Uber Loses $900 Million In Second Quarter; Urged By Investors To Sell Off Self-Driving Division (bloomberg.com) 228
Last week, Uber reported a second-quarter loss of $891 million, even though it brought in $2.8 billion in revenue. "While it's a 16 percent improvement from a year earlier, the loss follows a rare profit posted in the first quarter, thanks largely to the sale of overseas assets," reports Bloomberg. As a result, the company is being pressured by investors to sell its self-driving cars unit, which Uber is spending $125-200 million a quarter to maintain. From the report: Even after increased spending last quarter, revenue growth is slowing. Sales rose 63 percent to $2.8 billion in the second quarter compared with the same period last year. The rate in the first quarter was 70 percent. [Uber CEO Dara Khosrowshahi] Khosrowshahi is pouring large, undisclosed sums of money into food delivery, logistics and autonomous-car technology. The San Francisco-based company has said the food delivery business, Uber Eats, represents more than 10 percent of its gross bookings. Growth in that segment may be masking a slowdown in Uber's main business.
interesting (Score:4, Insightful)
On one hand, it's interesting how investors are really interested in companies bing a one trick pony. They are investing in a "ride sharing" (LOL) company. They are not interested in a company that does ride sharing AND self driving. If they wanted a self driving car company, they would invest in a self driving car company.
On the other hand, it's interesting how companies refuse to be one trick ponies. Uber saw the writing on the wall. They know in a few years it will be all about self driving. They wan't to be ready for the change. Being first to game is the key.
Basically you have to shake investors off as soon as you can. These people are interested in "money now" as opposed to "money later". This is why companies that operate at a loss all the time have little future.
Re:interesting (Score:5, Insightful)
They are not interested in a company that does ride sharing AND self driving. If they wanted a self driving car company, they would invest in a self driving car company.
I think part of the problem is they'd prefer to invest in a self-driving car company that doesn't kill people.
Re: (Score:2)
It's unrealistic to expect death-free cars.
So are investors calculating the price of liability for not only deaths, but many fender-benders a day into their risk analysis?
Re: (Score:2)
They should. It's what insurance companies do all the time, and look at how rich Warren Buffet has become because of it.
Not according to stuntman mike. (Score:2)
Stuntman Mike: [as he drives] Hey, Pam, remember when I said this car was death proof? Well, that wasn't a lie. This car is 100% death proof. Only to get the benefit of it, honey, you REALLY need to be sitting in my seat.
[slams his boot to the brake and sends Pam flying face-first into the dashboard]
Doesn't need to invent the self driving car (Score:5, Insightful)
They need patents (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Good question. Theoretically they've already got the infrastructure and brand. However since their business model isn't capital intensive there's a relatively low barrier to entry. There's something of a network effect where you're more likely to find a ride with the more popular app. However the ride likelihood is based on human drivers. Thus there's a fair chance that the company with the best/popular self--driving car comes up with its own ride hailing app to capture that rev
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Uber does not need to be the inventor of the self driving car. They only need to be a user of the self driving car. And frankly they are behind in self-driving R&D and doing a crappy job at it as well.
But what value does Uber add to that? Self-driving cars don't have to be recruited, there's no need for background checks, there won't be any drivers mistreating customers or driving recklessly, there's no pool of additional cars that can be called in through surge pricing, no car cares what rides it takes or where it ends up or how long it stays idle and the car will probably have its own insurance for traffic accidents. It's basically a clone army on wheels. There's also no quick scale-up, to increase you
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
Re: (Score:2)
I think it's more that investors are interested in a company that eventually proves it can make a profit. I don't think they have a problem with Uber diversifying - they just want some indication that they're not going to lose their investment first.
Which brings me to the point I originally intended to make. What does it say about our American version of venture Capitalism that, increasingly, the model seems to be to fund a company through years of losses until they eventually achieve monopoly or near-mon
Re: (Score:3)
On one hand, it's interesting how investors are really interested in companies bing a one trick pony. They are investing in a "ride sharing" (LOL) company. They are not interested in a company that does ride sharing AND self driving. If they wanted a self driving car company, they would invest in a self driving car company.
On the other hand, it's interesting how companies refuse to be one trick ponies. Uber saw the writing on the wall. They know in a few years it will be all about self driving. They wan't to be ready for the change. Being first to game is the key.
