Financials

Financials - Dingdong (Cayman) Limited (DDL)

Figures converted from Chinese yuan (CNY) at historical period-end FX rates — see data/company.json.fx_rates. Ratios, margins, multiples, and share counts are unitless and unchanged.

Dingdong is a $3.5bn (FY2025) self-operated on-demand fresh-grocery retailer in China that crossed two critical financial milestones — GAAP profitability and positive free cash flow — only in FY2024, after burning roughly $1.6bn of cumulative net losses through FY2023. The story now is a low-single-digit revenue grower with razor-thin operating margins (roughly 0.5%-1%), a debt-light balance sheet (net cash of $221m against $348m of debt), and a stock trading at $2.55 — barely 11% of the IPO price — even though FY2025 produced $32m of GAAP net income and $51m of free cash flow. The single financial metric that matters most right now is operating-cash-flow conversion: net income is real only if the $76m of FY2025 OCF can repeat after the Meituan acquisition closes and the China business is sold for $717m.

Revenue FY2025 ($M)

3,480

Operating Margin

0.5%

Free Cash Flow ($M)

51

Net Debt ($M)

-221

Return on Equity

22.1%

P/E (TTM)

17.6

Price / Sales

0.16

Price / Book

3.66

Revenue, Margins, and Earnings Power

Revenue grew from $557m in FY2019 to a peak of $3,511m in FY2022, then dipped to $2,811m in FY2023 after the company exited unprofitable cities, before recovering to $3,480m in FY2025. Operating income tells the more important story: $-1,003m of losses in FY2021 narrowed to $-18m by FY2023 and turned positive at $+29m in FY2024 — Dingdong's first GAAP-profitable year. FY2025 operating income slipped to $19m as growth investments resumed.

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The margin shape explains the inflection. Gross margin — revenue minus cost of goods sold, divided by revenue — climbed from 17% in FY2019 to 31% in FY2022 and has held at roughly 29%-31% since. That gain came from category mix (more high-margin private-label and prepared food), bargaining power with suppliers as scale grew, and removing the worst-economics SKUs in the FY2023 retrenchment. Operating margin — gross margin minus selling, general, administrative, and R&D expense — went from -45% in FY2019 to -32% in FY2021, then to a peak of +0.9% in FY2024 and 0.5% in FY2025. The 24-percentage-point swing in operating margin from 2021 to 2024 is the entire story of this stock.

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Quarterly revenue shows a flatter trajectory than the annual view suggests. The eight quarters from Q1 2024 to Q4 2025 oscillated between $755m and $936m, with the year-over-year growth rate decelerating from mid-teens in late 2024 to mid-single-digits in 2025. The company guides to a "4G strategy" (good food, good price, good service, good growth) that is keeping gross margin stable at 29%-30% but capping pricing power.

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Dingdong reported $854m of revenue in Q1 FY2026 (+7.5% year over year), with the China business contributing $834m and the much smaller overseas business at $20m (+195% off a tiny base). Earnings power is real but fragile — a 1-percentage-point gross-margin compression would wipe out the entire operating margin.

Cash Flow and Earnings Quality

Free cash flow — operating cash flow minus capital expenditure — went from $-963m in FY2021 to $-45m in FY2023, $+114m in FY2024, and $+51m in FY2025. The two profitable years cumulatively produced more cash than reported net income ($165m of cumulative FCF versus $72m of cumulative net income in FY2024–FY2025), which is the cleanest signal that Dingdong's GAAP earnings are not aggressive.

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Three earnings-quality features matter:

  1. Negative cash conversion cycle. Dingdong sells groceries to customers (paid immediately or within days) but pays suppliers on 35-50 day terms. Days-payable-outstanding ($38-equivalent) less days-inventory-outstanding ($12-equivalent) less days-sales-outstanding ($2-equivalent) gave a cash conversion cycle of -24 days in FY2025. Growing revenue throws off working-capital cash — a tailwind during expansion but a headwind if revenue ever shrinks.

  2. FCF whipsawed by capex timing. Capex was $13m in FY2024 but rose to $25m in FY2025 (+81%), pulling FCF margin from 3.6% to 1.5%. Depreciation has run $14-29m annually for the past four years, so capex below $21m is below replacement and capex above $21m signals reinvestment.

  3. Share-based compensation has shrunk dramatically. SBC peaked at $50m in FY2021 (1.6% of revenue) and was $11m in FY2025 (0.3%). That makes non-GAAP and GAAP net income converge — non-GAAP net income of $25m for Q1 FY2026 is only $1m above GAAP, versus a $35m+ gap during the loss years.

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The FY2024 FCF margin of 3.6% is the high-water mark to compare against. If FY2026 reverts toward 1%-2%, the underlying business is barely better than break-even on cash. If it holds at 3%+, the business has earned a real re-rating.

Balance Sheet and Financial Resilience

Dingdong has a fortress balance sheet by online-grocery standards. As of FY2025 year-end, cash and equivalents were $568m against $348m of total debt — net cash of $221m. Short-term debt has fallen from $614m at FY2022 year-end to $124m at FY2025 year-end, a 80% reduction.

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Coverage and liquidity metrics improved sharply with profitability:

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Two balance-sheet caveats matter:

  • Accumulated deficit of $1.9bn. Even after two years of profit, retained earnings remain deeply negative. Book equity is $168m — only 17% of total assets — so a single bad year would put the equity ratio back under stress.
  • No goodwill, modest intangibles. Tangible book value equals book value ($149m). The balance sheet is exactly what it appears to be — no acquisition-driven write-downs lurking.

