NYSE:UBER Uber Technologies Q3 2023 Earnings Report $86.98 -0.77 (-0.88%) Closing price 08/1/2025 03:59 PM EasternExtended Trading$86.94 -0.05 (-0.05%) As of 08/1/2025 07:59 PM Eastern Extended trading is trading that happens on electronic markets outside of regular trading hours. This is a fair market value extended hours price provided by Polygon.io. Learn more. ProfileEarnings HistoryForecast Uber Technologies EPS ResultsActual EPS$0.10Consensus EPS $0.13Beat/MissMissed by -$0.03One Year Ago EPSN/AUber Technologies Revenue ResultsActual Revenue$9.29 billionExpected Revenue$9.47 billionBeat/MissMissed by -$174.43 millionYoY Revenue GrowthN/AUber Technologies Announcement DetailsQuarterQ3 2023Date11/7/2023TimeN/AConference Call DateTuesday, November 7, 2023Conference Call Time8:00AM ETUpcoming EarningsUber Technologies' Q2 2025 earnings is scheduled for Wednesday, August 6, 2025, with a conference call scheduled at 8:00 AM ET. Check back for transcripts, audio, and key financial metrics as they become available.Q2 2025 Earnings ReportConference Call ResourcesConference Call AudioConference Call TranscriptSlide DeckQuarterly Report (10-Q)Earnings HistoryCompany ProfileSlide DeckFull Screen Slide DeckPowered by Uber Technologies Q3 2023 Earnings Call TranscriptProvided by QuartrNovember 7, 2023 ShareLink copied to clipboard.Key Takeaways Uber reported 25% year-over-year trip growth in Q3 (up from 22% in Q2) and its adjusted EBITDA margin surpassed 3% for the first time, reflecting strong leverage of its growth flywheel and cost discipline. The mobility segment’s new offerings—taxi, three-wheelers, two-wheelers, UberX Share, high-capacity vehicles, Reserve and Uber for Business—now account for a $9 billion run rate in gross bookings, growing over 80% year-over-year. Uber One membership has reached 15 million, with members spending four times more per month and showing 15% higher retention than non-members, prompting plans to add non-monetary perks and deeper integration with mobility services. Driver incentives were reduced by 41% year-over-year and net headcount remained flat, supporting improved profitability while maintaining a high level of earner earnings. Uber sees regulatory momentum toward a flexible contractor model with benefits like minimum earnings and insurance protections globally, and notes its direct exposure to the Middle East market is only about 2% of gross bookings. AI Generated. May Contain Errors.Conference Call Audio Live Call not available Earnings Conference CallUber Technologies Q3 202300:00 / 00:00Speed:1x1.25x1.5x2xThere are 16 speakers on the call. Operator00:00:00Good morning. My name is Brianna, and I will be your conference operator today. At this time, I'd like to welcome you to Uber's Q3 2023 Earnings Conference Call. Please note that this call is being recorded. All participants are in listen only mode. Operator00:00:16After the speakers' remarks, There will be a question and answer session. Call. Thank you. I will now turn today's call over to Alex Wong, Head of Investor Relations. Please go ahead. Speaker 100:00:38Thank you, operator. Thank you for joining us today and welcome to Uber's Q3 2023 earnings presentation. Call. On the call today, we have Uber's CEO, Dara Khazashahi and CFO, Nelson Chai. During today's call, we will present both GAAP and non GAAP financial measures, call. Speaker 100:00:54Additional disclosures regarding these non GAAP measures, including a reconciliation of GAAP to non GAAP measures are included in the press release, call, supplemental slides and our filings with the SEC, each of which is posted to investor. Uber.com. As a reminder, these numbers are unaudited and may be subject to change. Call. Certain statements in this presentation and on this call are forward looking statements. Speaker 100:01:16You should not place undue reliance on forward looking statements. Call. Actual results may differ materially from these forward looking statements and we do not underwrite any obligation to update any forward looking statements we make today, except as required by law. Call. For more information about factors that may cause actual results to differ materially from forward looking statements, please refer to the press release we issued today call as well as risks and uncertainties described in our most recent Form 10 ks and other filings made with the SEC. Speaker 100:01:42We published our quarterly earnings press release, prepared remarks and supplemental slides to our Investor Relations website earlier today, and we ask you to review those documents if you haven't already. We will open the call to questions following brief opening remarks from Dara. With that, let me hand it over to Dara. Speaker 200:01:58Thanks, Alex. Call. Q3 marks another very strong quarter for Uber. Year on year trip growth accelerated to 25% from 22% in Q2, call. Outpacing gross bookings growth for the Q3 in a row. Speaker 200:02:12Trip growth was powered by strong audience and frequency trends as consumer activity remains robust call heading into our busiest period of the year. Notably, monthly trips per MAPC continue to steadily increase matching our all time high. Call. At the same time, adjusted EBITDA exceeded our Q3 outlook and our adjusted EBITDA margin exceeded 3% for the first time. Call. Speaker 200:02:35Simply put, the growth flywheel we built coupled with rigorous cost discipline is enabling us to generate strong leverage. Call. We're exiting the year with tremendous momentum and reliable execution. Our Q3 results and Q4 outlook demonstrate that Uber continues to drive profitable growth at scale. Call. Speaker 200:02:53We remain focused on scaling GAAP operating income and free cash flow, while also making disciplined investments to properly fund growth initiatives call that will deliver long term sustainable financial value. Finally, I want to recognize Ansak Nelson for his immense contributions to the company and its partnership with me over the past 5 years. Looking ahead, I'm thrilled to welcome Prashanth as our new CFO starting tomorrow, call, and I'm confident that he'll continue to build upon the great foundation that Nelson has built. With that, let's open the call Speaker 300:03:26for questions. Operator00:03:27Call. Thank you. Our first question comes from Ross Sandler with Barclays. Please go ahead. Speaker 400:03:39Hey, Dara. Just a couple of questions on the Mobility business. Could you just flush out a little bit more in detail what the drivers of the acceleration in mobility gross bookings were in the Q3? And as we look out over the next few years, what do you see as the biggest drivers of sustainable mobility gross bookings growth now that we've kind of caught up with call. The pre pandemic trip volume and frequency, what do you see for UberX versus the new areas? Speaker 400:04:08Thanks a lot. Speaker 200:04:10Yes, absolutely Ross. So, in terms of Q3, listen, the quarter was strong across the board call in every single geography, pretty much in every single product. But a couple of geographies to call out are the Asia Pacific regions and the LatAm regions. These areas accelerated pretty substantially on a year on year basis between Q3 and Q2 on big absolute numbers. Call. Speaker 200:04:38And some of those countries were kind of very early and penetrating. So for example, Japan and South Korea, Our penetration rate is minuscule compared to where we are in the rest of the world. And some of the newer products that we're building out, for example, hailable call. Taxi are very large parts of the marketplace again in Japan and Taiwan and Hong Kong and South Korea. Then we got products like Moto which are 2 wheelers that are growing call. Speaker 200:05:11Very, very quickly in Latin America as well, in Brazil and a number of other LatAm markets. So while the growth was pretty broad, I do think that the APAC and LatAm markets in particular were super strong, partially because of some of the newer products that we're rolling out. And then if you look more broadly, like we had a very, very strong summer, augmented by travel. As you know, travel has been Absolutely booming leisure travel and Uber has a very high penetration of call to travel consumer. And then what we're seeing now back to school is also going very, very strong. Speaker 200:05:48So that absolutely call. Added to our Q3 strength and acceleration that frankly surprised us in terms of its strength. In terms Speaker 500:05:59of the mobility business and Speaker 200:06:00kind of the growth construct, how do we think about the mobility business going forward multi year? We tend to look at the business from a business construct and then from a user construct, right. So from a business construct, call. Number one driver for growth and this is of the core UberX business that grew over 20% on a year on year basis call. Is about adding more drivers to the platform. Speaker 200:06:24We added, we're now at 6,500,000 earners on our platform, call. Up 30 up over 30% on a year on year basis. And this is a supply led marketplace. As we add more drivers, call. The marketplace gets more liquid, ETAs come down, surge come down, that pushes essentially demand. Speaker 200:06:47Call. So adding more drivers essentially drives the marketplace. Then on top of that base business, we have the new growth initiatives that we've got call that we have. These are businesses that we've really built in the past 5 years essentially from 0. These are available products Taxi, 3 wheelers, 2 wheelers, our Uber for Business product that is actually seeing some strength now, which is great. Speaker 200:07:11Call. Our Uber's ex share and low cost products such as high capacity vehicles and then reserve as well. That collective is now $9,000,000,000 call. And it's growing over 80% on a year on year basis. And then on top of that, you've got international markets with very big GDPs, call. Speaker 200:07:30Where as you know, we just weren't in those markets 5 years ago and we've tuned our business model to be able to penetrate into those markets. These are the Germany, Spain, Argentina that grew more than 150 percent on a year on year basis, Japan, South Korea and Turkey. So really you've got kind of a call. Based business that's driven by supply. On top of that, you have a bunch of new products that are big $9,000,000,000 annual run rate growing over 80%. Speaker 200:08:00And then you've got these international markets, which are big GDP markets that we've got very low penetration to. So that's the business construct. And then the other way that we look at the business is actually from a consumer view. And that's about driving new audience, driving frequency call. And then price as well. Speaker 200:08:18So if you think about audience, all of these new markets, the international markets that we're getting to, call. Many of them are entirely new audiences or when we introduce Taxi into a small village in the UK, that's new audience that comes on to our platform. Call. Then when we think about audience, we think about demographics. So for example, for the high income consumer, we're introducing products like Reserve, call, where you can pay more for higher reliability, and we're seeing that reserve usage is actually incremental. Speaker 200:08:50And then for lower income consumers, we're introducing like UberX share, high capacity vehicles, etcetera. So demographically, we're expanding. Internationally, we're expanding. Call. And then we also look at age. Speaker 200:09:02So like we introduced Uber for teens for younger consumers. Turns out Teens tend to use Uber just as much as adults do, which is great. And we think they'll continue to use it as they grow up. So call. That's the audience kind of construct for us, which is global, income level and age, and we have products call specifically for all three of those. Speaker 200:09:25And then when you get into frequency, only a third of our annual users call. Use us on a monthly basis. So our job is to increase that 1 third. Membership is a very, very big driver there. Call. Speaker 200:09:42As you we got now 15,000,000 Uber One members. Members spent 4 times more than non members. So as we penetrate into the membership frequency, call. Naturally increases all of the use cases that we're introducing like reserve, drive frequency as well. And then what we're also seeing is that users who use more than one product on mobility and delivery tend to spend more on the platform. Speaker 