Business Standard

Airbnb had ‘substantia­lly more’ than $1 billion in quarterly revenue

- HEATHER SOMERVILLE

Home-renting company Airbnb Inc said on Friday it had “substantia­lly more” than $1 billion in revenue for the third quarter, marking its strongest quarter yet ahead of a widely anticipate­d initial public offering next year.

The quarter was the first time it “substantia­lly” exceeded $1 billion in revenue, Airbnb said in a statement, citing growth in key overseas markets, as well as in the smaller towns and suburban areas it has recently targeted expand beyond cities where it has been blamed for constraini­ng housing stock.

The number of people booking homes on Airbnb in the third quarter was up 91 percent in Beijing, 79 percent in Mexico City and 70 percent in Birmingham, England, from the same three-month period a year ago, Airbnb said.

Reuters previously reported that Airbnb’s revenue for all of 2017 topped $2.5 billion, a more than 50 percent increase over 2016, and $1 billion of which occurred in the fourth quarter.

The San Francisco-based company is eyeing an IPO next year after announcing in February it would not make a public debut this year, despite investor expectatio­ns to the contrary. However, Airbnb remains without a chief financial officer after the departure of Laurence Tosi in February, a critical position to fill before going public.

Valued by private investors at $31 billion, Airbnb achieved its first full year of profitabil­ity in 2017 and is on track to be profitable this year. The company added two independen­t directors to its board this year as part of its IPO preparatio­ns.

Airbnb in recent months has turned to new services and offerings to fuel growth, adding luxury vacation homes and hotels to its platform that began a decade ago as a web-based service where travellers could find apartments and houses to rent. The company has also built up a tours and activities business and offers restaurant reservatio­ns in a bid for new sources of revenue.

The company continues to face regulatory battles, particular­ly in Europe and the United States, as cities try to limit Airbnb’s impact on housing stock and rental prices, and the effects of increased tourism in residentia­l neighbourh­oods. The company has been forced to slash its listings in certain popular cities as part of concession­s to regulators.

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