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by curiousjorge
3974 days ago
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No it doesn't have any speakable economic moat built around it. Like the parent comment mentions, it's just one of the many possible ways to get around the city, there's no cost of change. >However, the more people that use Uber will lead to better service levels and lower prices. That would be very bad for Uber. Lower prices would mean that they are constantly operating at a loss against traditional taxis and other competitors or apps. Your argument fails to support that there is a network effect that would raise the cost of switching to alternative means of transport and incorrectly assumes that uber is able to operate at a loss constantly as the network size grows. Take a look at the airline industry. The first guys to do it are nowhere. Everyone is undercutting each other because customers are not locked into one airline and are price sensitive. |
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Uber doesn't own any cars. How would better service and lower prices be bad for Uber? It wouldn't. The more activity they generate, the better off they are. They simply get a cut off everything. It would be wiser to compare to VISA/MasterCard. Those are software companies with huge network effects similar to Uber. Could anyone just go out and create their own payment network? Sure. Are prices per transaction competitive? Sure. Do VISA and MasterCard make a TON of money? Absolutely. And in this case (the more accurate comparison), the first guys to do it are still the main players, and they haven't needed to truly innovate in decades.
I think a lot of people tend to forget that these valuations aren't just some people out there being euphoric about the future. These valuations come from experienced investors, using real money, making thoroughly calculated guesses.