Uber wins $1bn investment from Toyota, SoftBank fund

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TOKYO, April 19, 2019 (BSS/AFP) – Japanese car giant Toyota and investment
fund SoftBank Vision Fund on Friday unveiled an investment of $1 billion in
US company Uber to drive forward the development of driverless ridesharing
services.

The latest cash injection, expected to close in the third quarter this
year, came amid fevered anticipation of Uber’s public share offering which is
expected to be the largest in the tech sector for years.

Toyota has already invested $500 million in Uber as the firm races Google-
owned Waymo and a host of other companies, including major automakers, to
develop self-driving vehicles.

The latest investment, which also involves Japanese parts maker DENSO,
will go to Uber’s Advanced Technologies Group in a bid to “accelerate the
development and commercialisation of automated ridesharing,” the firms said
in a statement.

Toyota and DENSO are stumping up $667 million and SoftBank Vision Fund,
the investment arm of Japanese tycoon Masayoshi Son’s SoftBank, will pour
$333 million into the venture. It is already the top shareholder in Uber,
holding 16 percent.

The Japanese car firm said it would also contribute “an additional $300
million over the next three years to help cover the costs related to these
activities.”

Uber chief executive Dara Khosrowshahi said driverless cars would
“transform transportation as we know it, making our streets safer and our
cities more liveable.”

His firm is aiming to go beyond car rides to becoming the “Amazon of
transportation” in a future where people share, instead of own, vehicles.

If all goes to plan, commuters could ride an e-scooter to a transit
station, take a train, then grab an e-bike, share a ride or take an e-scooter
at the arriving station to complete a journey — all using an Uber app on a
smartphone.

Uber is also seeing growing success with an “Eats” service that lets
drivers make money delivering meals ordered from restaurants.

– ‘Sharing economy’ –

Last week, Uber filed official documents for its much-anticipated public
share offering.

The filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission said it operates on
six continents with some 14 million trips per day and has totalled more than
10 billion rides since it was founded in 2010.

The filing contained a “placeholder” amount of $1 billion to be raised but
that figure is expected to increase ahead of the initial public offering
(IPO) expected in May.

The Wall Street Journal said earlier this month that Uber was seeking to
raise $10 billion in what would be the largest stock offering of the year.

Media reports said the ride-hailing giant was likely to seek a market
value of close to $100 billion.

Uber is the largest of the “unicorns” or venture-backed firms worth at
least $1 billion to list on Wall Street, and is one of the key companies in
the “sharing economy” based on offering services to replace ownership of
cars, homes and other commodities.

Its revenue grew 42 percent last year to $11.2 billion but it continued to
lose money from its operations. A net profit was reported for the year from a
large asset sale, but operational losses were more than $3 billion.

And some analysts have voiced caution over the forthcoming IPO given a
relative lacklustre debut for Lyft, the main US rival.

Khosrowshahi has promised greater transparency as he seeks to restore
confidence in the global ridesharing leader hit by a wave of misconduct
scandals.

In October, Toyota and SoftBank announced the creation of a joint venture
to create “new mobility service” including driverless vehicles for services
such as meal deliveries.

The new company — called “Monet”, short for “mobility network” — is
majority owned by SoftBank.

SoftBank started as a software firm but has increasingly been pushing into
investments under tycoon Son, one of Japan’s richest men.