200:10:08They spend up to 3 times more for example in mobility if they take 2 different products as well. That drives frequency as well. Call. And then price this year essentially has been flattish, and that's a good thing. But I think going forward, you can expect our services to Grow price along with inflation as well. Speaker 200:10:27So if you're driving audience, driving frequency and then price is kind of call. We're price takers, so to speak. You get to a pretty good growth construct over the long term. Speaker 400:10:39Thank you. Speaker 600:10:40You're welcome. Call. Next question. Operator00:10:43Our next question comes from Brian Nowak with Morgan Stanley. Please go ahead. Speaker 700:10:49Call. Great. Thanks for taking my questions. I have 2 sort of somewhat higher level Speaker 200:10:53of Dara. First one I Speaker 800:10:54want to ask you is sort of on call. The types of machine learning or data analytics that you've done on the platform so far, give us some examples of where you'd be able to Prove matching, improved conversion on the platform. And where do you still see more opportunities to improve that as you kind of look into 2024? Speaker 300:11:13Then the second one, there's been a lot sort of written in Speaker 800:11:15the press about new potential product extensions, travel, you mentioned B2B, etcetera. As you look at these, which of these new potential products have you most excited that could move the needle over the next couple of years? Thanks. Speaker 200:11:29Yes, absolutely, Brian. So I think on the ML front, it's actually hard to say call. Where ML can improve because it's pretty much in every part of our business. Like we've been developing and using machine learning for call. Many, many years now. Speaker 200:11:47Just a couple of examples might be like earner onboarding, right? You take that for granted, but call. Now what we're using is we're using machine learning technology to like computer vision call to essentially allow the machines to recognize documents more reliably transcribe them accurately call. So that your onboarding experience and the time to onboard could be reduced drastically, errors can be reduced as well. So essentially, machines can read these documents better than humans can. Speaker 200:12:24That's one example. On the productivity front, we're rolling out GitHub Copilot call for software developers. We have already seen because of investments that we've made in our tooling, call. Our average software developer is much more productive now than they were 2 years ago. And we think that GitHub Copilot call. Speaker 200:12:45We'll improve productivity and hopefully we'll also reduce mistakes on the platform as well. So they will we'll have ML algorithms call. Debug developer code before that code kind of is tested etcetera. So we think that call. That can increase the productivity of our business as well. Speaker 200:13:07We're pretty excited about conversational support. So these are call, a large language based tools that essentially help our customer service agents. They will go through customer history. They'll get details about the particular issue that the customer might be calling about or chatting about. Call. Speaker 200:13:29And we'll be giving recommendations on what to do based on our policies all around the world. Humans have to kind of go through all these kinds of policies call. Now machines do, they give humans a recommendation and eventually then machines are going to be talking with our customers on the front line as well. And then on the delivery marketplace and the mobility marketplace, we've been using advanced machine learning algos call. For routing, for matching, for pricing, all of these algos generally improve on a year on year basis call and accrue 100 of 1,000,000 of dollars of either incremental bookings that call it VC neutral or call. Speaker 200:14:13Can improve matching algorithms to reduce, let's say, cost per transaction on the delivery space. So these are just some of the areas where ML is working out. And listen, for us, ML is a powerful technology, period. But because we're the largest player in the world, call. We are gathering more data for more customers across a wider range of behaviors than anybody else. Speaker 200:14:39So we think in a world where ML becomes more important, Uber becomes competitively stronger, so to speak, because of call. The set of data that we have that's really unmatched and unrivaled, including customers who are engaging both in the mobility and the delivery marketplace. So it's pretty powerful. In terms of the other use cases that we're seeing, listen, Uber for Business is something that's very, very promising. Call. Speaker 200:15:05We continue to penetrate into the corporate space. It's great to see companies now call. Get their travelers on the road again and we definitely saw an uptake there. But with Uber for Business, we're also looking at verticals like call. Health and transit as well that are very, very healthy and hold a ton of promise. Speaker 200:15:26For me, travel is something that's very much in my heart because of my old Expedia Days. And we've talked about travel being a very, very strong kind of signal for Uber and travelers typically using Uber because for global footprint. Kind of perspective here in 2022, nearly 700,000,000 trips call. Globally, we're taken by consumer that's out of their primary city, which is pretty amazing. And every quarter, about 20% of our users call. Speaker 200:15:58Took a domestic trip outside of their primary city. So our users, they're high income earners, they tend to travel a lot and that becomes a call. Good kind of segment for us to target. We've done so in the UK where we're quite optimistic about our travel business in the UK. And some of the early signal that we see, for example, in the UK, you can book trains and buses. Speaker 200:16:23Call. 60% of train and coach users and 25% of our flight users are now repeat users on Uber as well. So they try the product call. Because we have big audience, but more importantly, they're coming back to the product, which is great. So we have multiple avenues call. Speaker 200:16:40Growth and travel and business are just one amongst many honestly. Speaker 700:16:46Great. Thanks, Dara. Speaker 600:16:47Next question? Operator00:16:50Call. Our next question comes from Eric Sheridan with Goldman Sachs. Please go ahead. Speaker 900:16:56Thanks so much. And first, thanks to Nelson for all the insights and conversations over the years. Thanks. I'm wishing you best going forward. Maybe, Dara, I think 2 bigger picture ones for you. Speaker 900:17:071 on Uber 1, as it continues to scale globally and the base of subscribers continues to build, What are some of the early learnings that have now translated into scale about how you're thinking about bringing that subscription to market more globally than in the early years and what that call. And then on driver supply, we were in a very different position a year ago where you were using a lot of call. As we come out of that period and things have normalized, how are you thinking about optimizing driver supply for efficiency, Costs, maybe even insurance, so we should be thinking about that, as an initiative going forward. Thanks so much. Speaker 200:17:47Sure, Eric. So as far as Uber One goes and lessons call. Honestly, the UberOne customer behavior has been pretty darn consistent in that UberOne consumer spend call. Four times the amount that non members do on a monthly basis, and retention is more than 15% higher call for members versus non members. That pattern has remained. Speaker 200:18:14There were some question as to, hey, as we Expand the user base, is that 4x going to come down to 3x, for example, but that hasn't happened. The 4x and the 15% retention have continued. The focus now for us with Uber 1, I'd say, is threefold. 1 is keep expanding geographically, and we just introduced Uber 1 into a couple of more markets as well. So now we got 15,000,000 members across 18 countries. Speaker 200:18:44Number 2 is call. Really focused on UberOne retention. And when you look at UberOne benefits, the benefits are call. Typically monetary in nature. So you get discounts on your food, you get delivery for free, you get call. Speaker 200:19:03Cashback on mobility, what we want to do going forward is also provide benefits that are non monetary in nature. Let's say, call. Advanced matching upgrades to different cars or head of the queue matching when you get into an airport call. When there aren't that many cars around, those are more non monetary benefits that we think that our members will very much appreciate. Call. Speaker 200:19:30And the design spec there is to drive member retention. Retention levels are high, but they can always get higher and we always want to make sure that we're not call. Kind of driving just member growth, we also want to drive retention as well. And the 3rd area is really optimizing around our mobility use case. Call. Speaker 200:19:47Delivery already members count for more than 40% of bookings. With Mobility, it's in the mid It's much earlier in terms of penetration and I think we can do a lot more in terms of the member experience for mobility users call. And just continuing to optimize that. Turning to the driver supply question, our supply position is the best That it's been. We've got over 6,500,000 earners. Speaker 200:20:14And I would say those earners are actually earning this quarter 15 $9,000,000,000 which is up 23% on a constant currency basis. So we're really proud of our being 1 of the largest earnings, if not the largest earnings platform in the world in a flexible way. And the fact that earnings are actually going up call faster than gross bookings, which is something that we're proud of. And at the same time, we're driving the bottom line in free cash flow for investors that's super as well. That said, we are optimizing around our earnings cost. Speaker 200:20:51So we don't have to lean into incentives the way that call we did previously. So if you look at our incentive spend for earners, it's down about 41% on a year on year basis. Call. Globally, it's down about 50% in the U. S. Speaker 200:21:06Because with the liquidity of the marketplace, call. Kind of natural earnings levels are high at about $33 per utilized hour across the U. S. It's $50 here in New York City, pre utilized hours. So earning levels are high. Speaker 200:21:22That allows us to take incentives down. But we're also working on other parts of onboarding call. When we run a background check, for example, for a driver and running a background check, if we qualify a driver, if we know that driver Highly, highly interested running a background check. If we don't think we can qualify, let's say that earner delaying the background check that again delays expenses as well. So call. Speaker 200:21:49Across the business of bringing earners on, not just incentives, We're looking to optimize the cost there and so far so good. Speaker 100:21:58Thank you. Speaker 600:21:58Thank you. Next question. Speaker 200:21:59You're welcome. Operator00:22:01Call. Our next question comes from Ron Josey with Citi. Your line is open. Speaker 1000:22:07Great. Thanks for taking the question, Dara. I wanted to ask a little bit more call. The non ex gross bookings now at that $9,000,000,000 run rate, growing 80%. Are any of these new offering talk to us about how these new options creating demand? Speaker 1000:22:19And any product specifically seeing greater demand versus others meaning reserve comfort green over X things along those lines? Thank you. Speaker 200:22:27Yes, absolutely. So these new products are definitely creating demand and they create demand in different ways. So for example, haleables or taxi product, if you look at the number, the percentage of new customers coming in from haleables, call. It's about twice the percentage of gross bookings that Taxi represents. That's because in a bunch of markets call. Speaker 200:22:51Actually, the only way we can penetrate into those markets is through taxi, Japan as an example. We have a very, very call. Small high end peer to peer business, but we're going in partnering with taxis in Japan. Call. We actually just joined a taxi association in Japan as well. Speaker 200:23:12And those taxis essentially are brand new call. Introduce us to a whole new audience in Japan and actually for tourists coming into Japan as well, kind