Business Day

Uber leaves Lyft eating its dust

• Having upended the taxi industry, the ride-hailing service has stretched its domination over its rival

- Dave Lee

The assumption about Uber Technologi­es has long been that it would make real money only via one of two routes. The first was self-driving cars become a reality and there would be no more need to pay human drivers. Well, forget that, it ain’t gonna happen — at least not for many years.

The second route involves using price cuts to see off the competitio­n before raising fares and cutting driver pay as soon as consumers and gig workers have few other options.

Are we at that point? Looking at the market now, you might think so. Having swiftly upended the taxi industry worldwide, in recent months Uber has also stretched its domination over longtime US rival Lyft, which has caused its market share fall to as little as 24% in March from about 33% before the Covid-19 pandemic, according to data from Bloomberg Second Measure.

The latest round of company earnings show Uber thriving — gross bookings were up 19% year on year, customer growth up 13% — while Lyft is merely surviving. The latter beat analysts ’ targets in 2023’s first quarter but issued softer-thanexpect­ed guidance, blamed on investment­s needed to regain ground with Uber.

If Lyft can’t pull off the “challengin­g yet necessary turnaround ”, as Citi analysts described it, it would be bad news for consumers who value choice. And it could be bad news for Uber, too.

David Risher, Lyft’s new CEO, was put in place in April as investors finally ran out of patience with Lyft’s co-founders. He quickly announced job cuts — 26% of the company — and conceded the best hope for Lyft was a strong second place behind the “800-pound gorilla” of Uber.

If the above theory of profitabil­ity is correct, then now might be the time for Uber to strike: finish off Lyft once and for all, take the market for itself, and get to the exciting business of screwing us all over.

But Lyft’s decline, were it to worsen, would do Uber CEO Dara Khosrowsha­hi few favours. Speaking to Bloomberg TV last week, the smooth-talking boss sounded like a conflict-adverse cowboy. His message: These towns are plenty big enough for the both of us.

“I think we can both do fine,” Khosrowsha­hi said. “The mobility marketplac­e is growing. People are going out more, they’re going to restaurant­s, they’re returning to work. We are definitely seeing those tailwinds, and I wouldn’t be surprised if Lyft does too going forward.”

I don’t believe Khosrowsha­hi, who rescued Uber’s grotty reputation from the gutter, was being insincere. Lyft operates only in the US and Canada, and it ’ s strongest on the West Coast, where the post-pandemic recovery has been slower than in other regions. Lyft’s position should improve as these markets regain strength.

And that suits Uber just fine. If Lyft ceased being a meaningful competitor, the landscape would change dramatical­ly. Regulatory attention, which brought about significan­t (if still limited) concession­s on working conditions, would be re-examined. Uber’s claim that drivers are “independen­t contractor­s” falls down if there is only one legitimate choice of rideshare platform. The company’s already dubious position that it should only consider “active” driving hours when calculatin­g benefits, because drivers can work for other apps when out on the road, would lose credibilit­y fast.

In Washington, any hint of an Uber rideshare monopoly would sound the alarm at Lina Khan’s Federal Trade Commission. She may feel a combined rideshare and delivery giant would make things unjustly difficult for DoorDash, the current leader in delivery, if Uber is in a position to use rideshare profits to buttress aggressive food pricing. We saw a version of this sentiment when Uber looked at acquiring smaller food player GrubHub in 2020, with antitrust hawks in the US Senate calling for scrutiny.

Improved consumer sentiment towards Uber might also unravel. Despite having long been more expensive than Lyft — according to YipitData — any fluctuatio­n in price would be met with suspicion and anger. When two rideshare companies push surge pricing during peak moments, it’s the market. If it’s just one player doing so, it’s exploitati­on.

The 2017 #DeleteUber trend, which caused a notable loss of customers, arose when users felt Uber was profiting from a lack of taxis due to a strike.

Uber might start to draw that special kind of contempt many Americans reserve for monopolist­ic internet service providers. Or that single company that inexplicab­ly charges you $5 for a luggage trolley at what seems like every US airport.

Besides, Uber doesn’t need to take drastic action to beat Lyft. Shrewd leadership after lockdown has moved it well along a third route to sustained profitabil­ity — one that consists of growing the business and improving its margins.

OLD ENEMY

Uber has earned its lead. Rapid investment­s in driver supply in early 2021 caught Lyft on the hop, and Uber was also quicker to motivate drivers with bonuses as well as changes to its app such as showing fares upfront.

Uber Eats’ popularity boomed during the pandemic and has persisted, with improved economics (more deliveries per hour, per driver) thanks to technologi­cal improvemen­ts. New rideshare products — such as prebooking and hourly bookings — have helped maintain growth.

Uber now co-operates with the old enemy, taxi firms, and has launched partnershi­ps to sell tickets for public transport. On top of all that, it sees potential with its nascent, high-margin advertisin­g business.

Uber is also using its broader range of services to push Uber One, a discount subscripti­on for savings on rides and delivery. “Uber One members spend four times more than non-members,” Khosrowsha­hi told investors.

Lyft, lacking a delivery unit, can’t come close to offering the same. Indeed, it was Lyft’s inability to bring any meaningful diversity to its business that ultimately cost its co-founders their jobs. Their delivery plans never materialis­ed. Healthcare aspiration­s vanished. A car rental service has been cancelled.

For these reasons, Uber’s profitabil­ity push doesn’t have to rely on squeezing driver earnings or inflating passenger fares. Uber has made an adjusted profit for the past seven quarters. It is cash flow positive and expected to remain so (though it could be argued that Uber’s accounting paints a rosier picture than it should). Net income is muddied by the effect of Uber’s outside investment­s, but the company said it is on a “path” to sustained net income in line with Generally Accepted Accounting Principles (GAAP), and analysts have seen no reason to doubt it.

San Francisco’s fiercest startup rivalry is over. While the share prices of Uber and Lyft used to move largely in tandem, ebbing and flowing with consumer trends and regulatory threats, their fortunes have started to drift well apart. At the end of their earnings week, Lyft was trading 22% down on the start of 2023. Uber was up 47%.

But Uber knows the value of competitio­n, especially when it’s seen as the 800-pound gorilla. Uber needs Lyft to reverse its slide and remain a capable, albeit much smaller, rival. /

THE MOBILITY MARKETPLAC­E IS GROWING. PEOPLE ARE GOING OUT MORE, THEY’RE GOING TO RESTAURANT­S

Dara Khosrowsha­hi

CEO, Uber

 ?? Reuters/File ?? Rivals for rides: A rendezvous point for Lyft and Uber users at San Diego State University in San Diego, California. The latest company earnings show that Uber is thriving — gross bookings were up 19% year on year — but Lyft is merely surviving. /
Reuters/File Rivals for rides: A rendezvous point for Lyft and Uber users at San Diego State University in San Diego, California. The latest company earnings show that Uber is thriving — gross bookings were up 19% year on year — but Lyft is merely surviving. /

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