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vmarquet | 9 years ago

Isn't Uber like a Ponzi scheme in some way? They use investors money to subsidize drivers so that prices are low and they get more users, and with more users they are valued better and get more investors money. When investors money or/and user growth stops, prices go up, people stop using it, and the system collapses (or at least the user base shrinks).

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jfoster|9 years ago

Like Amazon & Tesla?

Some companies just have a much bigger ramp up than others. Amazon has so many markets to build warehousing & logistics in. Uber has so many markets to establish drivers in.

The subsidising of rides makes complete sense; subsidised rides are loss-leaders aimed towards building habits. I haven't seen their data, but it seems like a good plan.

tarunm|9 years ago

Amazon spent capital on building an efficient supply chain based on technology which is a huge entry barrier for any competitor. They did not use VC on exclusively providing any discounts. Uber, on the other hand, is using VC almost entirely on discounts hoping that users will stick around. Their product is essentially an app which has been replicated in every major economy with considerable success.

MegaButts|9 years ago

Both Amazon and Tesla build physical infrastructure to lower their costs in the future. Uber is banking on self-driving cars to save them. The ironic thing though is Uber is racing to spend as much as money as possible before that happens, effectively gaining them nothing more than mindshare. As soon as another company pops up with self-driving vehicles, they can compete with Uber and they haven't wasted $10 billion making everybody hate them.

mason55|9 years ago

I prefer to think of it as a wealth redistribution plan from the investor class to the upper middle class

jacques_chester|9 years ago

One of the very few times in history that there's been such a massive, rapid, worldwide and voluntary transfer of wealth from the very wealthy to the merely well-off.

tybit|9 years ago

They are aware of this, the goal is to have a large market share when self driving cars make their business model profitable.

This may not work, but that in no way makes Uber a Ponzi scheme.

prostoalex|9 years ago

> self driving cars make their business model profitable

In what way? Will they manufacture their own cars? That seems expensive, and from the past experience of GM and Chrysler Fiat not exactly a money-printing machine. Will they partner with manufacturers and buy their cars to add to Uber fleet? That will be a new expense that was externalised to the driver before, but now affects the company's bottom line. Will they just become a dispatch software licensee like Flywheel? Enterprise buyers tend to squeeze margins and negotiate tough.

What's the scenario where either their top line increases in a massive way or expenses are trimmed way, way down from where they are today?

BinaryIdiot|9 years ago

> They are aware of this, the goal is to have a large market share when self driving cars make their business model profitable.

That can't be their goal. Personally I think their goal is to get bought out at a very high price by some sort of car company / conglomerate. If car companies can make their own cars that are also self driving, why wouldn't they just toss up some software and go direct to consumers with them and cut out Uber entirely? Uber has a lead on the software and infrastructure for mapping but they're really pretty awful (I'd argue Apple Maps has surpassed much of what Uber does with mapping and routing at this point).

A car company with self driving cars is going to be able to provider a lower cost per ride while still profiting than Uber ever could unless they start producing their own vehicles.

> that in no way makes Uber a Ponzi scheme.

The parent stated "Isn't Uber like a Ponzi scheme in some way?" and then explained the rationale behind the thought. I think you took some words out of the parent's question when understanding what he or she was asking.

Uber subsidizes car rides using investor money to bring in more users which can make their valuation higher which can then bring in more investor money. Rinse repeat. It's not a ponzi scheme but it certainly has some traits of one and I think parent's question was fair.

conistonwater|9 years ago

That's not called a Ponzi scheme, though. It's possibly a type of anti-competitive behaviour, just not that particular type.

tarunm|9 years ago

Probably the most effective economic trickle down.

Drumlin|9 years ago

It somehow reminds me of those advert bars that people used to put on their desktops and be paid to view adverts in the late 90s - early 2000s. There was so much money in online advertising back then that businesses created referral pyramids based on it.

It also reminds me of those daily deal websites like Groupon, which were controversial yet hyped. That was back when there was a lot of money in 'hyper' local services.

Now there's a load of hype in self driving cars, the problem is the technology is probably decades away. It's just the latest hype in a new cycle. Local taxi services will take up the slack once the investment dries up.

ec109685|9 years ago

Way more money is spent advertising online now than in the 90s and early 2000s. The delivery mechanism has simply been optimized and figured out.

savanaly|9 years ago

A Ponzi scheme involves early investors being paid with the money of later investors. Unless you sell your shares, you're not getting money out of Uber right now. Instead, Uber appears to be as Yglesias famously said of Amazon: "a charitable organization being run by elements of the investment community for the benefit of consumers."

mcgannon2007|9 years ago

To be fair, you could make a similar argument with a lot of these high-growth VC backed companies.