of supports the local economy. So that's an entirely new audience. That's true in many parts of Argentina, in Turkey, call, where these new business models essentially are bringing new audience. The other ones that I would point out to are low cost products. Speaker 200:23:37So if you look at UberX Share, for example. It is taking some trips away from our UberX business. Call. We do see kind of lower income consumers move to UberX share faster. So we think that's providing them relief call based on kind of the economic hardships and all the inflation that we're seeing there. Speaker 200:24:00So we're absolutely seeing a higher penetration of UberX share call for lower income consumers, but it's also introducing us to a new audience as well. Same thing in Moto. These call. 2 wheelers in Latin America and again newer lower income audience that call. Previously couldn't afford Uber, now can afford Uber as well. Speaker 200:24:24So, all of these either drive audience or frequency or both. Call. And obviously, they're strategic in terms of our long term growth formula. Speaker 1100:24:35Great. Thank you, Dara. Speaker 600:24:37You're welcome. Next question? Operator00:24:40Call. Our next question comes from Doug Anmuth with JPMorgan. Please go ahead. Speaker 200:24:47Thanks for taking the questions. Speaker 1200:24:48One for Dara and one for Nelson. Dara, what do you view as some of the primary compounding advantages you're currently achieving just across operational best practices and where do you see the biggest opportunities going forward. And Nelson, you've improved profit significantly call. Over the past year, incremental margins now running at about 9% in 3Q. How are you thinking about key investments in hiring into 2024? Speaker 1200:25:13Thanks. Speaker 200:25:14Call. Absolutely, Doug. So in terms of the compounding advantages, I'll go back to what I was talking about in terms of machine learning, which is becoming call. A much more important part of the business. So we're just we have more data points in terms of opportunities to match call. Speaker 200:25:30Riders to drivers or eaters to restaurants to couriers. And for example, if you take a look at our driver upfront pricing, call. The change that we made. It had a huge benefit for drivers, right? Drivers can see where their destination is call. Speaker 200:25:49And as a result can accept or not accept that trip based on destination and upfront price that they see. It's a very, very powerful driver of the business. But it also is another opportunity for us call to price out that trip. Previously, drivers are paid based on time and distance. Anyone can price based on time and distance. Speaker 200:26:11So the amount of data call. It doesn't help you calculate a certain per mile rate and a certain time rate as well. So there's 0 call. Kind of benefit to scale. Now in a world where drivers know their destination, we can price out that destination. Speaker 200:26:29Call. We have more opportunities to price. We have more drivers than anyone else in the marketplace. So we'll be able to price out that trip call and match it to a particular driver based on a bigger data set than anyone else in the world. That advantage compounds call. Speaker 200:26:47As our machine learning kind of platform learns more about different trips, which ones are accepted, which ones are not accepted, which ones Or canceled as well. So all of our marketplace mechanisms in terms of routing, in terms of matching, in terms of pricing, call. Now we're essentially point estimates that we can train on a larger database than anyone else. If you look at payments, for example, we announced a great new partnership with PayPal. And our ability to we're one of the largest Players out there in terms of bookings, dollars 35,000,000,000 in bookings in a quarter, call. Speaker 200:27:29Growing at a rate that most players our size aren't growing. So on the payment side, for example, we think we can secure lower payment costs than other players. Call. That's going to compound. If you look at parts of our business like detecting fraudulent activity, call. Speaker 200:27:45There are lots of fraudsters out there. They are being armed by machine learning, and we can detect patterns call. Across a greater set of use cases both in mobility and delivery so that we can identify, let's say, the bad call. Folks from the good folks differentiate them and reject the bad folks and have them maybe go try to steal from other platforms. Call. Speaker 200:28:09All of these different parts of the business are compounding in one way or the other. Many of them are powered by machine learning. And again, if you've got the most data in the world, your ML call. All goes typically have an advantage over smaller players. Speaker 1300:28:21So Doug, in terms of our ability to balance growth and profitability, call. As you know, since we went public, Dara and I have been talking about our capital allocation process. We laid out our 3 year targets last year. And if you look at the performance of the company, we've been in line at the top line and overachieved at the bottom every single quarter. And if you look at the guidance, again, it's very, very, very constructive if you think about it. Speaker 1300:28:47You heard Dara talk a lot about where the business is going and some of the growth. Our mobility business, the gross bookings were up 30% in Q3. Call. And that's why we're continuing to invest in Speaker 200:28:56the businesses. So if you think about Speaker 1300:28:58it where we are today on both delivering the bottom line, but investing for the future, We're starting to see some of these new growth initiatives scale. New mobility products are at a $9,000,000,000 gross bookings run rate. New verticals are at a $6,000,000,000 gross bookings run rate. So we're delivering the bottom line. We're delivering free cash flow. Speaker 1300:29:16We've delivered GAAP operating income, as we've talked about over the past 3 years, call. While we're driving a lot of top line growth and so the business is in terrific shape as you think about how we're going into 'twenty four and beyond. And again, we are balancing our capital allocation model. We probably do a little optimize to make sure we deliver on the bottom, call. But we are able to fund certain growth initiatives. Speaker 1300:29:38So we have a lot of confidence in terms of where we are. And as you heard from Dara's commentary on all the growth vectors we have, We're pretty bullish about where the company has had it. Speaker 1400:29:49Thank you, both. Speaker 600:29:51You bet. Next question? Operator00:29:53Call. Our next question comes from Benjamin Black with Deutsche Bank. Please go ahead. Speaker 500:30:00Great. Thanks for taking the question. You obviously scored a nice regulatory win in New York last week, but we still have the DOL, the EU platform directive, Prop 22 in California. So Great if you could give us sort of a lay of the land on the registry funds and do you feel comfortable operating sort of in any employment classification outcome? And then just quickly, there are clearly concerns around the crisis in the Middle East. Speaker 500:30:25We've heard that from other travel companies. Could you sort of help Speaker 200:30:35Sure, absolutely. So in terms of the regulatory framework, the first thing I'd say is we can operate under any regulatory framework. Call. So, we think the right framework is a framework that preserves flexibility, for drivers and couriers, call. While providing them protections, and for example, our settlement with New York AG and DOL call. Speaker 200:31:01Provides for, earners to be able to earn flexibly on the platform with minimum earnings call and other protections as well, insurance protections. That we think is the right framework going forward. It's the same framework call. That voters voted for in Prop 22 in California. And if I look big picture, generally the world is moving towards call. Speaker 200:31:27This model, which is earn flexibly with benefits such as minimum earnings and other benefits out there that call. Saunders:] So, we're very pleased with the progress we're making in the dialogue with all the constituencies to get to The right solution there. There are some markets where drivers or employees are, for example, fleets with which we do business. This is in some of our European businesses, European markets. They are employees of fleets. Speaker 200:32:02We contract with these fleets and these fleets are on our platform call as well and those markets are profitable as well. The price to the end consumer is higher call. And drivers frankly missed the flexibility that they have in markets where independent contractor plus model is the right model going forward. So if I zoom out, the regulatory framework that we see is not about whether or not we're in a market or not, whether or not we do business there or not. It's about whether or not our earners have flexibility to work on our platform the way that they want to work on our platform, when they want to work on our platform, where they want to work on our platform call. Speaker 200:32:40And what the price is to the end consumer. And generally, I would say that across the world, there are absolutely exceptions. Call. Most countries, most states are moving in the direction of flexibility plus benefits and protections. Call. Speaker 200:32:59And then in terms of the Middle East, so the Middle East is about represents about 2% of our overall gross bookings of the business. So it's a relatively small part of our business. Now, certain parts of the Middle East are quite profitable. Call. So it's a very attractive geography to us. Speaker 200:33:18Generally, we are seeing some weakness in a couple of countries in the Middle East. Egypt, for example, is one call is one that I would point out. But we don't operate in Israel. We don't operate in the West Bank. So we're not affected in any way directly. Speaker 200:33:34Call. And any weakness that we see in the Middle East is very, very small compared to the rest of the business. Call. We were a little worried, will companies cut back on travel, will people cut back generally on travel? And actually with our Uber for Business segment, We're seeing travel spend up, whereas some of the companies that we contracted with were saying either no travel or travel when necessary. Speaker 200:34:01Call. Now let's kind of use your judgment, and we're seeing, a bit of acceleration in our Uber for Business, business, which is Speaker 600:34:13call. Quite encouraging going forward. Great. Thanks so much. You're welcome. Operator00:34:17Our next question comes from Ken Gawrowski with Wells Fargo. Please go ahead. Speaker 1500:34:23Thank you so much. Call. And let me reiterate, thanks Nelson for the partnership over the years. Two questions if I may. First, call. Speaker 1500:34:33You talked about just broadening out a little bit on the macro side. I know you just talked about the Middle East specific exposure, but you could talk could Could you talk a little bit more broadly? Some of your travel related peers have seen macro weakness more broadly than the Middle East into October. Why do you think rideshare growth quarter to date hasn't been impacted? And then I guess maybe the bigger picture question there is, How do you think more broadly about the economic sensitivity of the business? Speaker 1500:35:01And then the second question please is, if active driver growth continues to outpace trip growth. How do you think about balancing a potential take rate opportunity versus expanding use cases and growing the addressable market? Speaker 200:35:18Call. Yes. So in general, listen, we've been looking for pockets of consumer call. We read the news. We watch CNBC just like anyone else. Speaker 200:35:33Call. And frankly, we haven't found it. I think part of the reason is that when you look at consumer spend, 1, the U. S. Consumer is incredibly strong. Speaker 200:35:44Call. And 2, I think within the consumer spend bucket, if you look at spend on services versus spend on retail, spend on services is not is still not back to where pre pandemic spend was. Call. So we do think that the tailwind that we've seen in terms of spend on services continues. It could continue going forward. Speaker 200:36:06It's very difficult to predict. Call. And what we have seen with Uber is that Uber is a local type of product. So I do think that consumers during periods