As Lyft Heads Toward IPO, Does Its Key Metric Justify A Unicorn Valuation?

 | Mar 07, 2019 04:48AM ET

With the announcement in late February that Lyft, the San Francisco-based ride-hailing service, was planning to start its roadshow in early March—the run-up to an initial public offering—the 2019 IPO season is finally underway.

Lyft is one of a number of closely watched, privately-held, Unicorn companies whose public listing has been highly anticipated by investors. Other firms expected to go public this year include Uber, Airbnb, and Slack.

After delays caused by U.S. President Donald Trump's partial government shutdown, Lyft is the first one out of the gate. Though its official IPO date is still unknown, it's expected to happen in the coming weeks, possibly as early as the end of March. The company will likely trade under the ticker symbol LYFT.

Lyft's S-1 filing, the mandatory financial disclosure form that precedes an IPO, was made public last Friday. Here are the numbers and key fundamentals that can and will affect both the offering and its forward valuation.

h3 Lyft Valuation
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A word of warning first: the risks associated with investing in any initial public offering are higher than a similar investment in equities that have been trading for a considerable period of time. Newly publicly traded stocks tend to be more volatile, and with little historical data it's more difficult to call which way shares might head next.

As well, even with Lyft's S-1 information, there's much that remains unknown about the company. We'll have to wait for its quarterly reports for answers to those questions.

Still, we now have a better understanding of many of Lyft's fundamentals. The company, which competes directly with Uber, Gett and traditional taxi services, operates a platform that matches independent drivers with customers looking for transportation, via Lyft's app. Much like Uber, Lyft collects service fees and commissions from drivers for using the company's platform. Those fees account for Lyft's total revenue stream right now.

Estimates for Lyft's valuation range between $20 and $25 billion dollars. There won't be an exact number released until just days before the IPO, so for this post, we'll assume it will be in the $22 billion range.

h3 Revenue And Net Income/h3

The S-1 provides insight into the company's financials for the past three years. Lyft's revenue growth has been substantial.

In 2016, the company brought in $343 million. That grew to $1.05 billion in 2017, then doubled to $2.15 billion in 2018. Over two years, that's an impressive 500% increase.

However, like many young companies fueled by venture capital, net income has not kept pace, nor to be honest has it been a point of emphasis thus far. In 2016 and 2017, Lyft lost $682 and $688 million, respectively. Losses were even higher in 2018: $911 million dollars. Reasons given were costs of developing the platform, plus additional budgeting for marketing, R&D and operations.

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One positive: the losses-to-revenue ratio is shrinking. In 2016, losses were twice the size of its revenue; by 2018 losses were just 42% of the size of its revenue. Nonetheless, we don't see Lyft becoming profitable anytime soon.

But then Wall Street is infamous for caring more about growth than profits. As such, Lyft is likely to get a pass on profitability if it can manage to continue its impressive growth streak.

h3 Key Make-Or-Break Metric/h3

When it comes to growth, more than anything else, Wall Street loves user growth. Not-yet-profitable companies such as Netflix (NASDAQ:NFLX), Twitter (NYSE:TWTR) and most notably Tesla (NASDAQ:TSLA), have been boosted or hammered solely on this metric. At the same time, investors almost completely disregarded their revenues and profits.

We believe Lyft will be judged similarly, with investors focusing mostly on its active rider metrics. An active rider is anyone who uses the service at least once during the quarter.