Yeah, this is a more nuanced critique that could definitely have teeth.
That said, I'm kind of skeptical that it's really true that shareholders are keeping the whole enterprise afloat? Here I admit I haven't delved deep into their financials, but isn't a big part of their operating loss related to huge R&D spend for self-driving plays, outsized engineering dev teams that might eventually be reduced as the app stabilizes, etc.? It seems like riders have been willing to shell out a lot more money for the experience, which I would imagine leaves plenty of margin. They are essentially a global taxi company with good market position and value added. It seems hard to believe there is no way to operate that company profitably, even if they're not currently achieving it. It's not like they're being strongly pressured to reach profitability either, though, so this isn't a particularly fair litmus test as to whether they're capable.
Anyway, you raise a good point that it -could- be true the Uber model is fundamentally unsustainable. I was reacting some of the hotter revisionist takes you see, where Uber was never a good idea, offers no value over a normal Taxi, is a big brogrammer pyramid scheme, etc.
That said, I'm kind of skeptical that it's really true that shareholders are keeping the whole enterprise afloat? Here I admit I haven't delved deep into their financials, but isn't a big part of their operating loss related to huge R&D spend for self-driving plays, outsized engineering dev teams that might eventually be reduced as the app stabilizes, etc.? It seems like riders have been willing to shell out a lot more money for the experience, which I would imagine leaves plenty of margin. They are essentially a global taxi company with good market position and value added. It seems hard to believe there is no way to operate that company profitably, even if they're not currently achieving it. It's not like they're being strongly pressured to reach profitability either, though, so this isn't a particularly fair litmus test as to whether they're capable.
Anyway, you raise a good point that it -could- be true the Uber model is fundamentally unsustainable. I was reacting some of the hotter revisionist takes you see, where Uber was never a good idea, offers no value over a normal Taxi, is a big brogrammer pyramid scheme, etc.