call. Because of elevated perceived risk, they sometimes pull back on higher, call it, higher spend product, whether it's Renovating their house or booking a big vacation during uncertain times, they may not, but they still treat themselves call. Speaker 200:36:35To great food, sushi delivered to them or they'll still go out to restaurant, they'll still go see their friends. So I think the local nature of our business makes us relatively resistant to macro uncertainty call. Because it's usually the big, the large price product that got priced out first. Call. In terms of active driver growth, we are active driver growth is absolutely growing faster at this point than trips. Speaker 200:37:07Call. We generally want to keep take rate as low as possible call. Because we think that's the right thing to do long term and kind of is the allows us to compound for a much longer time period. Call. Now incentives are a part of our take away. Speaker 200:37:26And as we said, incentive spend has been down pretty substantial on a year on quarter basis. And so that is a tailwind on our take rate. But otherwise, what we want to do is to call. Maximize long term free cash flow growth, maximize long term earnings per share at the lowest take rate that we call. Can because it drives us to be more efficient as a business going forward. Speaker 200:37:51So we try not to kind of push take rate opportunistically because call. The cycle is going to move the other way and when it moves the other way, it's really going to hurt, if you're not structured with a low cost base. Speaker 100:38:04Call. Thank you. Speaker 600:38:05You're welcome. Next question? Operator00:38:08Our next question comes from Michael Morton with MoffettNathanson. Please go ahead. Speaker 1100:38:15Hi. Thank you for the question. I wanted to talk a little bit about the new growth with opportunities in mobility. In the past, Dara, you've spoken about aspiration for reserve penetration of total airport trips call. And would love to know if you're seeing the product in the market for some time now, how you see this opportunity, how large it could get reserves as a percentage of airport bookings. Speaker 1100:38:39And then looking outside of travel and airport bookings, maybe the impact Speaker 1300:38:45you think reserve could have Speaker 1100:38:47call. On the other aspects of the mobility business. And then just a second question, quick one. On your advertising product, You've really made a lot of progress since rolling this out. And I would love to learn some more about how you believe Your offering meets the needs from large enterprises. Speaker 1100:39:07It seems like there's a lot of demand for the large enterprises, but they're more demanding when it comes to advertising solutions and the product has historically been overweight to kind of SMBs. Call. So any update there would be great as well. Thank you so much. Speaker 200:39:22Yes, absolutely. So in terms of reserve, listen, reserve is call. A very, very promising product, continues to grow at significant rates, but it's still pretty early in terms of reserves development. We typically now account for 1 out of the 4 legs of the call. If you go to the airport, you get picked up and then you come back and you get picked up, etcetera. Speaker 200:39:48We typically only cover one out of those 4 legs. So we think that call. Increased penetration at airport is absolutely a significant opportunity for us and we're very early in that penetration. I do think that reserve as a product, while it's very good at picking you up at your home, dropping off at the airport or picking up at your hotel and getting into the airport call. On your way back, I think we can do a lot more in terms of the experience for call. Speaker 200:40:18The rider who is arriving in the airport, we have you put in your flight information so that the driver knows when you're arriving. Call. We automatically account for delays, etcetera. You can upload the information from your Google Calendar onto our product, So there's a lot that we've done, but there's some hyper optimization to be done in terms of arrivals call. And generally for airport pricing algorithms, whereas we were pricing generally for the market, now we're focused on call. Speaker 200:40:50Really the airport experience and I think the airport experience in terms of finding where the pickup area is, the pricing, the supply that we have in airports call. It's something that it's best to breed, but frankly, I think we can improve on. We are seeing some reserve usage for other types of use cases, going out to dinner, etcetera. And there we think it's about optimizing call. The premium that reserve represents over UberX versus the reliability. Speaker 200:41:22And there is a trade off there. If you want call. 99.9 percent reliability and reserve, the premium over UberX on demand is going to be quite high. Call. And on a market by market basis and kind of on a consumer segment by consumer segment basis, we're trying to optimize what's that trade off between call. Speaker 200:41:41Price and reliability that can maximize our reserve volume. And again, we think there's a lot more optimization to be done there. In terms of advertising for large entities, I think your question is spot on, in that the majority of our ad revenue at this point call is SMBs, etcetera. It's a pretty simple call. Pay for audience and pay for additional business model. Speaker 200:42:09The return on ad sales are excellent. Return on ad sales are call. On average, anywhere from 7x to 10x your spend. So this is a very profitable endeavor for our partners, which is great. Call. Speaker 200:42:24We are building out more sophisticated technology for our larger advertisers that frankly will also offer to our smaller advertisers. They may be, for example, amongst other products, the ability to target new customers and then being able to track those new customers when they become repeat customers. For grocery products, for example, is to integrate their membership and loyalty programs call into Uber Eats so that their loyalty consumers can go direct or they can go through Eats call. And kind of in that way they get to build the relationship with those loyalty members as well. We are working increasingly on building out tool sets that can help larger advertisers call. Speaker 200:43:14Measure the incrementality of the advertising and not just the return on ad sales of that advertising as well. Call. And then we're also helping our larger advertisers with Dayparts. They may for example, we've had certain larger advertisers who really want to promote breakfast call. And want to go over promote breakfast because it's something that they're introducing and we allow kind of daypart targeting as well. Speaker 200:43:42Call. So all of these are relatively newer tools and we think those tools are going to get a higher penetration of the larger advertisers, call. Both in our Uber Eats business, but just as importantly CPG advertisers for our grocery business. And of course, we got the branded business call in our Mobility segment and our Delivery segment as well. So we think we're well on our way to $1,000,000,000 plus, which was our target for our ad business call that we set a few years ago, and we continue to be very, very pleased with our progress. Speaker 200:44:15And there's a lot of potential business. So we're not nearly even midstream in terms of its development. Thank you. Call. All right. Speaker 200:44:27Next question, I think we got one more. Operator00:44:30Our next question comes from Mark Mahaney with Evercore. Please go ahead. Speaker 1400:44:35Call. Okay, thanks. Two questions, please. You talked about this net headcount being down roughly 1% sequentially and looking for ways to call. And then secondly, you talk about in the next earnings call, I think, or next quarter, you're going to provide an update on returning capital to shareholders. Speaker 1400:45:02Could you I know you'll make that announcement then, but what are the options, reasonable range of options that investors should think about with that? Thanks a lot. Speaker 200:45:11Call. So in terms Speaker 1300:45:12of the headcount, yes, Mark, we do believe that we can continue to move forward with flat or very small incremental headcount. And so that's what we are planning as we go forward. As you know, we've pretty held we've held pretty steadfast since 2019 in terms of where the headcount's been. Call. And we continue to get that operating leverage and you're seeing the bottom line. Speaker 1300:45:32And so the team is pushing hard to try to maintain that discipline call. Because again, we continue to try to deliver while we're investing, by the way, in the growth that you heard Dara outlined before, so we certainly can. In terms of capital returns, so as you know, I'm handing the baton over to my able new partner over here who's Kind of stepping in tomorrow as CFO. So it's certainly one of the first priorities that he and Dar are going to walk through. Call. Speaker 1300:46:00He's fortunate because he's getting a business that's in great shape, as you know. As you know, we are now eligible for S and P inclusion. And so it's really a matter from a corporate action perspective of an opportunity. We're well on our way to investment grade as well, so he'll get that benefit as well. And so he also understands the fact that call. Speaker 1300:46:17Capital return is something that's come up from investors. We've been pretty workmanlike in terms of 2 years ago, we talked about getting to EBITDA profitability. Call. Last year, we talked about getting to free cash flow. This year, we talked about getting to GAAP operating income at some point. Speaker 1300:46:34And as you know, call. Especially based on where our projections are, we'll be GAAP operating income for the full year. And so we know next year capital return will be a big question. And I know if you look at his background, he has a lot of experience in terms of doing it. You know the forms, whether it's buybacks or dividends. Speaker 1300:46:50I think that he will look at the full suite And has a lot of experience in his past life doing it. So I'm confident that when he addresses investors in February, which I believe will be the next time, call. That he'll be ready to at least give a perspective on that for investors. Speaker 1400:47:08Thank you, Nelson. Wishing you all the best. Speaker 1300:47:10Call. Thank you very much, Mark. Operator00:47:14This will conclude our question and answer session. I will now turn the call back to Uber's CEO, Dara Khosrowshahi for any closing remarks. Speaker 200:47:23All right. Thank you everyone for joining us in this quarter. Call. Huge thanks to the Uber team who keeps delivering with flatter down headcount, which is pretty amazing. They're working pretty hard. Speaker 200:47:36Thank you to our partners, our restaurant partners, earners without whom we wouldn't be able to deliver any of these services. And then a big thank you again. We said it before, but I'll say it again to Nelson who has been an incredible partner on this journey. I think Nelson was saving the best for last and this is definitely the best. So thank you Nelson for everything you've contributed to the company. Speaker 200:47:59We won't be here without you. Call. So first Speaker 1300:48:01of all, I should say this. So look, I'm really, really proud of the collective work that we've all done over my 5 years. The company is really, really well positioned to continue to grow at call, deliver increasing profitability and free cash flow. My hope is the company continues to maintain the discipline call. That's allowed us to deliver against our commitments. Speaker 1300:48:22And I do want to thank Dara for his partnership and all of Uber because it's really given me an incredible call. And I'm very proud of the work we've done together and to come into a company that's the verb and leave in such good shape, I think is call. But all you can ask for is so again I thank you and I really thank Dara Laffer's partnership because we've been great partners Speaker 200:48:42over the 5 years. All right. Speaker 100:48:43Thank you everyone for your time, Speaker 600:48:44Malcolm. Call. Operator00:48:46This concludes today's conference call. Thank you for your participation. You may now disconnect.Read morePowered by Earnings DocumentsSlide DeckQuarterly report(10-Q) Uber Technologies Earnings HeadlinesJim Cramer Believes “Uber’s going to $200”4 hours ago | finance.yahoo.comDeere and Uber Stock Are Propelling an Industrial Resurgence. What Comes Next.August 1 at 2:16 PM | barrons.com$100 Trillion “AI Metal” Found in American Ghost TownJeff Brown recently traveled to a ghost town in the middle of an American desert… To investigate what could be the biggest technology story of this decade. 