The Altman Z-Score and Piotroski F-Score were not available in this dataset, but the trajectory — net cash, EBIT/interest now 7.8x, current ratio above 1.0 — looks like a balance sheet exiting the danger zone rather than entering it.

Returns, Reinvestment, and Capital Allocation

Return on equity reached 43% in FY2024 — a flattering number because the equity base was small ($127m of book value against $42m of net income). FY2025 ROE normalized to 22%. Return on invested capital is mathematically unstable here because invested capital (debt + equity – cash) turned negative as the company built its cash pile.

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Capital allocation since IPO shows a company in survival-then-deleveraging mode:

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Dingdong has bought back only modest amounts of stock ($1m-4m per year) and pays no dividend. Capex has been disciplined — under 1% of revenue since FY2022. The big use of cash through FY2024 was debt paydown. The capital-allocation regime is about to change dramatically: management has said it will use "a substantial majority of the proceeds" from the $717m Meituan sale for share buybacks and/or dividends once the deal closes, pending SAMR antitrust approval. At the current $544m market cap, the deal proceeds alone exceed enterprise value.

Share count has been steady — 216-225m weighted-average diluted shares outstanding for four consecutive years. There is no dilution problem; the dilution happened pre-IPO during the loss years, and the company is no longer issuing equity.

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Segment and Unit Economics

Granular segment financials were not provided in this dataset. From quarterly disclosures, Dingdong now distinguishes China business (the historical core, classified as held-for-sale after the Feb-2026 Meituan deal) from overseas business (a much smaller growth bet). For Q1 FY2026 the split was:

  • China business revenue: $834m, net income $34m (boosted by depreciation cessation under held-for-sale)
  • Overseas business revenue: $20m (+195% year over year), net loss $-10m

The takeaway: the China business is profitable and being sold; the overseas business is a venture-stage bet that is still loss-making and will define the residual public-co economics if the deal closes.

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Valuation and Market Expectations

At a $2.55 ADS price (May 22, 2026, two ordinary shares per ADS), Dingdong's market cap is roughly $544m. Enterprise value is roughly $248m after netting cash against debt — the market is paying less than 0.1× revenue for the enterprise.

Trailing multiples on FY2025 numbers:

  • Price / Sales = 0.16× — meaning investors pay $0.16 of market cap for every $1 of revenue. Below 0.2 is consistent with very low-margin retail.
  • EV / Sales = 0.07× — even lower because of the net-cash position.
  • EV / EBITDA = 7.6× — close to JD's 18× (the closest large-cap analog), but with much lower growth.
  • Price / Book = 3.66× — but book is $168m against accumulated deficit of $1.9bn, so book is not a normalized anchor.
  • P/E = 17.6× — only meaningful given the FY2024-25 GAAP profitability streak.
  • P/FCF = 10.6× — on FY2025 $51m of FCF; this number reverts to ~6× on FY2024's $114m of FCF.
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The chart says the same thing three ways: the market re-rated Dingdong from "loss-making growth story" (P/S 1.7× at FY2021) to "stranded asset" (P/S 0.12× at FY2023) and only modestly back to "barely profitable" (P/S 0.16× today). The reset is structural — the IPO closed at $23.52 and the stock has compounded at roughly -30% per year since.

A simple deal-implied valuation cross-check. Meituan agreed to pay $717m for the China business in Feb 2026. Adding overseas business value (call it $0 to $100m given losses) and the existing ~$210m of net cash, the implied per-ADS value is roughly $2.66 to $2.95 — within 4-16% of the current $2.55 trading price. The market is pricing in meaningful closing risk on the SAMR clearance, plus dead-money risk on the overseas residual.

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Peer Financial Comparison

Dingdong sits in an uncomfortable peer group: large Chinese e-commerce platforms (JD, PDD, BABA), the publicly-listed acquirer (Meituan), the closest US analog (Instacart), and the larger US local-delivery network (DoorDash). DDL's growth is the slowest, its margin the thinnest, and its market cap by far the smallest.

No Results

The peer table makes the gap explicit. DoorDash and Instacart trade at 7× and 2.8× EV/Sales because investors believe in the marketplace economics; PDD trades at 1.6× because it actually earns a 22% operating margin; Dingdong trades at 0.07× because it has neither. The cleanest comparable is JD, which has the closest first-party retail model — and JD trades at similar EV/Sales (0.17× vs DDL 0.07×) but earns positive FCF reliably. DDL is not "cheap" in a vacuum; it is priced as the worst-economics player in a sector full of better-economics peers.

What to Watch in the Financials

No Results

The financials confirm three things: (1) Dingdong stopped burning cash and started generating it in FY2024, (2) the balance sheet is now in net-cash position with $221m of cushion, and (3) GAAP earnings are real because operating cash flow exceeds net income comfortably. The financials contradict the bear narrative that this is a zombie business — it is not — but they also contradict the bull narrative that operating leverage is finally kicking in. Operating margin actually declined from FY2024 to FY2025 (0.93% to 0.54%) and FCF margin halved (3.6% to 1.5%). The business is profitable but flat.

The first financial metric to watch is operating cash flow in continuing operations — the residual overseas business after the China unit is sold. If continuing-ops OCF turns positive within four quarters of deal close, the new RemainCo is a real business. If it doesn't, this is a cash-shell special-situation trade that will compound at the risk-free rate plus capital-return uncertainty.