Uber is still struggling to make money while the ride-hailing service’s CEO deals with the headaches left behind by his predecessor.
Gross bookings on the ride-hailing service brought in $12 billion, up 41 percent from a year ago.
The second-quarter results released Wednesday show Uber’s pioneering service continues to reel in more passengers and revenue, despite a variety of debacles that have tarnished its reputation and spurred some disillusioned riders to defect to its main U.S. rival, Lyft.
That has further complicated one of Uber’s biggest challenges — proving it can mature into a profitable business nearly a decade into its existence.
That’s something that CEO Dara Khosrowshahi has predicted Uber will eventually do, but for now it makes more sense to aggressively spend money on marketing, promotions and expanding into other areas of transportation, such as its recent investment in scooter-rental startup Lime.
Uber fared slightly better from April through June than it did a year ago. The San Francisco company lost $891 million in the quarter, narrowing from a loss of $1.06 billion at the same time last year.
Gross bookings on the ride-hailing service brought in $12 billion, up 41 percent from a year ago. Excluding operations that have been sold during the past year, gross bookings surged 49 percent. Those numbers are encouraging because it shows Uber is still attracting riders in droves, despite tougher competition from Lyft.
After paying its drivers, covering promotions, and various other items, Uber recorded net revenue of $2.8 billion, a 63 percent jump from a year ago. The increase stemmed largely from fewer incentives offered to drivers and fewer discounts given to passengers.
“We had another great quarter, continuing to grow at an impressive rate for a business of our scale,” Khosrowshahi said in a statement. “Going forward, we’re deliberately investing in the future of our platform.”
The second-quarter loss marked a return to form for Uber after it posted a profit of nearly $2.5 billion during the first three months of the year. That anomaly was generated by a windfall from Uber’s sale of operations in Southeast Asia and Russia.
Uber has consistently lost money since its inception, including a $4.5 billion setback last year.
The losses stem from Uber’s efforts to introduce and then hook consumers on the concept of being able to summon a ride on a smartphone app and then have drivers working as independent contractors pick them up within a few minutes. As an enticement, Uber historically has offered prices below the cost of providing its service, after paying for the drivers and other expenses.
Uber’s early investors are betting heavily that the company eventually will be able to come up with a money-making formula. They have valued Uber at $62 billion in privately negotiated investments, an assessment that will be put to the test if the company follows through on its current plan to sell its stock in an initial public offering next year.
To prepare for the IPO, Uber has been trying to prune its losses and minimize the damages from revelations about a corporate culture that cultivated or allowed a pattern of sexual harassment, a yearlong cover-up of a major computer break-in and the use of duplicitous software to dupe government regulators.
Uber’s efforts to develop self-driving cars also have been bogged down during the past year amid allegations that it stole technology from a Google spinoff and a fatal collision involving one of its robotic cars that ran over a pedestrian in Arizona. And on Tuesday, New York City’s mayor signed a bill that would impose a yearlong cap on new licenses for ride-hailing apps and also allow the city to set a minimum wage for drivers. New York is the largest American market for Uber.
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