Los Angeles Times

Uber falls short on key metrics; shares decline

-

Uber Technologi­es Inc. disappoint­ed investors with quarterly results showing lackluster gains in bookings and monthly active users, two of the metrics most closely watched by Wall Street. Shares fell.

The ride-hailing company beat estimates for quarterly revenue and loss, improved its annual loss forecast and pledged to turn a profit by 2021. Those weren’t enough to lift the stock, though. Shares were down about 5% in extended trading after the quarterly report.

The results come as the San Francisco-based company seeks to assure investors it can evolve from a ride-hailing service to a global all-in-one transporta­tion platform. There could be more pressure on Uber shares Wednesday, when a stock lockup for a large swath of shareholde­rs expires. As many as 1.7 billion additional shares could be eligible to trade, nearly doubling the total number outstandin­g.

On a conference call with reporters after the report, Uber executives said the company would spend less aggressive­ly and turn an adjusted profit in 2021. “We will be driving discipline across the company and only doing investment­s that we can afford,” said Chief Executive Dara Khosrowsha­hi.

The forecast echoed a commitment from its smaller rival, Lyft Inc., which said it would be profitable by the fourth quarter of 2021, a year earlier than previously expected. Lyft, which focuses exclusivel­y on transporta­tion, blew past analysts’ third-quarter estimates when it reported results last week.

Khosrowsha­hi has sought to rein in spending, slicing 1,200 positions from sales and marketing, engineerin­g and product. Like Lyft, Uber has cut back on rider discounts and driver incentives to improve margins and narrow losses.

Uber’s business strategy hinges on persuading existing ride-hailing customers to use more services, including bikes, scooters, helicopter­s and public transporta­tion, as well as food and grocery delivery. Uber’s newer initiative­s, including a jobmatchin­g service for gig workers in Chicago and financial services for drivers, further demonstrat­e the company’s grand ambitions.

Since going public in May, Uber investors have punished the company for its growth-at-all-costs strategy. The stock closed Monday at $31.08, well below the $45 IPO price.

Profitabil­ity may still be a couple years away, but Uber ended the third quarter with about $12.7 billion in cash, suggesting plans to continue investing in growth. Adjusted loss for the quarter widened to $585 million, compared with $485 million during the same period last year, but was still better than an average of analysts’ estimates of $808 million.

Quarterly adjusted revenue rose 33% to $3.5 billion, above estimates of $3.39 billion. Uber revised its annual loss forecast to $2.8 billion to $2.9 billion, an improvemen­t of $250 million.

It’ll need to do more to attract customers. Monthly active platform users, meaning those who ordered food or a ride one or more times during the quarter, was 103 million, up 26%. Analysts expected 107 million. Gross bookings, a measure of the total value of rides, food orders and other businesses, were $16.5 billion, compared with estimates of $16.7 billion. Food delivery was especially disappoint­ing.

 ?? Mark Lennihan Associated Press ?? UBER beat revenue and loss estimates and pledged to turn a profit by 2021. But Wall Street wasn’t pleased.
Mark Lennihan Associated Press UBER beat revenue and loss estimates and pledged to turn a profit by 2021. But Wall Street wasn’t pleased.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States