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Has Lyft ever turned a profit?

The short answer is that, no, Lyft is not profitable. The company has never reported an annual net profit, and 2022 reversed two years of declining net losses with a $522 million higher loss than the previous year. In 2022, Lyft reported revenue of $4 billion, compared to $3.2 billion in 2021.



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Finally, a profit In Q2 2023, Uber's revenue totaled $9.23 billion, up 14% from $8.1 billion a year earlier. As we mentioned above, Uber finally turned an operating profit, reporting $326 million in Q2 compared to an operating loss of $713 million a year earlier.

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Second Quarter 2023 Financial Highlights Net loss of $114.3 million compares with $187.6 million in Q1'23 and $377.2 million in Q2'22. Net loss includes $116.6 million of stock-based compensation and related payroll tax expenses. Net loss margin of 11.2% compares with 18.8% in Q1'23 and 38.1% in Q2'22.

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Lyft mainly generates revenue from the drivers; it is mostly in the form of the commissions paid and service fees for using the ride-sharing marketplace connecting riders with drivers successfully.

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Lyft began the year mired in the same ditch it ended in last year, with its ride-hailing service struggling to recover from a pandemic-driven downturn that triggered a change in leadership and layoffs that wiped out a quarter of its workforce.

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Uber made a loss of US$8.8 billion in 2022. Lyft, Uber's main competitor in the United States, lost US$1.28 billion. These companies, collectively known as transportation network companies (TNCs), have two options to become profitable.

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Therefore, to make $2000 a week with Lyft at the standard rate, you'd need to work for around 83 hours per week. Over the course of 7 days, that averages just shy of 12 hours every single day! This only barely fits with Lyft's demands for drivers to take at least a six-hour break for every twelve hours spent driving.

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Before the pandemic, Uber had far more rides, and worse margins. Uber has diseconomies of scale: when you lose money on every ride, adding more rides increases your losses, not your profits. Meanwhile, Lyft — Uber's also-ran competitor — saw its margins worsen over the same period.

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Lyft has failed to attract the same number of customers as before the pandemic, with its 20.4 million active riders last quarter falling short of its 22.9 million customers in the last quarter of 2019. Uber's monthly active users have grown by 18% in the period, per FactSet.

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Uber, Lyft and Doordash have set up a lobbying group against workers' right to unionize. Lyft has donated 14 million dollars to buy a ballot initiative to deny Lyft's drivers the rights of employees. Uber and Lyft Drivers Say Apps Are Short-Changing Wages While Raising Fares.

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The average price target for Lyft is $12.15. This is based on 25 Wall Streets Analysts 12-month price targets, issued in the past 3 months. The highest analyst price target is $22.00 ,the lowest forecast is $9.00. The average price target represents 10.15% Increase from the current price of $11.03.

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Lyft Gross Profit Margin (Quarterly): 44.32% for Sept. 30, 2023.

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In terms of revenue, Uber is about 10 times the size of Lyft. Granted, more revenue means Uber is spending more on variable costs like driver compensation and administrative support. More revenue, however, also means Uber can spend more on research and development, which in turn maintains its technological edge.

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While Uber diversified its business beyond ride-hailing by delivering meals and grocery items, Lyft never did. That arguably hurt the company earlier in the pandemic when fewer customers were traveling but more were ordering items online.

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While both services look identical, there are major differences. Uber is richer in features and available in more cities. Yet Lyft is more transparent in its receipts about the details of a trip, which can help consumers understand when prices increase; Uber's opaque receipts could leave people perplexed.

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