The Denver Post

Airbnb reveals falling revenue

- By Erin Griffith

SAN FRANCISCO » Airbnb, the home rental service that disrupted the travel industry and was itself disrupted by the coronaviru­s, took a major step toward one of the year’s largest initial public offerings when it revealed declining revenue and growing losses in a prospectus Monday.

The offering, which could value Airbnb at more than $ 30 billion and raise as much as $ 3 billion, will test investors’ appetite for hospitalit­y- related stocks in a year when the industry has been battered and its future is uncertain. The company provides a marketplac­e for people to rent their homes, taking a percentage of the fees, and facilitate­s bookings for activities.

Airbnb’s prospectus painted an optimistic picture, advertisin­g its brand’s associatio­n with unique travel experience­s. “We have helped millions of people satisfy a fundamenta­l human need for connection,” the company said. “And it is through this connection that people can experience a greater sense of belonging.”

In total, Airbnb brought in $ 2.5 billion in revenue in the first nine months of the year, down from $ 3.7 billion a year earlier. Its net loss more than doubled during that period to $ 697 million.

Airbnb’s revenue bounced back in its most recent quarter, giving it a profit.

But because of the overall trajectory of shrinking revenue and the continued uncertaint­y of the coronaviru­s, the company is unlikely to be able to pitch Wall Street on the typical tech startup narrative of soaring growth. It was the first time Airbnb provided a comprehens­ive look at its finances.

Airbnb was valued at $ 31 billion before the pandemic, but some investors bought shares valuing it at $ 18 billion after travel ground to a halt. The company since has positioned its business around getaways that are within driving distance of people’s homes, allowing it to recover from the disruption faster than hotels.

“It’s going to be a mixed story,” said Karen Xie, a professor at the University of Denver who researches the short- termrental industry. Airbnb’s fast rebound showed it could win customers from hotels, she said, but that success could disappear with the virus surging again. In another lockdown, she said, “they’ll face a hard time again, and history will repeat just like last spring.”

If Airbnb goes public in the coming months, the company will have squeaked its offering in before a compensati­on deadline affecting many of its employees. Startups such as Airbnb compensate workers, especially those who join in the earliest years, with potentiall­y lucrative stock options and restricted stock units. But if a company waits too long to sell or go public, that equity can expire and become worthless. If Airbnb goes public before the end of the year, its employees will avoid losing a large tranche of equity that was set to start expiring next spring.

The IPO also could enrich Airbnb’s earliest backers, some of whom invested 12 years ago, while turning its founders into billionair­es.

Airbnb has raised more than $ 3 billion in venture capital funding. Its largest shareholde­rs include Silver Lake and Sixth Street, which invested in the company as the pandemic set in.

Sequoia Capital, Founders Fund and Accel also own sizable stakes.

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