Hindustan Times (Gurugram)

There will be no letup in India investment­s: Uber

Firm will continue to chase growth over profits in key market

- Mihir Dalal mihir.d@livemint.com

SAN FRANCISCO: Ride hailing company Uber is clocking more than 10 million rides every week in India, more than twice as many from a year ago, as the company prepares to boost its investment pace in its most important internatio­nal market.

Since entering India in August 2013, US-based Uber has quickly expanded to become one of the top two ride hailing service providers along with arch-rival Ola (ANI Technologi­es Pvt. Ltd).

India is now the company’s most important market outside the US after it sold its businesses in China and South-east Asia to local start-ups Didi Chuxing and Grab, respective­ly.

“We have a clear position of strength in India. After the Grab deal, we are increasing levels of resources that we can invest in opportunit­y markets and India is right on top of that list,” Uber chief operating officer Barney Harford said in an interview at its headquarte­rs in San Francisco.

While India is considered to be a lucrative long-term market, the current market size is small. India’s cab hailing market in terms of gross booking value was about $2.1 billion in 2017, according RedSeer Consulting. That is far smaller than Uber’s business in the single city of San Francisco. And given the relatively small size of the market, it requires companies to book huge losses. For instance, Ola reported an operating loss of ₹3,731 crore on revenue of ₹1,178 crore for the year ended March 2017, according to official documents. (Uber’s numbers are unavailabl­e)

Yet, Harford said that Uber will continue to invest heavily in

India to grow its business rather than focus on cutting losses. Apart from its core cab business, Uber also runs its food delivery service Uber Eats in 16 cities in the country. “We have an indefinite investment horizon in India. The market opportunit­y is so significan­t that we’re not focused right now on how can we get this business to profitabil­ity,” he said.

Harford added that even after a public listing of Uber — expected within the next two years — it will not stop the company from continuing its aggressive investment pace in India and chasing growth over profits here. “If you overlay the GDP growth potential in India (with the transporta­tion market potential) it absolutely makes sense for this to be one of the markets we’re investing in over the long-term. The logic imperative to invest in India over the long-term is very clear. We’re confident that we’ll be able to articulate that and the investors who choose to invest in Uber will be investing with that understand­ing,” he said.

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