The Week (US)

Transit: A giant loss raises questions about Uber

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Three months after its public debut, Uber posted a $5.2 billion loss that’s “impressive­ly vast” even for a company whose business model is based on outspendin­g the competitio­n, said The Economist. Much of this quarter’s loss—$3.9 billion—is a one-time cost from stock-based compensati­on linked to Uber’s IPO. Still, “from its inception Uber has now lost a cumulative $14 billion.” All that money is being spent on “efforts at becoming the ‘Amazon of transporta­tion,’” but this is far more money than Amazon ever lost. Meanwhile, Uber’s revenue growth has slowed to its lowest rate ever “as competitio­n for passengers holds down fares.” This is a company that “relies on rapid growth to keep investors happy.” Now those investors have to decide “whether it’s worth backing a firm splurging vast sums.” Uber still has $13.7 billion on hand, said Tom McKay in Gizmodo.com, so it still has “about two years before it exhausts its current funding.” But clearly the company can’t keep burning money at its current rate. It’s laid off 400 people from its marketing staff and put a hiring freeze on new engineers—not “a good sign for the future of an organizati­on.”

When Masayoshi Son, the CEO of tech investment giant SoftBank, “wrestled his way into Uber a little more than a year before the IPO,” it was seen as a triumph, said Tim Culpan in Bloomberg.com. Now, however, the stock is down more than 20 percent since Uber’s May 10 IPO, and the public markets have shown themselves less willing to “invest in big unprofitab­le businesses with the promise of future growth.” That makes Uber “among the biggest weights around the neck of the SoftBank Vision Fund.” SoftBank is even looking at investing in some of Uber’s competitor­s, said Jesse Pound in CNBC.com. But Uber CEO Dara Khosrowsha­hi believes Uber and SoftBank are very much still on the same side. When Son “puts money into companies, it’s because he believes in them and he thinks they’re going to be category leaders,” says Khosrowsha­hi. “We are their single largest investment.” Uber has claimed that its biggest rival is car ownership, said Patrick Sisson in Curbed.com. “For roughly the last decade, Uber and Lyft and other technologi­es have been the focus of wild claims of growth and guarantees that they would revolution­ize how we get around, reduce traffic, and cut emissions.” Now many of those claims look suspect. Uber’s and Lyft’s own studies show that drivers cruising around the streets increase congestion. Uber was heavily subsidized by venture capital, cutting the cost of rides and turning them into “affordable luxuries.” Its mounting losses, though, have exposed the problems with the model. “Not only is it difficult trying to disrupt the way Americans travel, it’s also very, very expensive.” Uber and its competitor­s face high costs to recruit drivers, while “passengers are very price-sensitive when booking rides.” All this invites a question that’s even bigger than Uber: Has the tech solution that so many investors bet on distracted us from better and cheaper ways of fixing our transporta­tion infrastruc­ture?

 ??  ?? Uber shares sank to a new low after a weak quarter.
Uber shares sank to a new low after a weak quarter.

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