The Philippine Star

Uber loses record $5 B, misses Wall St targets

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Uber Technologi­es Inc. reported a record $5.2 billion loss and revenue that fell short of Wall Street targets on Thursday as growth in its core ride-hailing business slowed, sending its shares down six percent.

The company said a price war in the US was easing and that an important measure of profitabil­ity topped its target, but slowing revenue growth raised questions about Uber’s ability to expand and fend off competitio­n.

“Losses are widening and the competitio­n is cutthroat,” said Haris Anwar, analyst at financial markets platform Investing.com. “What’s sapping investor confidence and hitting its stock hard after this report is the absence of a clear path to grow revenue and cut costs.”

Uber’s second-quarter net loss, widening from a loss of $878 million a year earlier, included $3.9 billion of stockbased compensati­on expenses related to its IPO earlier this year and nearly $300 million in “driver appreciati­on” related to the stock sale.

The report caught investors off guard in part because Uber’s smaller rival Lyft Inc. on Wednesday had raised revenue expectatio­ns and described an easing price war.

Uber stock had risen more than eight percent and Lyft had gained three percent during the day. Following Uber’s report, its shares fell six percent and Lyft dropped nearly two percent.

Uber reported that revenue growth slowed to 14 percent to $3.2 billion and fell short of the average analyst estimate of $3.36 billion, according to IBES data from Refinitiv. The company’s core business, ride-hailing, grew revenue only two percent to $2.3 billion. Food delivery Uber Eats grew 72 percent to $595 million.

Gross bookings, a measure of total value of car rides, scooter and bicycle trips, food deliveries and other services before payments to drivers, restaurant­s and other expenses, rose 31 percent from a year earlier to $15.76 billion. Analysts on average were expecting $15.80 billion.

At the same time, Uber is keeping less money per car ride. The amount passengers spent on trips rose 20 percent while the amount Uber kept after paying its drivers increased just four percent.

Chief executive officer Dara Khosrowsha­hi said in a press call the competitiv­e environmen­t was starting to rationaliz­e and had been “progressiv­ely improving” since the first quarter.

This year would be the peak for investment and losses would lessen in 2020 and 2021, he said.

Lyft on Wednesday said pricing had become “more rational,” meaning the company should spend less on promotions and incentives to win market share. It raised its revenue outlook.

Both the companies have historical­ly relied on subsidizat­ion to attract riders and have been spending heavily to expand services into areas such as self-driving technology for Lyft and food delivery for Uber.

Uber’s costs rose 147 percent to $8.65 billion in the quarter, including a sharp rise in spending for research and developmen­t.

“While we will continue to invest aggressive­ly in growth, we also want it to be healthy growth, and this quarter we made good progress in that direction,” chief financial officer Nelson Chai said in a statement.

The adjusted loss before items including interest, tax, and stock-based compensati­on more than doubled to $656 million but was better than the company expected, Uber said. It also topped Wall Street targets of a $996 million loss.

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