Deliveroo confirms IPO plans, flags €260m million loss in 2020

IPO expected to value food delivery business at around €5.9bn

Deliveroo operates across both the UK and Ireland, as well as other international markets. Photograph: Toby Melville/Reuters
Deliveroo operates across both the UK and Ireland, as well as other international markets. Photograph: Toby Melville/Reuters

Deliveroo announced plans to launch what could be the biggest London listing in more than seven years on Monday, after the British food delivery firm's business surged during the Covid-19 pandemic, although it still posted a loss for 2020.

The initial public offering (IPO) is expected to value Deliveroo at more than $7 billion (€5.9 billion), based on a $180 million private funding round completed in January with backers including minority shareholder Amazon, the world’s most valuable company. That would make it the biggest London IPO by market cap since Royal Mail in 2013.

The announcement is the latest in a busy start to London’s IPO season, with footwear brand Dr. Martens and greeting card retailer Moonpig completing high profile deals earlier this year and online review platform Trustpilot in the process of marketing an IPO.

In an accompanying trading update, Deliveroo said it had grown the total number of transactions processed on its online platform, the so-called gross transaction value, by 64.3 per cent last year to £4.1 billion (€4.77 billion) from £2.5 billion in 2019.

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The closure of restaurants except for takeaway and delivery services for parts of the year during the Covid-19 pandemic fuelled a surge in Deliveroo business, and founder Will Shu believes the shift will last.

“We feel confident of the behaviour of our new consumer base,” he told Reuters. “For example, when lockdown was lifted last summer...we continued to grow.”

He believes the company’s expansion into the grocery sector will also drive business, along with offerings such as a new monthly subscription service. The company believes the restaurant and grocery sectors represent an addressable market of £1.2 trillion in Deliveroo’s 12 markets, of which just 3 per cent of sales are currently estimated to be online.

That said, Deliveroo was still operating at an underlying loss of £223.7 million (€260 million) in 2020, although down from £317.3 million in 2019.

This is not expected to dampen enthusiasm for Deliveroo’s London listing. “There’s a large amount of money sloshing around and looking for growth - the IPO market is not sensitive to profit,” said Prof John Colley, associate dean of Warwick Business School. “But it will be several years before Deliveroo makes a profit and, while they ultimately may make some money, it’s difficult to see how they will justify the valuations being talked about currently,” he added.

The company confirmed it plans to use a dual-class share structure that will give Mr Shu more control over the company. This means it will have a “standard” listing upon entry into the London Stock Exchange, rather than a premium one, excluding it from the FTSE indices.

However, this could change if recommendations made in a recent review of listing rules by former EU commissioner Jonathan Hill are implemented.

“It’s obviously great news that Deliveroo, a global technology leader, born and bred in the UK, has chosen to list here,” Mr Hill said in a statement provided by Deliveroo. “The changes we recommended would make it easier for more companies to follow Deliveroo’s lead, sending out a message that London is open for business.”

Goldman Sachs and JP Morgan are joint global coordinators and bookrunners along with Bank of America, Citi, Jefferies and Numis. – Reuters