Lyft Inc (NASDAQ:LYFT) shared plunged 15% during extended trading due to disappointing second-quarter guidance while Uber Technologies Inc (NYSE:UBER) delivered strong quarter results earlier on Tuesday, showing growth and improved profitability.
Lyft’s First Quarter Was A Bumpy Ride
Revenue rose 14%to $1 billion, topping $981 million that Refinitiv expected, but Lyft’s operations still resulted in anet loss of $187.6 million, or 50 cents a share. With the first reported quarter since getting behind the CEO wheel, David Risher is more than pleased with the results that show improvement in rideshare services with riders taking more rides and drivers gaining the power to increase their earnings.
Lyft Is Having An Existential Crisis
The Corporate Strategy Gap Disables Comparison
Q1 Results Show Uber Got Its Mojo Back
Uber began the year strong by showing growth while improving its profitability.
Revenue for the quarter rose 29% YoY to $8.82 billion, topping $8.72 billion that Refinitiv expected. Mobility segment generated $4.33 billion in revenue while delivery brought in $3.09 billion. What was down from 2022’s quarter was the freight business that generated $1.4 billion, down from $1.8 billion as consumers have been spending more on services and less on retail that is shipped by freight.
Gross bookings rose 19% YoY to $31.4 billion, with mobility rising 40% YoY to $14.98 billion and deliveries rising 8% YoY to $15.02 billion.
Adjusted EBITDA amounted to $761 million, topping StreetAccount’s consensus estimate of $687 million.
Uber made a net loss of $157 million, or 8 cents per share, improving from $5.9 billion, or $3.03 per share it lost during last year’s comparable quarter.
Operating loss was $262 million, representing a margin of negative 3% which is an improvement compared to negative 6% over the last 12 months.
Only A Glimpse Of Efficiencies Brought On By AI Solutions
Uber is already using AI achieve accurate predictions of arrival times for rides and deliveries as well as to handle driver recruitment more “reliably and cost-efficiently.” CEO Dara Khosrowshahi remarked that the tech company is only the early stages of using large data models to improve user experiences and efficiencies across its business, announcing significant developments are on the horizon.
The Food Delivery Business Is Still Going Strong
There’s No Contest, But Not All That Shines Is Gold
It's safe to say that there is no competition between Uber and Lyft as the latter looking for way to stay above water, while the former is defying the tech slump by getting its house, one that hosts a diversified business model, in order.
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