The Mercury News

Lyft sets a value of $20 billion as it heads toward IPO.

Filing with SEC puts company in lead over Uber in race to go public

- By Olivia Zaleski and Eric Newcomer

Lyft is seeking to raise as much as $2.1 billion in its initial public offering, valuing the firm at almost $20 billion.

The No. 2 U.S. ride-hailing giant is offering 30.8 million shares at $62 to $68 each, it said in a regulatory filing Monday. At the top of that range and including a potential overallotm­ent of shares to investors the market valuation would reach $19.6 billion, based on the total numbers of shares outstandin­g after the IPO as detailed in the filing.

At the targeted range, the San Francisco-based company’s offering will be the biggest from a tech upstart since Snap went public two years ago, and the largest in the U.S. so far this year after the partial U.S. government shutdown put a damper on first-quarter listings.

Including the money Lyft is expecting to raise from the IPO as well as some likely dilution of shares, the total valuation of the company could be $21 billion to $23 billion, according to a person familiar with the matter. Lyft had earlier been aiming for a valuation of $20 billion to $25 billion.

The filing with the U.S. Securities & Exchange Commission puts Lyft further ahead in its race to go public with Uber Technologi­es Inc., the world’s biggest ride-hailing company. Uber has filed confidenti­ally with the SEC and intends to make its listing plans public in April, according to people familiar with the matter. Smaller startups including Postmates Inc. and Slack Technologi­es Inc. are also considerin­g listings.

Uber could be valued at as much as $120 billion in an IPO, people familiar with its plans have said previously, likely making its offering one of the top five of all time.

Lyft warned in its filing that expenses are likely to increase and that it may not be able to “achieve or maintain profitabil­ity in the future.” While Uber is pursuing food and freight delivery, scooters, electric bikes and even flying cars, Lyft remains focused on trans-

portation, including bikes and scooters.

The new filing spells out how much of Lyft will be controlled by cofounders Logan Green and John Zimmer once the company is public. The two will be issued Class B shares, which will equal the voting rights of 20 ordinary shares.

The offering is being led by JPMorgan Chase & Co., Credit Suisse Group AG and Jefferies Financial Group Inc., with more than two dozen other banks participat­ing. Lyft has applied to list shares on the Nasdaq Global Market under the symbol “LYFT.”

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 ?? PATRICK T. FALLON — BLOOMBERG NEWS ?? Lyft, which is the No. 2U.S. ride-hailing giant, is offering 30.8million shares at $62to $68each, the company said in a regulatory filing Monday.
PATRICK T. FALLON — BLOOMBERG NEWS Lyft, which is the No. 2U.S. ride-hailing giant, is offering 30.8million shares at $62to $68each, the company said in a regulatory filing Monday.

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