Q2 Earnings Ahead For Uber And Lyft: Profitability Path Still Unclear

 | Aug 02, 2021 10:29AM ET

As people have become more comfortable leaving their homes again, major global economies and their industries are riding gains on the path to a return to normal. But ride-sharing companies Uber Technologies (NYSE:UBER) and Lyft (NASDAQ:LYFT) seem to have been having trouble accelerating as people increasingly take to the streets.

Neither of these former tech darlings is currently reporting profitability. And the road ahead could continue to be bumpy as each company grapples with ongoing COVID-19 safety concerns, driver shortages, customer complaints, and continued yield signs popping up for its gig-economy business model of how they compensate drivers.

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When Lyft reports Q2 earnings on Aug. 3 and Uber on Aug. 4, both are expected to report losses. In Q1, Lyft reported revenue of $609.00 million for the quarter, compared to analyst estimates of $554.70 million. Uber earned $2.90 billion, missing the consensus estimate of $3.25 billion.

Of course, the pandemic cut into demand for Lyft and Uber ride services as many consumers shifted to working from home and went out less, which led to both companies reducing staff and other costs.

Since the beginning of the year, both companies have reported that bookings have picked up as more people have become vaccinated and comfortable getting into a car with a driver not in their COVID circle.

But a shortage of drivers has decelerated growth. On the Q1 conference call, Uber Chief Executive Dara Khosrowshahi said some drivers are still hesitant to ferry passengers. Many drivers said they pivoted during the pandemic to food deliveries or switched to jobs with benefits.

To entice drivers back, both companies have been distributing free personal protective equipment. Uber is reportedly in talks to fund education and career-building programs for drivers. Lyft is exploring a new partnership aimed at reducing drivers’ expenses, which could involve sizeable discounts on gas or insurance, or help with buying vehicles, according to published reports about the plans.

But that may not be enough to appease passengers, who have taken to social media to post angry missives about long waits and soaring prices for rides.