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Email Address About Uber TechnologiesUber Technologies (NYSE:UBER) develops and operates proprietary technology applications in the United States, Canada, Latin America, Europe, the Middle East, Africa, and Asia excluding China and Southeast Asia. It operates through three segments: Mobility, Delivery, and Freight. The Mobility segment connects consumers with a range of transportation modalities, such as ridesharing, carsharing, micromobility, rentals, public transit, taxis, and other modalities; and offers riders in a variety of vehicle types, as well as financial partnerships products and advertising services. The Delivery segment allows to search for and discover restaurants to grocery, alcohol, convenience, and other retails; order a meal or other items; and Uber direct, a white-label Delivery-as-a-Service for retailers and restaurants, as well as advertising. The Freight segment manages transportation and logistics network, which connects shippers and carriers in digital marketplace including carriers upfronts, pricing, and shipment booking; and provides on-demand platform to automate logistics end-to-end transactions for small-and medium-sized business to global enterprises. The company was formerly known as Ubercab, Inc. and changed its name to Uber Technologies, Inc. in February 2011. Uber Technologies, Inc. was founded in 2009 and is headquartered in San Francisco, California.View Uber Technologies ProfileRead more More Earnings Resources from MarketBeat Earnings Tools Today's Earnings Tomorrow's Earnings Next Week's Earnings Upcoming Earnings Calls Earnings Newsletter Earnings Call Transcripts Earnings Beats & Misses Corporate Guidance Earnings Screener Earnings By Country U.S. Earnings Reports Canadian Earnings Reports U.K. Earnings Reports Latest Articles Amazon's Earnings: What Comes Next and How to Play ItApple Stock: Big Earnings, Small Move—Time to Buy?Microsoft Blasts Past Earnings—What’s Next for MSFT?Visa Beats Q3 Earnings Expectations, So Why Did the Market Panic?Spotify's Q2 Earnings Plunge: An Opportunity or Ominous Signal?RCL Stock Sinks After Earnings—Is a Buying Opportunity Ahead?Amazon's Pre-Earnings Setup Is Almost Too Clean—Red Flag? 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There are 16 speakers on the call. Operator00:00:00Good morning. My name is Brianna, and I will be your conference operator today. At this time, I'd like to welcome you to Uber's Q3 2023 Earnings Conference Call. Please note that this call is being recorded. All participants are in listen only mode. Operator00:00:16After the speakers' remarks, There will be a question and answer session. Call. Thank you. I will now turn today's call over to Alex Wong, Head of Investor Relations. Please go ahead. Speaker 100:00:38Thank you, operator. Thank you for joining us today and welcome to Uber's Q3 2023 earnings presentation. Call. On the call today, we have Uber's CEO, Dara Khazashahi and CFO, Nelson Chai. During today's call, we will present both GAAP and non GAAP financial measures, call. Speaker 100:00:54Additional disclosures regarding these non GAAP measures, including a reconciliation of GAAP to non GAAP measures are included in the press release, call, supplemental slides and our filings with the SEC, each of which is posted to investor. Uber.com. As a reminder, these numbers are unaudited and may be subject to change. Call. Certain statements in this presentation and on this call are forward looking statements. Speaker 100:01:16You should not place undue reliance on forward looking statements. Call. Actual results may differ materially from these forward looking statements and we do not underwrite any obligation to update any forward looking statements we make today, except as required by law. Call. For more information about factors that may cause actual results to differ materially from forward looking statements, please refer to the press release we issued today call as well as risks and uncertainties described in our most recent Form 10 ks and other filings made with the SEC. Speaker 100:01:42We published our quarterly earnings press release, prepared remarks and supplemental slides to our Investor Relations website earlier today, and we ask you to review those documents if you haven't already. We will open the call to questions following brief opening remarks from Dara. With that, let me hand it over to Dara. Speaker 200:01:58Thanks, Alex. Call. Q3 marks another very strong quarter for Uber. Year on year trip growth accelerated to 25% from 22% in Q2, call. Outpacing gross bookings growth for the Q3 in a row. Speaker 200:02:12Trip growth was powered by strong audience and frequency trends as consumer activity remains robust call heading into our busiest period of the year. Notably, monthly trips per MAPC continue to steadily increase matching our all time high. Call. At the same time, adjusted EBITDA exceeded our Q3 outlook and our adjusted EBITDA margin exceeded 3% for the first time. Call. Speaker 200:02:35Simply put, the growth flywheel we built coupled with rigorous cost discipline is enabling us to generate strong leverage. Call. We're exiting the year with tremendous momentum and reliable execution. Our Q3 results and Q4 outlook demonstrate that Uber continues to drive profitable growth at scale. Call. Speaker 200:02:53We remain focused on scaling GAAP operating income and free cash flow, while also making disciplined investments to properly fund growth initiatives call that will deliver long term sustainable financial value. Finally, I want to recognize Ansak Nelson for his immense contributions to the company and its partnership with me over the past 5 years. Looking ahead, I'm thrilled to welcome Prashanth as our new CFO starting tomorrow, call, and I'm confident that he'll continue to build upon the great foundation that Nelson has built. With that, let's open the call Speaker 300:03:26for questions. Operator00:03:27Call. Thank you. Our first question comes from Ross Sandler with Barclays. Please go ahead. Speaker 400:03:39Hey, Dara. Just a couple of questions on the Mobility business. Could you just flush out a little bit more in detail what the drivers of the acceleration in mobility gross bookings were in the Q3? And as we look out over the next few years, what do you see as the biggest drivers of sustainable mobility gross bookings growth now that we've kind of caught up with call. The pre pandemic trip volume and frequency, what do you see for UberX versus the new areas? Speaker 400:04:08Thanks a lot. Speaker 200:04:10Yes, absolutely Ross. So, in terms of Q3, listen, the quarter was strong across the board call in every single geography, pretty much in every single product. But a couple of geographies to call out are the Asia Pacific regions and the LatAm regions. These areas accelerated pretty substantially on a year on year basis between Q3 and Q2 on big absolute numbers. Call. Speaker 200:04:38And some of those countries were kind of very early and penetrating. So for example, Japan and South Korea, Our penetration rate is minuscule compared to where we are in the rest of the world. And some of the newer products that we're building out, for example, hailable call. Taxi are very large parts of the marketplace again in Japan and Taiwan and Hong Kong and South Korea. Then we got products like Moto which are 2 wheelers that are growing call. Speaker 200:05:11Very, very quickly in Latin America as well, in Brazil and a number of other LatAm markets. So while the growth was pretty broad, I do think that the APAC and LatAm markets in particular were super strong, partially because of some of the newer products that we're rolling out. And then if you look more broadly, like we had a very, very strong summer, augmented by travel. As you know, travel has been Absolutely booming leisure travel and Uber has a very high penetration of call to travel consumer. And then what we're seeing now back to school is also going very, very strong. Speaker 200:05:48So that absolutely call. Added to our Q3 strength and acceleration that frankly surprised us in terms of its strength. In terms Speaker 500:05:59of the mobility business and Speaker 200:06:00kind of the growth construct, how do we think about the mobility business going forward multi year? We tend to look at the business from a business construct and then from a user construct, right. So from a business construct, call. Number one driver for growth and this is of the core UberX business that grew over 20% on a year on year basis call. Is about adding more drivers to the platform. Speaker 200:06:24We added, we're now at 6,500,000 earners on our platform, call. Up 30 up over 30% on a year on year basis. And this is a supply led marketplace. As we add more drivers, call. The marketplace gets more liquid, ETAs come down, surge come down, that pushes essentially demand. Speaker 200:06:47Call. So adding more drivers essentially drives the marketplace. Then on top of that base business, we have the new growth initiatives that we've got call that we have. These are businesses that we've really built in the past 5 years essentially from 0. These are available products Taxi, 3 wheelers, 2 wheelers, our Uber for Business product that is actually seeing some strength now, which is great. Speaker 200:07:11Call. Our Uber's ex share and low cost products such as high capacity vehicles and then reserve as well. That collective is now $9,000,000,000 call. And it's growing over 80% on a year on year basis. And then on top of that, you've got international markets with very big GDPs, call. Speaker 200:07:30Where as you know, we just weren't in those markets 5 years ago and we've tuned our business model to be able to penetrate into those markets. These are the Germany, Spain, Argentina that grew more than 150 percent on a year on year basis, Japan, South Korea and Turkey. So really you've got kind of a call. Based business that's driven by supply. On top of that, you have a bunch of new products that are big $9,000,000,000 annual run rate growing over 80%. Speaker 200:08:00And then you've got these international markets, which are big GDP markets that we've got very low penetration to. So that's the business construct. And then the other way that we look at the business is actually from a consumer view. And that's about driving new audience, driving frequency call. And then price as well. Speaker 200:08:18So if you think about audience, all of these new markets, the international markets that we're getting to, call. Many of them are entirely new audiences or when we introduce Taxi into a small village in the UK, that's new audience that comes on to our platform. Call. Then when we think about audience, we think about demographics. So for example, for the high income consumer, we're introducing products like Reserve, call, where you can pay more for higher reliability, and we're seeing that reserve usage is actually incremental. Speaker 200:08:50And then for lower income consumers, we're introducing like UberX share, high capacity vehicles, etcetera. So demographically, we're expanding. Internationally, we're expanding. Call. And then we also look at age. Speaker 200:09:02So like we introduced Uber for teens for younger consumers. Turns out Teens tend to use Uber just as much as adults do, which is great. And we think they'll continue to use it as they grow up. So call. That's the audience kind of construct for us, which is global, income level and age, and we have products call specifically for all three of those. Speaker 200:09:25And then when you get into frequency, only a third of our annual users call. Use us on a monthly basis. So our job is to increase that 1 third. Membership is a very, very big driver there. Call. Speaker 200:09:42As you we got now 15,000,000 Uber One members. Members spent 4 times more than non members. So as we penetrate into the membership frequency, call. Naturally increases all of the use cases that we're introducing like reserve, drive frequency as well. And then what we're also seeing is that users