Losses at ride-hailing giant Uber totalled $1.27 billion (€1.12 billion) in the first half of this year.
In the first quarter of this year Uber lost about $520 million before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortisation (ebitda), according to people familiar with the matter.
In the second quarter the losses significantly exceeded $750 million, including a roughly $100 million shortfall in the US, those people said.
That means Uber’s losses in the first half of 2016 totalled at least $1.27 billion.
Subsidies for Uber’s drivers are responsible for the majority of the company’s losses globally, Gupta told investors, according to people familiar with the matter. An Uber spokesman declined to comment.
Unprecedented
“You won’t find too many technology companies that could lose this much money this quickly,” said Aswath Damodaran, a business professor at New York University who has written sceptically about Uber’s astronomical valuation. “For a private business to raise as much capital as Uber has been able to is unprecedented.”
Bookings grew tremendously from the first quarter of this year to the second, from more than $3.8 billion to more than $5 billion.
Net revenue, under generally accepted accounting principles, grew about 18 per cent, from about $960 million in the first quarter to about $1.1 billion in the second.
Uber also told investors during the call that it was changing how it calculates UberPool’s contribution to revenue in the second quarter, which had the effect of artificially increasing revenue.
Uber’s losses and revenue have generally grown in lockstep as the company’s global ambitions have expanded. Uber has lost money quarter after quarter.
In 2015, Uber lost at least $2 billion before ebitda.
Uber, which is seven years old, has lost at least $4 billion in the history of the company. It’s hard to find much of a precedent for Uber’s losses. – (Bloomberg)