Basically you have to shake investors off as soon as you can. These people are interested in "money now" as opposed to "money later". This is why companies that operate at a loss all the time have little future.
I will do you one better. Uber isn't a viable business without self-driving cars. The entire model is to lose money until they can replace their drivers and then recoup those losses when their AVs becomes viable. These investors that want Uber to sell off the AV division basically don't understand any of this. And this is the type of action that is why being a public company is a double edged sword. On one hand you can sell your equity whenever you want, but on the other hand accountants and financial
Re: (Score:2)
Someone else said they didn't need to make self-driving cars, just purchase them
Re: (Score:2)
hence the quotes on "ride sharing".
Re: (Score:2)
Anti investors? Investors are fine. Get the money, grow, and shake investors off (meaning: PAY THEM). It's YOUR company and you get to decide what to do with it. Otherwise they own you and they decide what your company does. No NO.
Re: (Score:2)
Yes, it's really a weird scenario. In the US our streets are excellent in much of the country. But even in those areas, people live out in the suburbs making real public transportation a serious problem. This takes half the problem, people in suburbs needing to get into the cities and kind of resolves it... except for the fact that people in suburbs bought cars because they all have to get to work on time in the morning and also go grocery shopping and also have kids. Uber can't realistically solve this pro
Fuck you, Dara, (Score:4, Insightful)
Uber CEO Dara Khosrowshahi] Khosrowshahi is pouring large, undisclosed sums of money into food delivery, logistics and autonomous-car technology.
"Throw shit at wall; see what sticks." -Unimaginative moron with finance degree
It really amuses me to watch these VC's incompetently try to monetize every aspect of our fucking existence... they won't be happy until they're the middlemen making 25% on all our transactions coming and going.
Fuck 'em with a huge stick... bigger even than they enjoy.
Re: (Score:2)
In the last few months, Uber bought a startup that rents electric bicycles, invested in another one that rents electric scooters and went to work on its own scooter-rental business.
Those desperate, incompetent motherfuckers...
Re: (Score:2)
FYFY.
Seriously, this is why it drives me nuts to see so many anti-Union and anti-government folks. The mega corps & investor class have built large institutions to advance their interests. Meanwhile we hear in the working class are actively trying to tear down the ones that advanced ours.
Uber needs the self driving division (Score:5, Insightful)
Self driving division a vanity project (Score:3)
Replacing drivers is absolutely the goal but they can do that with a self driving car that someone else invents.
Re: (Score:2)
I agree with rsilvergun. In the long term, practical self-driving cars will be the reality. The average consumer will happily get their ride through an app from Uber or Apple or Google or Lyft or Walmart or Ford -- a ride is a commodity to them. If Uber finds itself more than a year or so behind that footrace, it will be completely crushed. Crushed as in 99%-100% of their valuation will evaporate.
At this point, it is conceivable that the race is a 10+ year marathon rather a 5 year jog. If the former, m
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Good point.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Because they already do (Score:2)
Self driving cars are this generation's moon landing. Ok, not quite ( it takes a government with the full support of the populace to put that much towards a goal) but it's the one thing every single nation is working towards. It will happen.
Re: (Score:2)
and the amount of money to be had by automating away 2 million driving jobs with an average pay of $50k/year (+ taxes, benefits, training, etc) is staggering.
Your average cab driver makes nowhere near $50k and truck drivers have long moved over the $60k hurdle in the US and are moving on $70k, with some companies now offering flat $80k/year plus $0.55-0.78 per mile. At that rate clearing $100k USD driving a truck isn't only possible, it's downright easy.
The real push for "self driving" vehicles like trucks is because there's such a huge shortage of drivers it's stupid. It's not just the US, but Canada as well. 10 years ago they were saying that it was the "be
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Moreover, all of them require previous experience so a newbie is going to have a hard time landing that first job. Now if they were really hurting for drivers, they'd offer training.
Re: (Score:2)
I have no doubt that self-driving cars will SOMEDAY exist. Just not self-driving cars based on what passes for 'artificial intelligence' at the moment. Teaching a car to know the precise locations of street furniture and buildings - and arming it with algorithms that allow it to avoid crashing into things (as long as they've been trained to 'understand' the specific situations the algorithm handles, is a clever bit of data processing, but is not intelligence - artificial or otherwise.
In the coming decades
Re: (Score:2)
Why do people assume that self-driving cars will EVER exist?
