The Star Malaysia - StarBiz

For Uber, Postmates deal is better than nothing

- By TAE KIM

UBER Technologi­es Inc needs to act fast to buttress its food-delivery business.

It now has a second chance and shouldn’t blow it.

Late Monday, the New York Times reported that Uber Eats-parent Uber Technologi­es Inc made an offer to acquire Postmates Inc, citing people familiar with the matter.

A deal for Postmates would value the company at around Us$2.6bil and could be announced next week or sooner, according to the Wall Street Journal.

Reuters also reported on Monday that Postmates is considerin­g an initial public offering as well.

This isn’t Uber’s first attempt at consolidat­ion for its food-delivery unit.

Earlier this year, the company was in serious negotiatio­ns to merge with Grubhub, but lost out in a bidding war to Just Eat Takeaway.com NV.

The European competitor announced a deal to buy Grubhub for Us$7.3bil in early June.

While this second option isn’t as ideal as the first for Uber, it’s still worth trying, and for the same reason: A merger would improve profitabil­ity and help make Uber Eats viable.

As an industry in aggregate, Uber Eats and its three other US food delivery competitor­s – Doordash, Grubhub and Postmates – has been hemorrhagi­ng cash as they compete against each other with lavish promotions anddeals.

Uber Eats alone lost more than Us$300mil in adjusted Ebitda, a measure of profitabil­ity, in its latest reported quarter, while Grubhub posted a Us$33mil loss for its first quarter.

If Uber can take a player out of the equation, it would help rationalis­e the level of discountin­g, thereby lowering losses.

Further, an Uber Eats-postmates merger will likely generate significan­t cost savings as any overlappin­g administra­tive expenses can be eliminated.

A Postmates acquisitio­n also has the benefit that it would be more amenable on antitrust grounds.

Some analysts have said worries over potential regulatory issues were part of what nixed the Uber Eats-grubhub combinatio­n, which would have united two big players:

An Uber Eats deal with Postmates would boost the combined companies’ total market share to around 30%.

It would still allow for a robust level of competitio­n for much of the country and be less likely of an issue for regulators to block.

So, while Grubhub would have been a better deal for Uber with its larger market power and higher potential for cost synergies, a deal with Postmates is better than the status quo.

Plus, it comes at a lower purchase price as well.the clock is ticking.

Uber’s status quo isn’t sustainabl­e. Yes, the company has a strong balance sheet with Us$9bil in cash as of the end of its last quarter, but it also lost more than a billion dollars in those three months, too.

Even a big cash pile won’t last long, if it doesn’t get its losses under control. A deal with Postmates would help fix that. — Bloomberg

This column does not necessaril­y reflect the opinion of the editorial board or Bloomberg LP and its owners.

Tae Kim is a Bloomberg Opinion columnist covering technology. He previously covered technology for Barron’s, following an earlier career as an equity analyst. The views are the writer’s own.

Uber’s status quo isn’t sustainabl­e. Yes, the company has a strong balance sheet with Us$9bil in cash as of the end of its last quarter, but it also lost more than a billion dollars in those three months, too.

 ?? Bloomberg ?? More bite: An Uber Eats delivery courier arrives to pick up meals for a customer at a restaurant. A deal with Postmates will boost the combined companies’ total market share to around 30%. —
Bloomberg More bite: An Uber Eats delivery courier arrives to pick up meals for a customer at a restaurant. A deal with Postmates will boost the combined companies’ total market share to around 30%. —

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia