Sunday Tribune

Enjoy the cheap ride before Uber counts the cost

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RIDE-SHARING services like Uber trumpet that they provide a cheap, easy way to zip around cities anywhere in the world. That may be true, but that is because someone else is silently picking up part of the cost, and that cannot last forever.

Here’s why: Uber and its rivals are paying for their escalating price wars with money they have raised in debt and equity markets. And it is getting harder to see how they are all going to be able to pay it back.

Uber’s latest plan is to borrow up to $2 billion (R30.6bn) from US leveraged-loan investors.

While the company’s plans for the cash are unclear, most of its money has ultimately gone toward the same goal, which is to claim market share by undercutti­ng its competitor­s with lower prices.

While this approach makes sense if the company is able to consolidat­e enough business, it has caused Uber to burn through cash.

The good news is that people are still extremely willing to lend. Uber is looking at paying a rate of 4.5 percent or less on the loan it may receive, which is lower than average yields on similarly rated new loans that range up to 5.5 percent, according to the Wall Street Journal, which cited sources familiar with the matter and S&P Global Market Intelligen­ce data.

Indeed, investors are generally warming back up to the US market for speculativ­e-grade loans after shunning it earlier in the year. Prices on the debt have risen 6 percent since their lows in February to 91.2c on the dollar, according to S&P and Loan Syndicatio­ns & Trading Associatio­n data.

And from an investor’s standpoint, what is not to like? If compa- nies can keep paying some interest and eventually repay their obligation­s, their debt holders will do phenomenal­ly well, especially compared with owners of the swelling volume of government bonds that yield nothing or less. The problem, of course, is that some of these borrowers will inevitably be unable to make good on all of their obligation­s.

Bad news

Which brings us to the bad news. All of Uber’s war chest has ultimately been aimed at the same goal, which is to build the biggest pool of drivers and riders in every city where the company operates. That is not cheap. Uber is spending on bonuses to sign up new drivers, and it subsidises the price of rides, particular­ly when it starts service in new cities.

The approach has made Uber a valuable firm that has truly changed many people’s daily lives. It also has made it tough to turn a profit.

Tech-news outlet The Informatio­n recently reported that Uber has roughly 20 percent gross margins in its establishe­d markets. That is a slim pool of potential profits before the company has to pay for drivers’ insurance, salaries for employees and other operating costs. Uber posted a loss of $1.7bn on $1.2bn in revenue over the first nine months of last year according to Bloomberg News.

On Tuesday, Uber’s chief product officer said the cash-torching habits of the ride-hailing industry would change “when the money train stops”. In an interview at the Bloomberg technology conference in San Francisco, Jeff Holden highlighte­d a “very distorted capital market” that won’t last forever. “When the tide goes out, you see who’s been swimming naked.”

Never mind the irony of that quip being a favourite of Warren Buffett, who would find little to love about Uber. Holden also didn’t acknowledg­e that Uber owes its very existence to this “very distorted capital market”.

There’s no way Uber could have started and thrived without the cheap cash it has been able to collect from a growing pool of eager investors, almost no questions asked. If Uber borrows $2bn, it would take the money it has raised to roughly $15bn. That is far more than Facebook, Amazon, Google, Yahoo and eBay collective­ly raised before those companies went public.

So that ride home from the bar at 2am on a Saturday may be cheap now, but it is coming at a price that may prove extraordin­arily steep for Uber in the future. – Bloomberg

 ?? PHOTO: BLOOMBERG ?? Uber may be cheap now, but it is coming at a price that may prove extraordin­arily steep for the company in the future.
PHOTO: BLOOMBERG Uber may be cheap now, but it is coming at a price that may prove extraordin­arily steep for the company in the future.

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