New York Post

No fender bender

Uber shares skid on ginormous Q3 loss

- By NICOLAS VEGA nvega@nypost.com

Shares of Uber sank more than 5 percent in extended trading Monday after the company revealed it once again lost more than $1 billion during the most recent quarter

The San Francisco-based ride-hailing giant reported $1.2 billion in losses for the fiscal third quarter as it continued to hand out discounts amid stiff competitio­n from Lyft and other rival services.

That was three months after Uber reported more than $5 billion in losses as it doled out billions in employee compensati­on tied to the company’s May initial public offering.

Despite heavy price cuts for customers, Uber also missed Wall Street’s estimates for monthly active users in the quarter, delivering 103 million riders worldwide versus the predicted 105.5 million.

Gross bookings — a key underlying metric that investors focus on — fell short of the $16.7 billion analysts were looking for, coming in instead at $16.5 million, up 29 percent from a year earlier.

“Ultimately, bookings are the hearts and lungs of the business, and that was a bit softer where investors were expecting a beat,” Wedbush analyst Dan Ives said.

On the positive side, Uber actually beat Wall Street’s expectatio­ns with losses of 68 cents per share versus the 81 cents — or more than $1.5 billion — Wall Street analysts had been expecting.

Uber also brought in $3.8 billion in revenue, slightly ahead of the Street’s forecast of $3.7 billion.

Uber upped its revenue guidance for the year, adding $250 million to the figure.

Costs jumped by a third, to $4.9 billion, in the quarter. Gross bookings, a measure of the total value of rides before driver costs and other expenses, rose nearly 30 percent from a year earlier, to $16.5 billion.

The company’s shares are expected to be under pressure Wednesday, when the post-IPO lockup period expires. Some analysts expect more than 80 percent of Uber’s outstandin­g shares will become eligible for sale.

“There are fears you’ll see an avalanche of selling from insiders,” Ives said. “Some of the early investors, in my opinion, will sell at any price.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States