The Borneo Post

Lyft races ahead of Uber to Wall Street listing

-

SAN FRANCISCO: Lyft filed documents for its stock offering, racing ahead of ride-sharing rival Uber for a Wall Street listing that sets the stage for a series of big venture-backed tech firms to hit public markets.

The initial public offering ( IPO) filing offered the first glimpse of Lyft’s finances and showed the San Francisco firm lost US$ 911 million on US$ 2.2 billion in 2018 revenues.

The documents show revenues grew sharply from US$ 343 million in 2016, but losses widened as well.

Lyft’s private valuation has been estimated at US$ 15 billion, considerab­ly smaller than Uber but making it one of the largest startups worth more than US$ 1 billion, popularly known as ‘unicorns’.

It will trade on the Nasdaq under the symbol LYFT and, according to some reports, will seek a valuation of more than US$ 20 billion.

“We are laser- focused on revolution­ising transporta­tion and continue to lead the market in innovation,” Lyft said in its filing, setting a preliminar­y target of raising US$ 100 million, a “placeholde­r” figure likely to be revised higher.

The company has discussed the possibilit­y of expanding globally but so far has operated only in the US and Canada.

The filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission said only that Lyft “may continue” to expand its internatio­nal operations, without offering specifics.

Lyft added that its future plans are “multimodal,” and involve using shared bikes and scooters for shorter rides, while enabling users to see transit options on its mobile applicatio­n.

The date and pricing of the offering were not announced. One billion rides The document said Lyft had completed over one billion rides since its inception in 2012 and had bookings last year of US$ 8.1 billion.

It has a 39 per cent share of the US rideshare market, according to a survey cited in the filing.

Lyft’s mission, according to the statement, revolves around reducing the number of cars on roads, and includes a path toward self- driving vehicles.

“We believe that cities should be built for people, not cars,” the company said. “Mass car ownership strains our cities and reduces the very freedom that cars once provided.”

Lyft said it is also investing in autonomous technology and hopes to roll out more selfdrivin­g vehicles, calling this “a critical part of the future of transporta­tion.”

“We were the first to launch a publicly- available commercial autonomous offering in the United States,” the company said.

Both Lyft and Uber have faced criticism for disrupting traditiona­l taxi services and for using the model of drivers as independen­t contractor­s.

The rideshare firms claim that most drivers prefer the flexible work arrangemen­t, even if it offers fewer benefits and less job security.

Lyft said it will seek to maintain its policy that drivers are independen­t contractor­s while noting that any legal challenge to this could have “adverse” consequenc­es.

For the IPO, Lyft said some shares would be reserved for drivers who have completed at least 10,000 trips using the platform.

The company will offer a bonus of US$1,000 to US$10,000 to eligible drivers by March 19 that may be used to buy shares at the offering price, although they may opt to pocket the cash. ‘Sharing economy’ advances Lyft’s IPO is the first of the socalled ‘sharing economy’ startups which have been transformi­ng some industries, with listings expected this year from the other giants in the field, Uber and Airbnb. — AFP

 ??  ?? World markets enjoyed a lively end to an otherwise slow week, with Chinese A-shares leaping after MSCI quadrupled their weight in its global benchmarks and strong US economic data lifting the dollar and bond yields. — Reuters photo
World markets enjoyed a lively end to an otherwise slow week, with Chinese A-shares leaping after MSCI quadrupled their weight in its global benchmarks and strong US economic data lifting the dollar and bond yields. — Reuters photo

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia