TradingKey - Fueled by “irrational competition” in the food delivery sector, Meituan (3690.HK) saw its Q2 2025 net profit crash 89% due to a surge in sales expenses. With its core local services business underperforming and new ventures deepening losses, the delivery giant faces mounting pressure on its profitability outlook.
On Wednesday, August 27, Chinese food delivery leader Meituan released its Q2 2025 earnings:
In its earnings statement, Meituan attributed the sharp decline in core business profitability — with core operating profit dropping to RMB 3.7 billion — to intense competition in the food delivery industry. The widening loss in new ventures was driven by overseas expansion.
Within the core local business:
Meituan’s Q2 cost of sales rose 27% YoY from RMB 48.4 billion to RMB 61.4 billion, increasing as a percentage of revenue from 58.8% to 66.9%. This rise was driven by higher order volume, increased rider subsidies, expansion in grocery retail, and overseas operations.
Notably, sales and marketing expenses surged 51.8% YoY to RMB 22.5 billion, due to rising spending on promotions, advertising, and user incentives as Meituan adjusts its strategy to counter fierce competition in food delivery and instant retail.
Since JD.com entered the food delivery market and Taobao integrated Ele.me into its main app, China’s delivery landscape has shifted dramatically.
According to a UBS report, in terms of order volume, Ele.me’s market share rose from 11–13% to 28% in Q2, while JD’s share dropped from 13% to 7%, and Meituan’s share fell from 85% to 74%.
UBS noted a key development: Meituan’s exclusive merchant advantage has begun to erode — the daily active users (DAU) of merchants exclusively partnered with Meituan declined in July for the first time.
Combined with JD’s recent earnings, the food delivery war has effectively wiped out profits for these tech giants. JD’s new business revenue doubled, but its operating loss ballooned from RMB 700 million to RMB 14.8 billion, dragging the entire group’s Q2 net profit down by 51%.