UBER BOUNCES BACK FROM PANDEMIC
But loses $5.6 billion from investments in companies such as DiDi
Uber on Wednesday reported strong growth in its ride-hailing and delivery businesses and said it was continuing to bounce back from a pandemic slump, even as it lost $5.6 billion because of its investments in other ride-sharing companies, primarily the Chinese service DiDi.
The company reported $6.9 billion in revenue for the first three months of 2022, outstripping analysts’ expectations and skyrocketing 136 percent compared with revenue from the same time last year, when COVID-19 vaccines were scarce and people were not traveling as much. Uber also said it logged 1.7 billion trips during the quarter and had 115 million people using its platform each month, an 18 percent and 17 percent increase, respectively, year over year.
Throughout the pandemic,
financial results have been an indicator of broader economic health and appetite for travel, with the company’s weaker quarters corresponding to spikes in coronavirus cases and increased lockdowns, and with stronger results generally indicating periods of greater normalcy.
Now, “as people have returned to offices, restaurants, pubs, stadiums and airports around the world, they’ve returned to Uber,” Dara Khosrowshahi, the company’s CEO, said in prepared remarks to investors. He added that the company’s results “make clear that we are emerging on a strong path out of the pandemic.”
Still, Uber’s investments in other ride-sharing businesses continue to hamper its bottom line. Of its nearly $6 billion in losses, $5.6 billion came from changes in the valuation of other companies in which it has a stake. DiDi’s value has plummeted since it went public last year.
Revenue from Uber’s ridehailing business surged nearly 200 percent from the same time last year — despite a slowdown at the beginning of the quarter because of the Omicron variant — and Uber’s food-delivery business grew 12 percent even though people have largely returned to restaurants and grocery stores.
Although Uber’s business continues to lose money, it said it was drawing closer to profitability. Excluding certain expenses like stock compensation and the DiDi losses, Uber had another profitable quarter, and its free cash flow approached a break-even point.
Drivers, who power Uber’s business — as well as the business of other gig economy companies like Lyft, DoorDash and Instacart — have said that high gas prices in recent months, stemUber’s ming in part from the Russian invasion of Ukraine, have made it more difficult to make a living driving for Uber. Some have said they are cutting back their hours or quitting the platform. And the value of Uber’s stock, similar to other gig economy companies, has fallen more than 30 percent since the beginning of the year.
Uber, which had already been spending heavily to lure back drivers who left early in the pandemic, responded in March by charging riders a small fuel fee for each trip, which went to drivers, and said Wednesday that it had more drivers on its platform than at any time since the pandemic began.
That confidence — and its rosy outlook for the next quarter — differed starkly from Lyft, which reported financial results Tuesday and saw its stock plunge 25 percent in after-hours trading after company executives said they were still struggling to persuade drivers to return to the platform and would be spending more money to incentivize them to do so.