Because humans are on average shitty drivers and there's nothing magical about driving that makes it perfectly possible for a human but not a machine.
Re: (Score:2)
We're also working on a trial that retro-fits cars with devices that will allow inter-car communication plus als
Re: (Score:2)
When I was 13 I made a chatbot for AOL, that must mean GAI will be here in the nearish future too!
Of course level 4 type automation, geofenced areas in good weather conditions, is right around the corner. But you're missing the leap it takes to get to level 5, anywhere in any condition, able to handle unexpected situations, with no human available. It's a lot
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Correct, we haven't. But we have cured lots of other things, like dying from a fucking splinter because infection set in. But maybe we should just stop figuring out how to heal things until we figure out the common fucking cold conundrum. Maybe if more people dropped dead from the common cold there would be more funding for something which is, in essence, not a big fucking problem.
Also true, but once again, the keyword that sho
Re: (Score:2)
Citation needed - and no, the bible doesn't count.
Mathematical proofs that some things are impossible, and the laws of thermodynamics.
Re: (Score:2)
You mean the laws "we" made based on our own limited knowledge? We still don't have a unified theory, why were we bothering to look for the Higgs Boson?
Our mathematical proofs are in the same boat, just because we think we can prove x cannot exist does that mean we are correct, or that we haven't figured out the math to do it?
I am not a mathematician (clearly) but we have repeatedly proven that our "laws" are incorrect, and that we need to rethink about how the universe fits to
Re: (Score:2)
The do follow, you just seem unable to keep up.
When they said they were going to put a man on the moon, people (like you) said it was impossible and it would never happen. They were wrong.
When they said they were going to create a huge accelerator and smash atoms into each other at really high speeds so they could crack them open to see what was inside, people (like you) said it would destroy the planet and end civilization as we know it. They were wrong.
When they set
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
But they were wrong
SDC's and their wide adoption probably won't happen in my life time (at least in my country) but it's coming, and people who say it's impossible annoy me. Fine, we won't have fully autonomous vehicles in chaotic areas like construction sites. Some construction sites I have worked on require special training and licensing (power stations, strip mines etc.) This is und
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
The question no one is asking (Score:5, Insightful)
How is this even possible?
Seriously. Look at their business model. They have a frakin' smartphone app. They don't own the cars or have employees and they take a 25% cut of every ride.
Please tell me how they can spend $3Bn a year in the first place? What are they spending it on? Two college kids in dorm room could write the app and keep it updated.
Mike
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
My two college kids in a dorm room is an obvious exaggeration. I was simply trying to make a light of the fact there is no way it costs $3bn a year to run Uber without a LOT of unnecessary spending.
Re: (Score:2)
Looking at our cost... (Score:3)
Re: (Score:2)
Bribes. Bribes to politicians to either ignore their flagrant violations of laws and regulations or to make sure same laws are changed.
Re: (Score:2)
trust Uber employees are not incompetent.
Losing $900 million in a quarter with no road to profitability in sight. Let that sink in for a second and then re-read what you wrote.
Re: (Score:2)
Day traders,... (Score:3)
The short term stock investors seeking instant profit sure make it difficult for a company to do any sort of long term growth plan or invest in anything for a potential future.
Re: (Score:3)
The short term stock investors seeking instant profit sure make it difficult for a company to do any sort of long term growth plan or invest in anything for a potential future.
Well the President is working on that problem, he wants to get rid of quarterly SEC filings. ;-)
Re: (Score:3)
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Logistics (Score:2, Interesting)
Re: (Score:2)
It's more complicated if you insist on a solution that makes sense a priori, or at least clearly makes more sense a priori than any other solution possibly could.
What human beings do when faced with situations like this is they adopt a set of largely obvious conventions that seem objectively correct and more sensible after we get used to them. That's pretty much how everything that is governed by law works. Something like private property seems as natural a part of universe as gravity or momentum, but if
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Sure, we'd all like to know that everything is going to work out perfectly. I'm just saying we have a consistent habit of learning to live with much less than perfection.
I don't think we'll solve the problems intrinsic to self-driving cars, I think we'll learn to live with them, just like we've learned to live with all the problems highways create. We won't see those problems as the consequence of choice, although they will be. We'll see them as just the way things are.
