After a long and bumpy road, Uber is officially a public company.
The company started publicly trading on the New York Stock Exchange on Friday morning. Notably absent at the bell-ringing ceremony was the company's controversial co-founder and ousted CEO, Travis Kalanick, who wasn't invited.
It looks like current CEO Dara Khosrowshahi doesn't want to relive Uber's early days, when it earned a nasty reputation for its cut-throat, sexist, and harassment-riddledcorporate culture. Now, Khosrowshahi is pushing a "do the right thing" mentality, as he looks beyond ride-hailing toward food delivery, bike- and scooter-sharing, and even flying taxis.
While Kalanick wasn't on the balcony, he did get to savor the event on the NYSE floor with his father, where we was, according to Mike Isaac of the New York Times, greeted with applause. However, it looks like Kalanick left the building before the first Uber trade.
Tweet may have been deleted
Tweet may have been deletedSEE ALSO: Uber could be worth $90 billion. Most drivers won't see much of it.
Uber shares opened Friday at $42, lower than the IPO price of $45. Kalanick owns 117 million shares of Uber stock, while Khosrowshahi holds just under 200,000.
Kalanick has moved on with his own investment fund, 10100 Fund. But he's still clearly connected to Uber (he testified just over a year ago during the Uber v. Waymo trade secrets trial).
Smaller rival Lyft went public in March, beating Uber to the punch, although it only operates in the U.S. and Canada. Uber is available in more than 65 countries. Both are unprofitable. Lyft lost nearly $1 billion in 2018, while Uber lost $1.8 billion.
Copyright © 2023 Powered by
Uber just went public, and former CEO Travis Kalanick didn't get to ring the opening bell-鼓盆之戚网
sitemap
文章
896
浏览
46
获赞
9834
China plans to ban Bitcoin mining, report claims
China plans to put an end to cryptocurrency mining in the country, Reuters reported Tuesday citing aHow to reset your Instagram password
Forgot your Instagram password?That's a shame. You didn't want to get back into your account, did yo'What are we doing?' Chris Murphy asks fellow lawmakers in wake of school shooting
The congressman who once served as the representative for the town of Sandy Hook gave a rousing viraTrump won't be fact
On Tuesday night, former president Donald Trump held a rally which officially ended all the speculatFacebook launches 'Facebook Shops' for more in
Facebook just made it way easier to spend your money on Instagram. On Tuesday, Facebook, which ownsChat messages that set off conspiracies about Buffalo and Uvalde shootings confirmed to be fake
If you've viewed viral screenshots depicting private chats from an anonymous online persona going byStarlink to throttle users who use too much data
Elon Musk’s satellite internet company is about to start slowing some users down.According toThe bitter, banal, and bizarre YouTube circus of Depp v. Heard
Depp v. Heard is the first celebrity trial of the streaming age, where content is king. Its livestreGood news everyone, Logan Paul doesn't actually think the Earth is flat
Logan Paul is many things, but thankfully he is not a flat Earther. In a 50-minute, 2-second mockumeFacebook profited of an anti
In case we needed another reason to distrust Facebookand its parent company Meta— and the overAmazon will reportedly lay off 10,000 employees
The big tech layoffs are continuing apace, and it seems nobody is safe. Following this month's massiAll the saucy new emoji in iOS 15.4 to spice up your sexts
We finally have our chance to click click click the new batch of emoji that dropped with iOS 15.4, aACLU warns that 'no replies' on Twitter could violate the constitution
Trump was basically Obama's reply guy throughout the 2010s, so it's only fitting that he won't be abThe 10 best and funniest tweets of the week, including Elon Musk and the airport security line
Bye, bye, April, I hardly knew ya. Can you believe it? We're just about through this month, barrelinFinding calm with TikTok's singing bowl meditations
March Mindfulnessis a Mashable series that explores the intersection of meditation practice and tech