The Denver Post

SoftBank’s investment offer approved by Uber

Goal is to buy multibilli­on-dollar stake in ride-hailing company

- By Bloomberg News

Uber Technologi­es Inc. approved SoftBank Group Corp.’s offer to buy a multibilli­ondollar stake in the ride-hailing company, setting the stage for one of the largest private startup share purchases ever.

The agreement lets SoftBank, the investment firm Dragoneer and others invest at least $1 billion in Uber and proceed with a tender offer in coming weeks to buy up to $9 billion in shares from existing investors. The deal could still fall through if there aren’t enough interested sellers. A slate of Uber governance changes hangs on the transactio­n closing.

“We’ve entered into an agreement with a consortium led by SoftBank and Dragoneer on a potential investment,” Uber said in a news release. “We believe this agreement is a strong vote of confidence in Uber’s long-term potential. Upon closing, it will help fuel our investment­s in technology and our continued expansion at home and abroad, while strengthen­ing our corporate governance.”

The terms were negotiated for weeks, according to people familiar with the matter who asked not to be identified talking about private deliberati­ons.

Uber’s board was briefed on the terms Saturday and lawyers had been working to complete the language of the agreement, the people said.

As part of the deal, venture capital firm Benchmark agreed to put its lawsuit against Uber co-founder Travis Kalanick on hold and drop the complaint when SoftBank’s investment

and the governance reforms kick in, the people said. Kalanick is agreeing to give Uber’s board majority approval over the board seats he controls should he ever need to fill them again, the people said.

The pact gets Uber closer to clearing a major hurdle as it tries to overcome a series of scandals, leadership turmoil and executive departures. SoftBank, a well-connected Japanese technology company, could help Uber strike deals with competitor­s in India or Southeast Asia. SoftBank is a major investor in Ola and Grab, Uber’s rivals in those regions.

Uber’s board already approved governance changes that restrict Kalanick’s role at the ride-hailing company, including equalizing the voting power of different share classes and increasing the size of the board to 17 to allow for new independen­t directors. Those changes are contingent on the SoftBank investing in Uber.

SoftBank, along with Dragoneer and General Atlantic, are expected to invest at least $1 billion in Uber and purchase up to $9 billion worth of Uber shares from existing investors. The initial price for the tender offer may not be set for more than a week, a person familiar with the matter said. SoftBank is expected to buy shares from Uber at the company’s current valuation of nearly $70 billion, but the price of the secondary stock sale — in which existing investors sell — is expected to be lower.

Rajeev Misra, CEO of SoftBank’s $93 billion tech investment fund, warned that the company could walk away if Uber shareholde­rs demand too much.

“By no means is our investment decided,” he said in a statement Monday. “We are interested in Uber, but the final deal will depend on the tender price and a minimum percentage shareholdi­ng for SoftBank.”

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