[ad_1]
Deliveroo has unveiled plans for its London stock market debut as it revealed 54 per cent growth in sales but losses of £224m in 2020.Â
The Amazon-backed online food ordering company announced its intention to float on Monday, suggesting that its shares are likely to begin trading by early April.Â
The filing includes details of a dual-class share structure that would give Will Shu, Deliveroo’s co-founder and chief executive, 20 votes a share, while every other shareholder will have a single vote for each share. The structure will expire three years after the listing.Â
London-based Deliveroo has privately targeted a valuation of as much as $10bn (£7.2bn), people briefed on internal discussions told the Financial Times last week.Â
Monday’s filing revealed that more than 6m people order from over 115,000 restaurants and stores through Deliveroo every month. Its gross transaction value — primarily made up of customers’ spending — rose 64 per cent to £4.1bn in 2020.Â
A Deliveroo spokesperson said that net revenues — mostly consisting of fees charged to restaurants and consumers — were £1.2bn in 2020, up 54 per cent on the previous year.
That included net revenue growth of 65 per cent to £599m in the UK and Ireland last year, suggesting that Deliveroo outpaced its more established rival Just Eat to gain share in its home market.Â
The company said growth was driven by increased customers and more frequent usage, as the coronavirus pandemic drove many people to try online deliveries for the first time. Even when lockdown rules were lifted and people could visit restaurants, Deliveroo said it “continued to see very strong user engagement and order frequencyâ€.Â
Deliveroo narrowed its underlying losses over the previous year by 29 per cent to £223.7m in 2020. However, it warned prospective investors that it would continue to prioritise expansion over profitability, saying it “remains focused on investing in driving growth in a nascent online food marketâ€.Â
“Our ambitions have increased as we start to truly understand and execute on the opportunity in front of us in online food,†said Shu.Â
Deliveroo was profitable for two quarters of 2020 after adjusting for finance costs, tax, depreciation, amortisation, stock options costs and other one-off items.Â
However, the fact that the eight-year-old company did not come closer to overall profitability during a boom year for food delivery may raise questions from prospective investors about its longer-term business model.Â
Deliveroo intends to use the proceeds from its initial public offering to support expansion of its “Editions†kitchens, which cater only to delivery customers and do not allow in-house diners, as well as initiatives including on-demand groceries, through partnerships with supermarkets such as Waitrose, Aldi and Co-op.Â
Deliveroo plans to pay out £16m to its couriers in bonus payments after the IPO. It is also reserving £50m worth of shares for private investors who are also customers of its services.Â
Goldman Sachs and JPMorgan Cazenove are Deliveroo’s joint global co-ordinators.
[ad_2]
Source link