SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) - Japan’s SoftBank Group Corp is offering to
purchase shares of Uber Technologies Inc at a valuation of $48 billion, a
30 percent discount to its most recent valuation of $68.5 billion, a
person familiar with the matter said on Monday.
SoftBank Group Corp. has told stakeholders in Uber Technologies Inc.
that it would initially offer to buy shares at a nearly 30% discount to
the company’s most recent valuation of $68 billion, according to a
person familiar with the matter.
The Japanese firm is leading a group of firms that plans to purchase atleast 14% of Uber by buying Billions of Dollars of shares from employees and investors at a valuation of $48 billion and by investing at least $1 billion in the company at previous valuation.
The investment, which was approved by the Uber
board in October, would also trigger a string of governance changes at
Uber that would limit some early shareholders’ voting power, expand the
board from 11 to 17 directors and cut the influence of former Chief
Executive Travis Kalanick.
The investment and
board moves are supported by new Chief Executive Dara Khosrowshahi and
come at the end of a year of scandals and change for Uber, including the
announcement last week that executives covered up a major hack in 2016.
The consortium of investors led by SoftBank
and Dragoneer Investment Group plan to take a stake of at least 14
percent in the ride-services company. The tender offer will launch on
Tuesday, sources told Reuters, and investors have nearly a month to
respond.
The SoftBank-led investor group will acquire two of
the new board seats, with the remaining four going to independent
directors. If
there are not enough interested sellers, SoftBank can still walk away
from the deal. SoftBank is also expected to make a separate $1 billion
investment in the company at the $68.5 billion valuation.
Another
person familiar with the deal said the offer price was in line with
what investors had been expecting. SoftBank’s offer is close to what
Uber was worth in 2015, when shares were priced a little less than $40
apiece for a $51 billion valuation, according to data from PitchBook
Inc.
Even at the discounted price, Uber is the world’s
second-highest valued private venture-backed company, after China’s
ride-service company Didi Chuxing, and the offer is a chance for early
investors to lock in substantial profits and for employees to cash in
shares that have to date only had value on paper. Shareholders,
including employees, with at least 10,000 shares are eligible to sell.
Nearly all secondary transactions, when a new
investor purchases from existing shareholders, come at a discount to the
company’s valuation.
However, the 30 percent
discount is steep given Uber’s plan to launch an initial public offering
in 2019, said Phil Haslett, co-founder and head of investments at
secondary marketplace EquityZen. Usually valuation cuts of this size
happen when a company is at risk of being sold at a heavy discount,
which Uber is not.“It really comes down to a re-pricing of Uber’s value,” Haslett said.
Since
it was valued at $68.5 billion more than a year ago, the company has
been hit by scandals, including accusations of sexual harassment. It has
also weathered federal criminal probes into software Uber used to
deceive regulators and allegations of paying bribes to authorities in
Asia, and a lawsuit by Alphabet Inc’s self-driving unit Waymo, accusing
Uber of stealing trade secrets.
Most recently,
Uber revealed that the data of 57 million Uber customers and 600,000
drivers had been stolen in a breach more than a year ago, and that the
company had paid two hackers $100,000 to cover it up. Since then,
governments across the globe have launched investigations into the
incident. The scandal raised questions about whether SoftBank would try
to renegotiate the deal for better terms.
But
Uber said on Friday it had informed SoftBank about the data breach
prior to informing the public. However, “our information at the time was
preliminary and incomplete,” a spokesman said.
A person familiar
with the matter said SoftBank would have already factored any negative
impact from the breach into its negotiations with Uber.
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