Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

Airbnb details years of losing money ahead of planned IPO

- By Dee-Ann Durbin

Airbnb was losing money before the pandemic struck and cut its revenue by almost a third, the home-sharing company revealed in documents filed this week ahead of a planned initial public offering of its stock.

The San Franciscob­ased company has yet to set a date for the IPO, but it is laying the groundwork­by filing financial records with U.S. securities regulators.

The documents show that leading up to the coronaviru­s outbreak this year, Airbnb was spending heavily on technology and marketing to grow its business. The company said it was expanding its operations and adding new programs, like tours and other experience­s that travelers could book through its website.

Its revenue jumped 32% to $4.8 billion in 2019, but it reported a net loss of $674 million that year. The company also lost money in 2018 and 2017.

This year, Airbnb said, revenue fell 32% to $2.5 billion in the first nine months as travelers canceled their plans after the pandemic crippled travel and forced lockdowns around theworld.

The pandemic forced a financial reckoning, the company said. In May, Airbnb cut 1,900 employees — around 25% of its workforce — and slashed investment­s in programs, like movie production, not related to its core business.

Airbnb funded operations with $2 billion from various sources, including a $1 billion investment from private equity firms Silver Lake and Sixth Street Partners. Now, the company said, demand is rebounding as some travelers see home rentals as safer than crowded hotels. The number of nights and experience­s booked, which plummeted

more than 100% in March and April, were down 28% in July, August and September.

Airbnb said that indicates its business model is resilient and can adapt to future travel needs, including an increase in business travelers whowant towork from a rental home.

“We believe that the lines between travel and living are blurring, and the global pandemic has accelerate­d the ability to live anywhere,” the company said.

Airbnb said it currently has 7.4 million listings run by 4 million hosts worldwide. Eighty-six percent of its hosts are outside the U.S., and 55% are women, the company said.

The company said it had 54 million guests in 2019.

Airbnb was founded 12 years ago by Brian Chesky and Joe Gebbia — classmates at the Rhode Island School of Design — and Nate Blecharczy­k, a software engineer. Their first listing was Chesky and Gebbia’s apartment in San Francisco.

Chesky, Airbnb’s CEO, will receive a multiyear equity grant worth an estimated $120 million in lieu of a salary, the company said. The award will vest if he meets stock-price targets over the next decade.

Airbnb’s massive growth

hasn’t been

The company has angered some cities that accuse it of promoting overtouris­m and making neighborho­ods less affordable by taking housing off the market. Cities like Los Angeles, Barcelona, Paris and even Airbnb’s home city of San Francisco have passed laws restrictin­g its rentals.

The company has tried to clean up its couch-surfing reputation by adding luxury rentals and promising to verify each of its properties to make sure the photos on its website match the accommodat­ions.

It has also been cracking down on parties since a 2019 shooting at an illegal Airbnb house party in California. The shooting left five people dead.

Relationsh­ips with its hosts have sometimes frayed. Earlier this year, hostswere infuriated when Airbnb allowed guests to cancel and get full refunds amid the pandemic. Airbnb later promised $250 million to hosts to make up the shortfall.

More recently, the company said it will set aside 9.2 million shares for a host endowment, which will fund projects for hosts when its value tops $1 billion.

without

complicati­ons.

 ?? JASON HENRY/THE NEW YORK TIMES 2016 ?? Airbnb cut 1,900 jobs this year due to the coronaviru­s pandemic. Above, Airbnb’s headquarte­rs in San Francisco.
JASON HENRY/THE NEW YORK TIMES 2016 Airbnb cut 1,900 jobs this year due to the coronaviru­s pandemic. Above, Airbnb’s headquarte­rs in San Francisco.

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