Uber posts $50 billion in annual bookings as profit
remains elusive ahead of IPO
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[February 16, 2019]
By Heather Somerville
SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) - Uber Technologies
Inc had $50 billion in total bookings for its ride-service and
food-delivery businesses last year, a testament to the size and global
reach of the company as it prepares to woo investors in one of the
biggest public stock listings to date.
But figures released by the company on Friday showed revenue grew just 2
percent in the fourth quarter, a sign that Uber continues to heavily
subsidize rides in competitive markets, raising questions about its
future growth prospects.
Uber's full-year revenue for 2018 was $11.3 billion, up 43 percent from
the prior year. Its losses before taxes, depreciation and other expenses
were $1.8 billion, an improvement over the $2.2 billion loss posted in
2017.
Uber highlighted the annual bookings figure, which was up 45 percent
over 2017, in its release on Friday of a smattering of selected figures
for its fourth-quarter and full-year results, a practice it has had for
the last several quarters as it anticipated going public. The full-year
figures are particularly important to show potential investors the
trajectory of the business, as opposed to Uber's more erratic quarterly
results.
Uber in December filed confidentially for an initial public offering,
which may come as early as the second quarter this year. It is racing
neck-and-neck with rival Lyft to become the first ride-hailing IPO.
"Last year was our strongest yet, and Q4 set another record," Uber Chief
Financial Officer Nelson Chai said in a statement.
Uber said gross bookings for the fourth quarter were a record $14.2
billion, up 11 percent from the prior quarter. That marks an improvement
after bookings growth slowed to just single-digit percentages throughout
much of last year.
Uber's revenue in the fourth quarter reached $3 billion, up 2 percent
from the third quarter and a 24 percent increase over the previous year.
INTENSE COMPETITION
The food-delivery service, Uber Eats, accounts for more than $2.5
billion in bookings quarterly, according to a person with knowledge of
the matter. Uber has trumpeted Uber Eats as the largest online food
delivery business outside of China.
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Uber's logo is displayed on a mobile phone in London, Britain,
September 14, 2018. REUTERS/Hannah Mckay/File Photo
Uber must convince public market investors that its market share, growth
trajectory, global scale and diversity of businesses make it a compelling
investment, despite its enormous losses.
"Uber needs to show it can control costs and can make money, basically provide a
strong argument that its business model is not broken and that it can achieve
and sustain profitability despite issues with drivers, customers and
politicians," said David Brophy, professor of finance at the University of
Michigan's Ross School of Business.
Ongoing intense competition with ride-hailing foes across the globe has kept
Uber in the red. Rivalries in India with ride service Ola, in Latin America with
Didi Chuxing and in the Middle East with Careem have pressured Uber to lower
prices, raise driver commissions and invest heavily in marketing and recruiting.
Uber has held talks with Careem since the middle of last year about a potential
merger, but the companies have not reached an agreement.
Uber Eats is also battling a crowded food-delivery industry, forcing it to adopt
discounting tactics to compete with companies like food-delivery startup
DoorDash, which is in the process of raising $500 million from investors at a $6
billion valuation, and restaurant and grocery delivery company Postmates, which
filed for an IPO this month.
Uber has no plans to slow investment in Uber Eats or other costly areas such as
autonomous car development to show profit any time soon. The company's losses
before interest, taxes and depreciation spiked in the fourth quarter to $940
million, a 43 percent jump over the previous quarter and 21 percent increase
from 2017.
"I believe investors will forgive even higher fourth-quarter losses if there's
evidence of significant topline growth," said Arun Sundararajan, a professor of
business at New York University Stern School of Business.
But, he said, Uber's business still represents a fraction of global consumer
spending on transportation, and "evidence that Uber is making significant
inroads into changing behaviors" is critical to its long-term success.
(Reporting by Heather Somerville; Editing by Leslie Adler)
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