who use more than one product on mobility and delivery tend to spend more on the platform. Speaker 200:10:08They spend up to 3 times more for example in mobility if they take 2 different products as well. That drives frequency as well. Call. And then price this year essentially has been flattish, and that's a good thing. But I think going forward, you can expect our services to Grow price along with inflation as well. Speaker 200:10:27So if you're driving audience, driving frequency and then price is kind of call. We're price takers, so to speak. You get to a pretty good growth construct over the long term. Speaker 400:10:39Thank you. Speaker 600:10:40You're welcome. Call. Next question. Operator00:10:43Our next question comes from Brian Nowak with Morgan Stanley. Please go ahead. Speaker 700:10:49Call. Great. Thanks for taking my questions. I have 2 sort of somewhat higher level Speaker 200:10:53of Dara. First one I Speaker 800:10:54want to ask you is sort of on call. The types of machine learning or data analytics that you've done on the platform so far, give us some examples of where you'd be able to Prove matching, improved conversion on the platform. And where do you still see more opportunities to improve that as you kind of look into 2024? Speaker 300:11:13Then the second one, there's been a lot sort of written in Speaker 800:11:15the press about new potential product extensions, travel, you mentioned B2B, etcetera. As you look at these, which of these new potential products have you most excited that could move the needle over the next couple of years? Thanks. Speaker 200:11:29Yes, absolutely, Brian. So I think on the ML front, it's actually hard to say call. Where ML can improve because it's pretty much in every part of our business. Like we've been developing and using machine learning for call. Many, many years now. Speaker 200:11:47Just a couple of examples might be like earner onboarding, right? You take that for granted, but call. Now what we're using is we're using machine learning technology to like computer vision call to essentially allow the machines to recognize documents more reliably transcribe them accurately call. So that your onboarding experience and the time to onboard could be reduced drastically, errors can be reduced as well. So essentially, machines can read these documents better than humans can. Speaker 200:12:24That's one example. On the productivity front, we're rolling out GitHub Copilot call for software developers. We have already seen because of investments that we've made in our tooling, call. Our average software developer is much more productive now than they were 2 years ago. And we think that GitHub Copilot call. Speaker 200:12:45We'll improve productivity and hopefully we'll also reduce mistakes on the platform as well. So they will we'll have ML algorithms call. Debug developer code before that code kind of is tested etcetera. So we think that call. That can increase the productivity of our business as well. Speaker 200:13:07We're pretty excited about conversational support. So these are call, a large language based tools that essentially help our customer service agents. They will go through customer history. They'll get details about the particular issue that the customer might be calling about or chatting about. Call. Speaker 200:13:29And we'll be giving recommendations on what to do based on our policies all around the world. Humans have to kind of go through all these kinds of policies call. Now machines do, they give humans a recommendation and eventually then machines are going to be talking with our customers on the front line as well. And then on the delivery marketplace and the mobility marketplace, we've been using advanced machine learning algos call. For routing, for matching, for pricing, all of these algos generally improve on a year on year basis call and accrue 100 of 1,000,000 of dollars of either incremental bookings that call it VC neutral or call. Speaker 200:14:13Can improve matching algorithms to reduce, let's say, cost per transaction on the delivery space. So these are just some of the areas where ML is working out. And listen, for us, ML is a powerful technology, period. But because we're the largest player in the world, call. We are gathering more data for more customers across a wider range of behaviors than anybody else. Speaker 200:14:39So we think in a world where ML becomes more important, Uber becomes competitively stronger, so to speak, because of call. The set of data that we have that's really unmatched and unrivaled, including customers who are engaging both in the mobility and the delivery marketplace. So it's pretty powerful. In terms of the other use cases that we're seeing, listen, Uber for Business is something that's very, very promising. Call. Speaker 200:15:05We continue to penetrate into the corporate space. It's great to see companies now call. Get their travelers on the road again and we definitely saw an uptake there. But with Uber for Business, we're also looking at verticals like call. Health and transit as well that are very, very healthy and hold a ton of promise. Speaker 200:15:26For me, travel is something that's very much in my heart because of my old Expedia Days. And we've talked about travel being a very, very strong kind of signal for Uber and travelers typically using Uber because for global footprint. Kind of perspective here in 2022, nearly 700,000,000 trips call. Globally, we're taken by consumer that's out of their primary city, which is pretty amazing. And every quarter, about 20% of our users call. Speaker 200:15:58Took a domestic trip outside of their primary city. So our users, they're high income earners, they tend to travel a lot and that becomes a call. Good kind of segment for us to target. We've done so in the UK where we're quite optimistic about our travel business in the UK. And some of the early signal that we see, for example, in the UK, you can book trains and buses. Speaker 200:16:23Call. 60% of train and coach users and 25% of our flight users are now repeat users on Uber as well. So they try the product call. Because we have big audience, but more importantly, they're coming back to the product, which is great. So we have multiple avenues call. Speaker 200:16:40Growth and travel and business are just one amongst many honestly. Speaker 700:16:46Great. Thanks, Dara. Speaker 600:16:47Next question? Operator00:16:50Call. Our next question comes from Eric Sheridan with Goldman Sachs. Please go ahead. Speaker 900:16:56Thanks so much. And first, thanks to Nelson for all the insights and conversations over the years. Thanks. I'm wishing you best going forward. Maybe, Dara, I think 2 bigger picture ones for you. Speaker 900:17:071 on Uber 1, as it continues to scale globally and the base of subscribers continues to build, What are some of the early learnings that have now translated into scale about how you're thinking about bringing that subscription to market more globally than in the early years and what that call. And then on driver supply, we were in a very different position a year ago where you were using a lot of call. As we come out of that period and things have normalized, how are you thinking about optimizing driver supply for efficiency, Costs, maybe even insurance, so we should be thinking about that, as an initiative going forward. Thanks so much. Speaker 200:17:47Sure, Eric. So as far as Uber One goes and lessons call. Honestly, the UberOne customer behavior has been pretty darn consistent in that UberOne consumer spend call. Four times the amount that non members do on a monthly basis, and retention is more than 15% higher call for members versus non members. That pattern has remained. Speaker 200:18:14There were some question as to, hey, as we Expand the user base, is that 4x going to come down to 3x, for example, but that hasn't happened. The 4x and the 15% retention have continued. The focus now for us with Uber 1, I'd say, is threefold. 1 is keep expanding geographically, and we just introduced Uber 1 into a couple of more markets as well. So now we got 15,000,000 members across 18 countries. Speaker 200:18:44Number 2 is call. Really focused on UberOne retention. And when you look at UberOne benefits, the benefits are call. Typically monetary in nature. So you get discounts on your food, you get delivery for free, you get call. Speaker 200:19:03Cashback on mobility, what we want to do going forward is also provide benefits that are non monetary in nature. Let's say, call. Advanced matching upgrades to different cars or head of the queue matching when you get into an airport call. When there aren't that many cars around, those are more non monetary benefits that we think that our members will very much appreciate. Call. Speaker 200:19:30And the design spec there is to drive member retention. Retention levels are high, but they can always get higher and we always want to make sure that we're not call. Kind of driving just member growth, we also want to drive retention as well. And the 3rd area is really optimizing around our mobility use case. Call. Speaker 200:19:47Delivery already members count for more than 40% of bookings. With Mobility, it's in the mid It's much earlier in terms of penetration and I think we can do a lot more in terms of the member experience for mobility users call. And just continuing to optimize that. Turning to the driver supply question, our supply position is the best That it's been. We've got over 6,500,000 earners. Speaker 200:20:14And I would say those earners are actually earning this quarter 15 $9,000,000,000 which is up 23% on a constant currency basis. So we're really proud of our being 1 of the largest earnings, if not the largest earnings platform in the world in a flexible way. And the fact that earnings are actually going up call faster than gross bookings, which is something that we're proud of. And at the same time, we're driving the bottom line in free cash flow for investors that's super as well. That said, we are optimizing around our earnings cost. Speaker 200:20:51So we don't have to lean into incentives the way that call we did previously. So if you look at our incentive spend for earners, it's down about 41% on a year on year basis. Call. Globally, it's down about 50% in the U. S. Speaker 200:21:06Because with the liquidity of the marketplace, call. Kind of natural earnings levels are high at about $33 per utilized hour across the U. S. It's $50 here in New York City, pre utilized hours. So earning levels are high. Speaker 200:21:22That allows us to take incentives down. But we're also working on other parts of onboarding call. When we run a background check, for example, for a driver and running a background check, if we qualify a driver, if we know that driver Highly, highly interested running a background check. If we don't think we can qualify, let's say that earner delaying the background check that again delays expenses as well. So call. Speaker 200:21:49Across the business of bringing earners on, not just incentives, We're looking to optimize the cost there and so far so good. Speaker 100:21:58Thank you. Speaker 600:21:58Thank you. Next question. Speaker 200:21:59You're welcome. Operator00:22:01Call. Our next question comes from Ron Josey with Citi. Your line is open. Speaker 1000:22:07Great. Thanks for taking the question, Dara. I wanted to ask a little bit more call. The non ex gross bookings now at that $9,000,000,000 run rate, growing 80%. Are any of these new offering talk to us about how these new options creating demand? Speaker 1000:22:19And any product specifically seeing greater demand versus others meaning reserve comfort green over X things along those lines? Thank you. Speaker 200:22:27Yes, absolutely. So these new products are definitely creating demand and they create demand in different ways. So for example, haleables or taxi product, if you look at the number, the percentage of new customers coming in from haleables, call. It's about twice the percentage of gross bookings that Taxi represents. That's because in a bunch of markets call. Speaker 200:22:51Actually, the only way we can penetrate into those markets is through taxi, Japan as an example. We have a very, very call. Small high end peer to peer business, but we're going in partnering with taxis in Japan. Call. We actually just joined a taxi association in Japan as well. Speaker 200:23:12And those taxis essentially are brand new call. Introduce