be a startup, too new to offline to be a retail incumbent. At Rs 609 Cr, it is the clear leader among digitally-native ethnic wear brands — nearly 3x the revenue of its nearest funded peer — while still being less than half the scale of Fabindia. The next two years will determine whether Libas becomes a genuine omnichannel challenger or reverts to an online-only margin model.
What the Founder Says
“The new-age consumer was moving towards brands and aspiration. Ecommerce was picking up, and I was very clear that this was going to be the future.”
— Sidhant Keshwani, Founder & CEO, Libas
Keshwani’s consistent framing around ‘consumer behaviour’ — not just product — reveals a founder who sees Libas as a platform for repeat purchase loyalty, not a single-occasion fashion brand. Notably absent from his statements: any timeline to return to profitability, suggesting the management team is fully committed to the growth-over-margin playbook for at least FY26.
“Libas has demonstrated industry-leading growth characteristics in a capital-efficient manner and plans to strengthen its digital presence while focusing on offline expansion and omnichannel capabilities.”
— Gagandeep S. Chhina, Senior Director, Private Equity, ICICI Venture
The Rs 150 Cr Bet — Where the Capital Is Going
| Use of Capital | Strategic Goal | Timeline |
|---|---|---|
| Offline EBO expansion | 150 stores across metros + Tier 1/2/3 cities (COCO model) | FY25-FY27 |
| Omnichannel infrastructure | Target 50-60% online / 30-40% offline revenue split | FY27 |
| Quick commerce entry | Live on Myntra M-Now (March 2025); broader QC expansion planned | FY26 |
| Category expansion | Fast fashion, new occasion wear, kids ethnic, plus-size (Libas Extra Love) | Ongoing |
| International markets | Online-first to Indian diaspora in UK, USA, UAE, Australia | FY26-FY27 |
| Tech infrastructure | D2C platform, supply chain digitisation, demand forecasting | FY25-FY26 |
The emphasis on offline at the COCO (company-owned, company-operated) model — rather than franchise — signals Libas is protecting brand standards over rapid store count. This is expensive but defensible: Fabindia’s pricing power derives partly from its consistent in-store experience. Libas is making the same long-term bet.
What is Next
Our prediction: Libas returns to profitability by Q3-Q4 FY27, not FY26. The offline store ramp will take 18-24 months to generate meaningful revenue contribution — until the estate matures, the cost base stays elevated. The company is targeting Rs 1,000 Cr net revenue in FY26, which is now confirmed crossed on an ARR basis. Whether it prints that as full-year revenue will depend on whether festive-season offline demand — always the inflection quarter for Indian apparel — delivers.
The real test arrives with the next external fundraise. At a valuation of Rs 954 Cr on Rs 609 Cr revenue, Libas trades at ~1.6x revenue. A Series C at Rs 1,200-1,500 Cr valuation — likely needed by FY27 to fund the next offline tranche — will require demonstrating that offline stores are genuinely profitable at the unit level.
Watch for: FY25 MCA filings for Zivore Apparel (due by Dec 2025) will reveal actual expense line items. Sidhant Keshwani’s commentary on offline store-level EBITDA — the number that will decide investor appetite for the next round.
