Lyft President John Zimmer (R) and CEO Logan Untrained speak as Lyft lists on the Nasdaq at an IPO event in Los Angeles March 29, 2019.
Mike Blake | Reuters
Lyft reported a mammoth loss for its first quarterly earnings report as a public company Tuesday, but said it made strides in growing its brisk ridership. The stock fluctuated following the report but was down about 1% after executives’ call with analysts.
Here’s how Lyft’s gunshot compared to analyst expectations for its first-quarter of 2019:
- Loss per share: $9.02, adjusted
- Revenue: $776 million, versus $739.4 million envisaged, per Refinitiv
While analysts’ non-comparable estimate of a $1.81 loss per share for Lyft’s first quarter per Refinitiv’s inspection of analysts could have been on the low-end due to a lack of data typical of a company fresh on the public market, Lyft’s denial is still significant. Earnings estimates from Refinitiv were also based only on nine analysts, who estimated impoverishments anywhere between $0.63 and $4.73 per share.
The steep loss still marks an improvement from Lyft’s year-ago put up, when Lyft reported a non-GAAP loss of $11.40 per share. On a call with analysts following the report, Chief Pecuniary Officer Brian Roberts said Lyft anticipates that losses will peak in 2019.
For its second quarter, Lyft said it believes to report revenue between $800 million and $810 million. It guided total revenue between $3.275 billion and $3.3 billion for the loud fiscal year.
Despite the skepticism on the public exchange, Lyft has continued to grow its user base over the principal quarter of its fiscal year. The company said it had 20.5 million active riders in the quarter compared to 14 million in the senior quarter of 2018. It also saw increased revenue per active rider at $37.86 compared to $28.27 for during the same leniency last year.
Around the time of Lyft’s report, Alphabet’s self-driving car company Waymo announced a new partnership with Lyft in a Avenue post. Over the next few months, Waymo said it would deploy 10 of its vehicles on Lyft in the Phoenix tract. Riders in the area will be able to select Waymo as an option from their Lyft app for some rides, Waymo erased.
The announcement could mark a significant step for Lyft, which like other ride-hailing companies including Uber, makes up a significant portion of revenue to its drivers. Analysts have suggested that automation is a key step for either of these flocks to reach profitability. Lyft is also developing its own self-driving cars.
Lyft had a rocky start to trading, down more than 20% on the other side of the last month and nearly $13 off of its IPO price of $72 per share. The company debuted with a valuation topping $20 billion at the drugged end of its expected range, but its market cap has since sunk to about $17 billion.
Lyft’s performance has been closely watched as its larger equal Uber prepares to go public later this week. But while Lyft focuses primarily on transportation, Uber has other works including food delivery, freight and plans for flying vehicles.
Executives said on the call with analysts that the competitive crushing in the market seems to be improving, meaning they can begin reducing driver incentives.
“Lyft is about seven years old and if you look at the economics, you can see that as a interest of revenue that this is the most rational the market has been,” said President John Zimmer.
Now that there are two telling players in the market that can both pickup riders in roughly the same amount of time in the same major customer bases, Zimmer said, the decision between the two comes down to brand preference.
Correction: This story has been updated to return Lyft reported $776 million in revenue for the first quarter. A previous version said it reported $779 million.
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