Ubers a huge company. Coming from nowhere, it helped rip up and rewrite the rules for intra-city transit. The company, along with Lyft in the United States, have written themselves and their ride sharing business model into culture.
But while is famous for huge growth, towering revenues, and enormous fundraising, something that most dont know is that Uber loses money. A lot of it.
So much, in fact, that its IPO timing is a question mark, its eventual valuation a mystery, and there have been nagging concerns throughout Ubers recent life as to whether it can ever make money. Or if it can while supporting its more exotic operations (Uber Eats loses money, self-driving cars arent cheap, and ?).
So, today, were going to explain how Uber loses money. After all, the company is famous for being asset-light. By that we mean that Ubers non-employee drives own their cars, and pay for their own gas, and cover most insurance costs.
If Uber isnt operating a huge fleet of cars, how can it possibly lose money? Lets find out.
Losses
Today were looking at Ubers second quarter 2018 numbers. If you want to follow along at home, were leaning on put together by the Wall Street Journal.
Why focus on the the companys second quarter? Because we have yet to see Ubers third quarter figures, and the companys first quarter was impacted by one-time corporate divestments. More simply, the money that Uber got for divesting certain operations makes its first quarter look better than it was.
So, for the second quarter, how much money did Uber lose? Lets find out:
- Ubers Q22018 adjusted EBITDA (a very relaxed profit metric that doesn’t count all costs): -$614 million.
- Ubers Q22018 non-GAAP profit (the companys net loss, not including the cost of share-based compensation): -$870 million.
- Ubers Q22018 net loss (the companys profit or loss, inclusive of all costs): -$891 million.
In Ubers case, the stricter the profit metric (the more costs the profit metric takes into account), the worse its quarterly loss. That makes sense!
What you should take away from the above is that no matter which profit metric we decide on, be it net loss or adjusted EBITDA, Uber loses a pile of money each quarter.
How
Now that we understand that Uber does lose money, we want to know how it manages the task.
To understand, well start with fares and work our way through the companys costs. So up first? Gross bookings, or the value of all rides on Ubers platform. In the second quarter of 2018, Ubers gross bookings totaled $12 billion. Thats a lot of money!
However, Uber doesnt get to keep most of it. In fact, a lot of things need to come out of gross bookings before we can figure out Ubers own revenue. The largest gross bookings cost is what Uber drivers make. In the second quarter, $8.2 billion of the $12 billion in bookings Uber pulled in went to drivers.
Uber also spent $142 million on promotions in the second quarter, paid drivers another $427 million in incentives, spent $27 million on refunds, and paid $411 million in taxes and the like. All told, according , Ubers $12 billion of gross bookings included $9.2 billion in so-called contra-revenue expenses.
Now we can figure out Ubers real second quarter revenue: $12 billion (gross bookings) minus $9.2 billion (contra-revenue expenses) equals $2.8 billion in net revenue for Uber. This is the money it takes in the door, from which well deduct Ubers cost of revenue (what it costs to deliver product), its operating costs (salaries, office space), and other expenses to determine where all the money went. (Recall that we are trying to understand why Uber loses money; there is no profit at the bottom of this well.)
So Uber has $2.8 billion in Q2 revenue to spend on itself. Its cost of revenue came to $1.3 billion, leaving $1.5 billion in gross profit for the company to use to pay for its operating costs (for more on income statements, check out this post).
Are Ubers operating costs greater than its gross profit? Here are the ridesharing companys costs from its business operations:

So does that chart of costs sum to more than its gross profit of $1.5 billion? Yes. Ubers operating costs come to a total of $2.2 billion. And as Ubers costs are $700 million greater than its available gross profit, it loses money.
In English, the money that Uber collects from fares isnt enough to pay for its revenue and operating costs; therefore, Uber loses money each quarter.
How much money the company loses depends on how you count costs and if you take into account non-cash costs (such as stock compensation). But, by every possible real profit metric, Uber is deeply unprofitable.
And thats simply due to it having a higher cost base than it does revenue generating capacity. Now you know!
Editorial note: The original version of this post was more a loose series of notes. I decided to make it clearer and better. This is the improved version.
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