Business Standard

UBER WEIGHS INVESTORS’ OFFER TO BUY SHARES

- MIKE ISAAC & KATIE BENNER

Uber’s board has voted to move forward on proposals by two investment groups to buy shares in the ride-hailing service and is considerin­g a third offer, with any final decision set to affect who gains the upper hand at the company.

Over the last week, the privately held company’s board voted to take the next step on investment interest from Soft Bank, the Japanese conglomera­te. It is still considerin­g an offer from a consortium led by Shervin Pishevar, an early investor in the company, to buy Uber shares from an existing investor. The board also earlier voted to go forward with a proposal from a coalition led by the Dragoneer Investment Group to buy stock from Uber’s existing shareholde­rs.

The three proposals were described by four people close to the process, who spoke on the condition of anonymity.

The offers — which are mostly focused on buying Uber stock from current shareholde­rs, rather than issuing new shares — are preliminar­y. At this stage, the investment groups will begin a due diligence process that could eventually lead to formal investment terms.

The offers have emerged at a delicate time for Uber, which currently has no chief executive and is dealing with board and investor infighting. Travis Kalanick, Uber’s co-founder and chief executive, stepped down in June under pressure from investors. Since then, various factions of investors, board members and Kalanick have all battled to advance their own interests at the company.

Yet even as Uber undergoes leadership troubles, the company - which is largely funded by venture capital and private equity firms - remains an attractive investment because it is the world’s biggest ride-hailing service and is growing fast.

Uber itself does not need new money; the company has raised more than $10 billion in debt and equity and has some $5 billion in the bank.

But the board considered the proposals for a variety of reasons. For some of Uber’s existing shareholde­rs, selling stock now could help lock in a hefty profit at a time when the company’s future is unclear. One of the proposals could also lead to the ouster of one investor whose firm — Benchmark — has an Uber board seat and that some other board members believe is deliberate­ly damaging the company.

One concern has been whether a share sale could end up negatively affecting Uber’s valuation, which stands at $68.5 billion and has made the company the most highly valued private start-up in the world.

Two of the three proposals include buying shares at a discount to Uber’s valuation, but also provide a face-saving way for the company to maintain its $68.5 billion value. Dragoneer’s investment coalition wants to buy out shareholde­rs at a discount to Uber’s current valuation, and SoftBank is offering to buy shares at a lower valuation as well. But both groups would also purchase a small amount of new shares at Uber’s current valuation to keep the company’s value propped up on paper.

The group led by Pishevar said it would purchase the shares at the current valuation. Whichever deal ultimately gets approved, this would be the first time that Uber has sold a large chunk of shares at a price that was the same on paper as a previous round of financing.

A spokesman for Uber and a spokeswoma­n for Uber’s board declined to comment, as did SoftBank and a spokeswoma­n for Pishevar. Dragoneer did not respond to a request for comment.

SoftBank emerged as one of the first to be interested in buying Uber shares. For months, the conglomera­te has angled to purchase the shares from existing investors at a discount to the company’s current valuation. To let Uber preserve its $68.5 billion valuation on paper, SoftBank agreed to put a small amount of new money into the company at that price.

Uber’s board has been wary of the SoftBank proposal because of investment­s by its founder and chief executive, Masayoshi Son, in the ridehailin­g company’s rivals in Asia.

 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India