Uber looks to pare losses and drive growth from the Indian market

The ride-hailing app's stock has plummeted 27 per cent since a disappointing initial public offering in May

Dara Khosrowshahi, chief executive officer of Uber Technologies Inc., poses for a photograph in Bengaluru, India, on Wednesday, Oct. 23, 2019. Khosrowshahi vowed to get his company to profitability while pursuing growth from emergent arenas such as India, addressing investors' concerns about the ride-sharing company's mounting losses and global regulatory challenges. Photographer: Samyukta Lakshmi/Bloomberg
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Uber chief executive Dara Khosrowshahi vowed to get his company to profitability while pursuing growth from emergent arenas such as India, addressing investors’ concerns about the ride-sharing company’s mounting losses and global regulatory challenges.

Uber, which lost about $5.2 billion in the second quarter alone, is having a tough time convincing the market of its growth potential, or that it can turn a profit anytime soon. Its stock has plummeted 27 per cent since a disappointing initial public offering in May. Mr Khosrowshahi, who this month unveiled a final round of job cuts, said the core rides business would achieve profitability even as newer lines such as Eats gained traction.

Mr Khosrowshahi was brought in to clean up the ride-sharing company in the summer of 2017 after a series of scandals brought down flamboyant co-founder Travis Kalanick. It had already become one of the world’s most valuable startups by aggressively pushing into new markets, bringing its model to places where few rules existed to deal with the emergent phenomenon of ride-hailing. Now, Uber is advancing at a more even clip after exiting markets such as China, expanding existing business lines while exploring new markets. The company will soon roll out Uber Works, a listing service for temp workers of all stripes.

“If I rated myself based on accounting of the last quarter, I wouldn’t be doing so well. But I live in the real world,” Mr Khosrowshahi said, seated in a conference room sporting a bright-red Uber-monogrammed Indian silk waistcoat.

“I ran Expedia for 12 years. It was a profitable company with significant cash flows,” Khosrowshahi said at Uber’s engineering center in Bangalore, which was decked out with oil lamps and sheer orange drapes for Diwali, the upcoming Indian festival of lights. Uber’s take rate or commission earned, in rides was over 20 per cent and “a great business can be built with a 20 per cent take rate.”

Uber is one of the most prominent companies in the portfolio of SoftBank Group, the Japanese investment powerhouse that also backed WeWork and former rivals such as Didi Chuxing. The US company, once a star in the SoftBank constellation, is now labeled among its biggest under-performers.

India is a potential bright spot: a massive, untapped market where Uber can demonstrate rapid growth to calm investors back home. It’s also a laboratory for innovation in terms of new modes of transportation, the chief executive said. “Our fastest growing segments are some of the new segments -- two and three wheelers,” he said. The company has a presence in about 40 Indian cities.

Mr Khosrowshahi says Uber will continue to invest there and is confident his team can build products that fit not just the Indian market but could also be exported to growth regions of the next decade from the Middle East to Africa. This week, he unveiled a feature to link Uber’s services to Delhi’s public transport system.

The most significant of the problems facing the chief executive could well be a shifting gig-worker landscape. Regulators are making it harder for companies such as Uber and Lyft to classify workers as independent contractors, which raises a question about the basis of their business models. California’s classification of drivers as employees would be a “mistake” and would increase prices for riders while making the service available to fewer people, Mr Khosrowshahi said.

“We and other gig economy companies are going to sponsor an initiative that actually brings this issue to the voters. Let the voters decide.”