| * Deliveroo lost money last year that probably provided the best possible business environment with many people willing to work for them and ordering from home during a pandemic. * Deliveroo has basically no assets * What is the barrier to entry for other companies? Neither riders, restaurants, or customers have any reason to stay with them. * Deliveroo heavily depends on "self employed" couriers which quite likely courts will find are workers (edited, was: "employees") which the company needs to compensate accordingly |
The real winners in this scam are the founders, VCs and Amazon (Who will eventually acquire them) and some of the employees (Not riders). As expected the general public who got in late always lose even when the big investors warned them they would sell very early. Some did and some backed out altogether.
I don't know how one could fall for this ad in the UK [0] and actually become a very late 'retail investor' in Deliveroo's IPO day in which not only the share allocation isn't guaranteed, you are now locked in to waiting until the general public can trade it.
If a retail investor who bought into this pump and dump sells on the day of trading, it is at a loss. Ignore the initial hype entirely, wait for it to die down and probably buy it low.
[0] https://imgur.com/a/ylLwtE8