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						Uber sets terms for IPO, posts $1 billion first-quarter 
						loss
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		 [April 26, 2019]   
		By Joshua Franklin 
 (Reuters) - Ride-hailing company Uber 
		Technologies Inc is aiming for a valuation of up to $91.5 billion in its 
		initial public offering, potentially the largest U.S. listing in years 
		and a test of investor appetite for a high-growth but highly 
		unprofitable business.
 
 In a regulatory filing on Friday, Uber set a target price range of $44 
		to $50 per share for its IPO. The company will sell 180 million shares 
		in the offering to raise up to $9 billion, with a further 27 million 
		sold by existing investors for as much as $1.35 billion.
 
 Reuters reported earlier this month that the combined value of Uber 
		shares sold in the IPO could be around $10 billion.
 
		 
		Uber also said PayPal had agreed to purchase $500 million of stock in a 
		private placement at the price the IPO eventually settles at.
 The updated public filing comes as Uber gears up to begin its investor 
		road show, in which management will spend the coming days pitching Uber 
		to public markets investors. Uber expects to price the IPO on May 9 and 
		then begin trading on the New York Stock Exchange the following day, 
		people familiar with the matter have said.
 
 Uber will face a host of questions from investors, including when it 
		will turn a profit, how it will navigate the transition to autonomous 
		vehicles and whether its business model can support higher driver costs 
		from minimum wage rules.
 
 Underscoring the company's ability to generate revenue but also the 
		scale of its losses, Uber reported in the filing a net loss attributable 
		to the company for the first quarter of 2019 of around $1 billion on 
		sales of roughly $3 billion.
 
 "When it comes to Uber, we believe there are still questions over the 
		current car-sharing model, the economics of which are not immediately or 
		obviously attractive for sustainable, long-term investment," Mark 
		Hargraves, head of Framlington Global Equities, wrote in a note.
 
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			Uber's logo is displayed on a mobile phone in London, Britain, 
			September 14, 2018. REUTERS/Hannah Mckay/File Photo 
            
			 
The valuation that Uber is seeking in its IPO is less than the $120 billion that 
investment bankers told Uber last year it could fetch, and closer to the $76 
billion valuation it attained in its last private fundraising round in 2018.
 Uber's moderation of valuation expectations reflects the poor stock performance 
of its smaller rival Lyft Inc following its IPO last month. Lyft shares ended 
trading on Thursday down more than 20 percent from their IPO price amid investor 
skepticism over its path to profitability.
 
 During Uber's IPO road show, Chief Executive Dara Khosrowshahi will be also 
tasked with convincing investors that he has successfully changed the company's 
culture and business practices after a series of embarrassing scandals over the 
last two years.
 
 Those have included sexual harassment allegations, a massive data breach that 
was concealed from regulators, use of illicit software to evade authorities and 
allegations of bribery overseas.
 
 (Reporting by Joshua Franklin in New York; editing by Patrick Graham, Franklin 
Paul and Steve Orlofsky)
 
				 
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