us to a whole new audience in Japan and actually for tourists coming into Japan as well, kind of supports the local economy. So that's an entirely new audience. That's true in many parts of Argentina, in Turkey, call, where these new business models essentially are bringing new audience. The other ones that I would point out to are low cost products. Speaker 200:23:37So if you look at UberX Share, for example. It is taking some trips away from our UberX business. Call. We do see kind of lower income consumers move to UberX share faster. So we think that's providing them relief call based on kind of the economic hardships and all the inflation that we're seeing there. Speaker 200:24:00So we're absolutely seeing a higher penetration of UberX share call for lower income consumers, but it's also introducing us to a new audience as well. Same thing in Moto. These call. 2 wheelers in Latin America and again newer lower income audience that call. Previously couldn't afford Uber, now can afford Uber as well. Speaker 200:24:24So, all of these either drive audience or frequency or both. Call. And obviously, they're strategic in terms of our long term growth formula. Speaker 1100:24:35Great. Thank you, Dara. Speaker 600:24:37You're welcome. Next question? Operator00:24:40Call. Our next question comes from Doug Anmuth with JPMorgan. Please go ahead. Speaker 200:24:47Thanks for taking the questions. Speaker 1200:24:48One for Dara and one for Nelson. Dara, what do you view as some of the primary compounding advantages you're currently achieving just across operational best practices and where do you see the biggest opportunities going forward. And Nelson, you've improved profit significantly call. Over the past year, incremental margins now running at about 9% in 3Q. How are you thinking about key investments in hiring into 2024? Speaker 1200:25:13Thanks. Speaker 200:25:14Call. Absolutely, Doug. So in terms of the compounding advantages, I'll go back to what I was talking about in terms of machine learning, which is becoming call. A much more important part of the business. So we're just we have more data points in terms of opportunities to match call. Speaker 200:25:30Riders to drivers or eaters to restaurants to couriers. And for example, if you take a look at our driver upfront pricing, call. The change that we made. It had a huge benefit for drivers, right? Drivers can see where their destination is call. Speaker 200:25:49And as a result can accept or not accept that trip based on destination and upfront price that they see. It's a very, very powerful driver of the business. But it also is another opportunity for us call to price out that trip. Previously, drivers are paid based on time and distance. Anyone can price based on time and distance. Speaker 200:26:11So the amount of data call. It doesn't help you calculate a certain per mile rate and a certain time rate as well. So there's 0 call. Kind of benefit to scale. Now in a world where drivers know their destination, we can price out that destination. Speaker 200:26:29Call. We have more opportunities to price. We have more drivers than anyone else in the marketplace. So we'll be able to price out that trip call and match it to a particular driver based on a bigger data set than anyone else in the world. That advantage compounds call. Speaker 200:26:47As our machine learning kind of platform learns more about different trips, which ones are accepted, which ones are not accepted, which ones Or canceled as well. So all of our marketplace mechanisms in terms of routing, in terms of matching, in terms of pricing, call. Now we're essentially point estimates that we can train on a larger database than anyone else. If you look at payments, for example, we announced a great new partnership with PayPal. And our ability to we're one of the largest Players out there in terms of bookings, dollars 35,000,000,000 in bookings in a quarter, call. Speaker 200:27:29Growing at a rate that most players our size aren't growing. So on the payment side, for example, we think we can secure lower payment costs than other players. Call. That's going to compound. If you look at parts of our business like detecting fraudulent activity, call. Speaker 200:27:45There are lots of fraudsters out there. They are being armed by machine learning, and we can detect patterns call. Across a greater set of use cases both in mobility and delivery so that we can identify, let's say, the bad call. Folks from the good folks differentiate them and reject the bad folks and have them maybe go try to steal from other platforms. Call. Speaker 200:28:09All of these different parts of the business are compounding in one way or the other. Many of them are powered by machine learning. And again, if you've got the most data in the world, your ML call. All goes typically have an advantage over smaller players. Speaker 1300:28:21So Doug, in terms of our ability to balance growth and profitability, call. As you know, since we went public, Dara and I have been talking about our capital allocation process. We laid out our 3 year targets last year. And if you look at the performance of the company, we've been in line at the top line and overachieved at the bottom every single quarter. And if you look at the guidance, again, it's very, very, very constructive if you think about it. Speaker 1300:28:47You heard Dara talk a lot about where the business is going and some of the growth. Our mobility business, the gross bookings were up 30% in Q3. Call. And that's why we're continuing to invest in Speaker 200:28:56the businesses. So if you think about Speaker 1300:28:58it where we are today on both delivering the bottom line, but investing for the future, We're starting to see some of these new growth initiatives scale. New mobility products are at a $9,000,000,000 gross bookings run rate. New verticals are at a $6,000,000,000 gross bookings run rate. So we're delivering the bottom line. We're delivering free cash flow. Speaker 1300:29:16We've delivered GAAP operating income, as we've talked about over the past 3 years, call. While we're driving a lot of top line growth and so the business is in terrific shape as you think about how we're going into 'twenty four and beyond. And again, we are balancing our capital allocation model. We probably do a little optimize to make sure we deliver on the bottom, call. But we are able to fund certain growth initiatives. Speaker 1300:29:38So we have a lot of confidence in terms of where we are. And as you heard from Dara's commentary on all the growth vectors we have, We're pretty bullish about where the company has had it. Speaker 1400:29:49Thank you, both. Speaker 600:29:51You bet. Next question? Operator00:29:53Call. Our next question comes from Benjamin Black with Deutsche Bank. Please go ahead. Speaker 500:30:00Great. Thanks for taking the question. You obviously scored a nice regulatory win in New York last week, but we still have the DOL, the EU platform directive, Prop 22 in California. So Great if you could give us sort of a lay of the land on the registry funds and do you feel comfortable operating sort of in any employment classification outcome? And then just quickly, there are clearly concerns around the crisis in the Middle East. Speaker 500:30:25We've heard that from other travel companies. Could you sort of help Speaker 200:30:35Sure, absolutely. So in terms of the regulatory framework, the first thing I'd say is we can operate under any regulatory framework. Call. So, we think the right framework is a framework that preserves flexibility, for drivers and couriers, call. While providing them protections, and for example, our settlement with New York AG and DOL call. Speaker 200:31:01Provides for, earners to be able to earn flexibly on the platform with minimum earnings call and other protections as well, insurance protections. That we think is the right framework going forward. It's the same framework call. That voters voted for in Prop 22 in California. And if I look big picture, generally the world is moving towards call. Speaker 200:31:27This model, which is earn flexibly with benefits such as minimum earnings and other benefits out there that call. Saunders:] So, we're very pleased with the progress we're making in the dialogue with all the constituencies to get to The right solution there. There are some markets where drivers or employees are, for example, fleets with which we do business. This is in some of our European businesses, European markets. They are employees of fleets. Speaker 200:32:02We contract with these fleets and these fleets are on our platform call as well and those markets are profitable as well. The price to the end consumer is higher call. And drivers frankly missed the flexibility that they have in markets where independent contractor plus model is the right model going forward. So if I zoom out, the regulatory framework that we see is not about whether or not we're in a market or not, whether or not we do business there or not. It's about whether or not our earners have flexibility to work on our platform the way that they want to work on our platform, when they want to work on our platform, where they want to work on our platform call. Speaker 200:32:40And what the price is to the end consumer. And generally, I would say that across the world, there are absolutely exceptions. Call. Most countries, most states are moving in the direction of flexibility plus benefits and protections. Call. Speaker 200:32:59And then in terms of the Middle East, so the Middle East is about represents about 2% of our overall gross bookings of the business. So it's a relatively small part of our business. Now, certain parts of the Middle East are quite profitable. Call. So it's a very attractive geography to us. Speaker 200:33:18Generally, we are seeing some weakness in a couple of countries in the Middle East. Egypt, for example, is one call is one that I would point out. But we don't operate in Israel. We don't operate in the West Bank. So we're not affected in any way directly. Speaker 200:33:34Call. And any weakness that we see in the Middle East is very, very small compared to the rest of the business. Call. We were a little worried, will companies cut back on travel, will people cut back generally on travel? And actually with our Uber for Business segment, We're seeing travel spend up, whereas some of the companies that we contracted with were saying either no travel or travel when necessary. Speaker 200:34:01Call. Now let's kind of use your judgment, and we're seeing, a bit of acceleration in our Uber for Business, business, which is Speaker 600:34:13call. Quite encouraging going forward. Great. Thanks so much. You're welcome. Operator00:34:17Our next question comes from Ken Gawrowski with Wells Fargo. Please go ahead. Speaker 1500:34:23Thank you so much. Call. And let me reiterate, thanks Nelson for the partnership over the years. Two questions if I may. First, call. Speaker 1500:34:33You talked about just broadening out a little bit on the macro side. I know you just talked about the Middle East specific exposure, but you could talk could Could you talk a little bit more broadly? Some of your travel related peers have seen macro weakness more broadly than the Middle East into October. Why do you think rideshare growth quarter to date hasn't been impacted? And then I guess maybe the bigger picture question there is, How do you think more broadly about the economic sensitivity of the business? Speaker 1500:35:01And then the second question please is, if active driver growth continues to outpace trip growth. How do you think about balancing a potential take rate opportunity versus expanding use cases and growing the addressable market? Speaker 200:35:18Call. Yes. So in general, listen, we've been looking for pockets of consumer call. We read the news. We watch CNBC just like anyone else. Speaker 200:35:33Call. And frankly, we haven't found it. I think part of the reason is that when you look at consumer spend, 1, the U. S. Consumer is incredibly strong. Speaker 200:35:44Call. And 2, I think within the consumer spend bucket, if you look at spend on services versus spend on retail, spend on services is not is still not back to where pre pandemic spend was. Call. So we do think that the tailwind that we've seen in terms of spend on services continues. It could continue going forward. Speaker 200:36:06It's very difficult to predict. Call. And what we have seen