Tuesday 1 April 2025 11:16 GMT

TC’S Tough 2024: Losses Shrink, Revenue Slides, Strategic Shift Unfolds


(MENAFN- The Rio Times) TC, a Brazilian financial platform listed as TRAD3 on B3, reported a R$ 19 million ($3 million) loss for 2024, according to its latest quarterly filing.

The company, once called Traders Club, saw revenue drop 18% to R$ 44 million (8 million), reflecting a tough year for variable-income investments in Brazil. Yet, the adjusted loss shrank 69% from 2023's R$62 million ($11 million), showing progress in cost-cutting.

The fourth quarter brought an adjusted loss of R$ 4.5 million ($790,000), worsening 3% from Q3's R$ 4.4 million ($770,000). Revenue fell 18% to R$ 8.8 million ($1.5 million), while expenses rose 6% to R$ 8.9 million ($1.6 million).

For the year, expenses totaled R$ 35 million ($6 million), down 67% from 2023, thanks to streamlined operations. CEO Eduardo Barone, who took over in October 2024, called it a year of resilience.

He steers TC away from its old SaaS model toward TC Investimentos , a brokerage arm launched in 2022. This shift follows a rocky post-IPO journey since 2021, when TC raised R$ 606 million ($106 million) at a R$ 2.7 billion ($474 million) valuation.


TC Navigates Challenges Amid Growth and Macroeconomic Pressures
User growth offers a bright spot, with 985,000 registered users by year-end, up 21% from 2023. The company focuses on converting these users into brokerage clients, a move analysts watch closely.

However, Brazil's high 10.5% Selic rate in 2024 pushed investors toward fixed income, hurting TC's core offerings. Founded in 2015, TC rode a pandemic-era retail trading wave, peaking at R$ 73 million ($13 million) revenue in 2021.

Today, its market cap sits at R$ 300 million ($53 million), signaling investor doubts. Still, asset sales and a 66% expense cut show grit in a competitive fintech scene. The story behind these figures reveals a company at a crossroads.

Barone's strategy bets on brokerage growth, but declining revenue and macroeconomic headwinds test its resolve. Business observers note that 2025 could define TC's future, depending on market shifts and execution success.

With rivals like Toro Investimentos gaining ground, TC's pivot matters. The numbers tell of struggle and adaptation, a tale of survival in Brazil's shifting financial landscape.

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