I have no doubt self-driving cars ar
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Yep, but they'll solve problems too. Most things are like that.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
I sympathize with your position, but in all probability it will cause problems for people who not only never asked for autonomous driving, because that's how the world works. If everything that caused problems for people who didn't ask for them didn't happen, then practically nothing would happen. Cars create problems for people who never drive; bike lanes and mass transit create problems for people who prefer to drive.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Almost all things that happen in the world create an issue for someone who didn't ask for it. Not everyone can have a veto over everything they don't like, although I am all for the maximum freedoms given the need for others to exercise their freedoms, everyone to get along, and to have a functioning economy. Where the dividing line is between those is the difference between most parties in Western democracies.
Re: (Score:2)
Whether or not anyone can get self driving to work, the logistical problems are the real killer. Who is responsible if the car makes a mistake? Not the owner, because they aren't controlling it. Who will insurance companies charge for liability insurance? When there is a construction site, who pays for the time to set it up so that autonomous cars can navigate it? I hope not tax payers. Who is responsible if they make a mistake? How do you stop people from simply walking in front of them whenever they want, knowing they will stop? Lots of things to figure out.
But it's just that, decisions.
Who is responsible if the car makes a mistake? Not the owner, because they aren't controlling it.
Legally, probably the car company as a condition of their "license" to drive.
Who will insurance companies charge for liability insurance?
Even if somebody else is driving today the owner must have insurance, then the insurance company goes after whoever is at fault.
When there is a construction site, who pays for the time to set it up so that autonomous cars can navigate it?
There's probably rules for how a construction site should be marked today. That's what autonomous cars have to deal with.
Who is responsible if they make a mistake?
Who is responsible now? Lots of people cause traffic jams, I'd say mostly nobody. Like if you have an accident and block the road those blocked don't get pa
Re: (Score:2)
Even if somebody else is driving today the owner must have insurance, then the insurance company goes after whoever is at fault.
Because it is within the power of the person driving to control the vehicle, so the owner must ensure the person is reliable. If no one is actually controlling the car, you have a different situation. It's like riding a bus or taxi all the time. You don't insure a bus to ride on it.
There's probably rules for how a construction site should be marked today
Yes there is, but none of it involves mapping an exact route digitally on a map so cars don't go bombing through the construction site. Cones and blockades and signs need to be set up a certain way, but will what they do toda
Re: (Score:3)
Also, six taxi drivers have already committed suicide as their medallions become worthless, other cities are using taxpayer money to compensate taxi drivers. Huge messes to figure out.
Times change. We advance. We can't be held hostage to the old ways. If we worried about that we'd still be driving horse and buggies around because the wheel makers (blacksmiths) and horse breeders would have lost their jobs.
Re: (Score:3)
Re: (Score:3)
Times change. We advance. We can't be held hostage to the old ways. If we worried about that we'd still be driving horse and buggies around because the wheel makers (blacksmiths) and horse breeders would have lost their jobs.
You still can't take a person's livelihood and throw it in the dumpster. They trusted their jurisdiction to uphold the laws. It's not like they were participating in a known risky venture like investing.
What? Yes, that's exactly what they were doing. They invested in their own business, which was risky given the prospects for that business going forward. As an investor in their business, they are responsible for being familiar with the risks involved, and investing accordingly.
Just another reason why we need UBI, so that when people get those things wrong, they don't wind up on the street — which winds up costing everyone money.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Seriously? I appreciate the sentiment, but this idea that the law/govt or whomever is looking out for you is not reflected in current society, nor any society since time immemorial. Folks with the money and/or influence have and always will tilt the game their way at the expense of others and as other posters have written, that is a risk that the 'pleebs' need to be aware of an ac
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
You can keep your dystopia that has everyone crowded into one small space as people scrap each other to keep their
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:3)
You may well be correct that practical automated driving is too far off to throw so much money at today. I do not know, I can only guess.
However, not getting the game and being wrong could cause the Uber company valuation to evaporate to nothing. Rides are a commodity. And if Apple or Google or Walmart or Ford can offer an app that provides a cheaper ride than Uber, Uber is over.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Contempt for software has its price (Score:4, Informative)
Nor profitable (Score:2)
Re: (Score:3)
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Well, the world definitely gets weirder as you get older. The thing to remember is that the sensible world of your youth was just as weird and arbitrary, you just took it for granted.
Re: (Score:2)
But mommy told them they were the smartest boys on Earth and that they could do anything! Don't you go contradicting mommy!