with Uber is that Uber is a local type of product. So I do think that consumers during periods call. Because of elevated perceived risk, they sometimes pull back on higher, call it, higher spend product, whether it's Renovating their house or booking a big vacation during uncertain times, they may not, but they still treat themselves call. Speaker 200:36:35To great food, sushi delivered to them or they'll still go out to restaurant, they'll still go see their friends. So I think the local nature of our business makes us relatively resistant to macro uncertainty call. Because it's usually the big, the large price product that got priced out first. Call. In terms of active driver growth, we are active driver growth is absolutely growing faster at this point than trips. Speaker 200:37:07Call. We generally want to keep take rate as low as possible call. Because we think that's the right thing to do long term and kind of is the allows us to compound for a much longer time period. Call. Now incentives are a part of our take away. Speaker 200:37:26And as we said, incentive spend has been down pretty substantial on a year on quarter basis. And so that is a tailwind on our take rate. But otherwise, what we want to do is to call. Maximize long term free cash flow growth, maximize long term earnings per share at the lowest take rate that we call. Can because it drives us to be more efficient as a business going forward. Speaker 200:37:51So we try not to kind of push take rate opportunistically because call. The cycle is going to move the other way and when it moves the other way, it's really going to hurt, if you're not structured with a low cost base. Speaker 100:38:04Call. Thank you. Speaker 600:38:05You're welcome. Next question? Operator00:38:08Our next question comes from Michael Morton with MoffettNathanson. Please go ahead. Speaker 1100:38:15Hi. Thank you for the question. I wanted to talk a little bit about the new growth with opportunities in mobility. In the past, Dara, you've spoken about aspiration for reserve penetration of total airport trips call. And would love to know if you're seeing the product in the market for some time now, how you see this opportunity, how large it could get reserves as a percentage of airport bookings. Speaker 1100:38:39And then looking outside of travel and airport bookings, maybe the impact Speaker 1300:38:45you think reserve could have Speaker 1100:38:47call. On the other aspects of the mobility business. And then just a second question, quick one. On your advertising product, You've really made a lot of progress since rolling this out. And I would love to learn some more about how you believe Your offering meets the needs from large enterprises. Speaker 1100:39:07It seems like there's a lot of demand for the large enterprises, but they're more demanding when it comes to advertising solutions and the product has historically been overweight to kind of SMBs. Call. So any update there would be great as well. Thank you so much. Speaker 200:39:22Yes, absolutely. So in terms of reserve, listen, reserve is call. A very, very promising product, continues to grow at significant rates, but it's still pretty early in terms of reserves development. We typically now account for 1 out of the 4 legs of the call. If you go to the airport, you get picked up and then you come back and you get picked up, etcetera. Speaker 200:39:48We typically only cover one out of those 4 legs. So we think that call. Increased penetration at airport is absolutely a significant opportunity for us and we're very early in that penetration. I do think that reserve as a product, while it's very good at picking you up at your home, dropping off at the airport or picking up at your hotel and getting into the airport call. On your way back, I think we can do a lot more in terms of the experience for call. Speaker 200:40:18The rider who is arriving in the airport, we have you put in your flight information so that the driver knows when you're arriving. Call. We automatically account for delays, etcetera. You can upload the information from your Google Calendar onto our product, So there's a lot that we've done, but there's some hyper optimization to be done in terms of arrivals call. And generally for airport pricing algorithms, whereas we were pricing generally for the market, now we're focused on call. Speaker 200:40:50Really the airport experience and I think the airport experience in terms of finding where the pickup area is, the pricing, the supply that we have in airports call. It's something that it's best to breed, but frankly, I think we can improve on. We are seeing some reserve usage for other types of use cases, going out to dinner, etcetera. And there we think it's about optimizing call. The premium that reserve represents over UberX versus the reliability. Speaker 200:41:22And there is a trade off there. If you want call. 99.9 percent reliability and reserve, the premium over UberX on demand is going to be quite high. Call. And on a market by market basis and kind of on a consumer segment by consumer segment basis, we're trying to optimize what's that trade off between call. Speaker 200:41:41Price and reliability that can maximize our reserve volume. And again, we think there's a lot more optimization to be done there. In terms of advertising for large entities, I think your question is spot on, in that the majority of our ad revenue at this point call is SMBs, etcetera. It's a pretty simple call. Pay for audience and pay for additional business model. Speaker 200:42:09The return on ad sales are excellent. Return on ad sales are call. On average, anywhere from 7x to 10x your spend. So this is a very profitable endeavor for our partners, which is great. Call. Speaker 200:42:24We are building out more sophisticated technology for our larger advertisers that frankly will also offer to our smaller advertisers. They may be, for example, amongst other products, the ability to target new customers and then being able to track those new customers when they become repeat customers. For grocery products, for example, is to integrate their membership and loyalty programs call into Uber Eats so that their loyalty consumers can go direct or they can go through Eats call. And kind of in that way they get to build the relationship with those loyalty members as well. We are working increasingly on building out tool sets that can help larger advertisers call. Speaker 200:43:14Measure the incrementality of the advertising and not just the return on ad sales of that advertising as well. Call. And then we're also helping our larger advertisers with Dayparts. They may for example, we've had certain larger advertisers who really want to promote breakfast call. And want to go over promote breakfast because it's something that they're introducing and we allow kind of daypart targeting as well. Speaker 200:43:42Call. So all of these are relatively newer tools and we think those tools are going to get a higher penetration of the larger advertisers, call. Both in our Uber Eats business, but just as importantly CPG advertisers for our grocery business. And of course, we got the branded business call in our Mobility segment and our Delivery segment as well. So we think we're well on our way to $1,000,000,000 plus, which was our target for our ad business call that we set a few years ago, and we continue to be very, very pleased with our progress. Speaker 200:44:15And there's a lot of potential business. So we're not nearly even midstream in terms of its development. Thank you. Call. All right. Speaker 200:44:27Next question, I think we got one more. Operator00:44:30Our next question comes from Mark Mahaney with Evercore. Please go ahead. Speaker 1400:44:35Call. Okay, thanks. Two questions, please. You talked about this net headcount being down roughly 1% sequentially and looking for ways to call. And then secondly, you talk about in the next earnings call, I think, or next quarter, you're going to provide an update on returning capital to shareholders. Speaker 1400:45:02Could you I know you'll make that announcement then, but what are the options, reasonable range of options that investors should think about with that? Thanks a lot. Speaker 200:45:11Call. So in terms Speaker 1300:45:12of the headcount, yes, Mark, we do believe that we can continue to move forward with flat or very small incremental headcount. And so that's what we are planning as we go forward. As you know, we've pretty held we've held pretty steadfast since 2019 in terms of where the headcount's been. Call. And we continue to get that operating leverage and you're seeing the bottom line. Speaker 1300:45:32And so the team is pushing hard to try to maintain that discipline call. Because again, we continue to try to deliver while we're investing, by the way, in the growth that you heard Dara outlined before, so we certainly can. In terms of capital returns, so as you know, I'm handing the baton over to my able new partner over here who's Kind of stepping in tomorrow as CFO. So it's certainly one of the first priorities that he and Dar are going to walk through. Call. Speaker 1300:46:00He's fortunate because he's getting a business that's in great shape, as you know. As you know, we are now eligible for S and P inclusion. And so it's really a matter from a corporate action perspective of an opportunity. We're well on our way to investment grade as well, so he'll get that benefit as well. And so he also understands the fact that call. Speaker 1300:46:17Capital return is something that's come up from investors. We've been pretty workmanlike in terms of 2 years ago, we talked about getting to EBITDA profitability. Call. Last year, we talked about getting to free cash flow. This year, we talked about getting to GAAP operating income at some point. Speaker 1300:46:34And as you know, call. Especially based on where our projections are, we'll be GAAP operating income for the full year. And so we know next year capital return will be a big question. And I know if you look at his background, he has a lot of experience in terms of doing it. You know the forms, whether it's buybacks or dividends. Speaker 1300:46:50I think that he will look at the full suite And has a lot of experience in his past life doing it. So I'm confident that when he addresses investors in February, which I believe will be the next time, call. That he'll be ready to at least give a perspective on that for investors. Speaker 1400:47:08Thank you, Nelson. Wishing you all the best. Speaker 1300:47:10Call. Thank you very much, Mark. Operator00:47:14This will conclude our question and answer session. I will now turn the call back to Uber's CEO, Dara Khosrowshahi for any closing remarks. Speaker 200:47:23All right. Thank you everyone for joining us in this quarter. Call. Huge thanks to the Uber team who keeps delivering with flatter down headcount, which is pretty amazing. They're working pretty hard. Speaker 200:47:36Thank you to our partners, our restaurant partners, earners without whom we wouldn't be able to deliver any of these services. And then a big thank you again. We said it before, but I'll say it again to Nelson who has been an incredible partner on this journey. I think Nelson was saving the best for last and this is definitely the best. So thank you Nelson for everything you've contributed to the company. Speaker 200:47:59We won't be here without you. Call. So first Speaker 1300:48:01of all, I should say this. So look, I'm really, really proud of the collective work that we've all done over my 5 years. The company is really, really well positioned to continue to grow at call, deliver increasing profitability and free cash flow. My hope is the company continues to maintain the discipline call. That's allowed us to deliver against our commitments. Speaker 1300:48:22And I do want to thank Dara for his partnership and all of Uber because it's really given me an incredible call. And I'm very proud of the work we've done together and to come into a company that's the verb and leave in such good shape, I think is call. But all you can ask for is so again I thank you and I really thank Dara Laffer's partnership because we've been great partners Speaker 200:48:42over the 5 years. All right. Speaker 100:48:43Thank you everyone for your time, Speaker 600:48:44Malcolm. Call. Operator00:48:46This concludes today's conference call. Thank you for your participation. You may now disconnect.Read morePowered by