If you think about what its sales are, it should be trading a lot lower than 1. Most of what it is doing is matching a buyer to a seller, and taking some amount of that transaction in exchange for facilitating the transaction (I think ~30-40%). Today, it counts the entire price of a ride as revenue, and the entire cost of that sale as an expense.
In comparison, if you use Uber's ideas of what is revenue and what is an expense, Ebay (another transaction facilitator) had a P/S ratio of 0.34 in 2019 with a fee of ~10%. Ebay does not count revenue the same way Uber does - they only count their fees as revenue.
Another transaction facilitator, Costco (yes, I am comparing Uber to a retail chain - it makes the same fundamental trade), has a P/S ratio of 0.89. Walmart is 0.61. Nobody who retails something from a wholesaler has a P/S ratio greater than 1. Uber is an online retailer of taxi services.
Most two-sided platforms treat their fee as their earnings, and thus can claim a very healthy margin. Uber doesn't.
In comparison, if you use Uber's ideas of what is revenue and what is an expense, Ebay (another transaction facilitator) had a P/S ratio of 0.34 in 2019 with a fee of ~10%. Ebay does not count revenue the same way Uber does - they only count their fees as revenue.
Another transaction facilitator, Costco (yes, I am comparing Uber to a retail chain - it makes the same fundamental trade), has a P/S ratio of 0.89. Walmart is 0.61. Nobody who retails something from a wholesaler has a P/S ratio greater than 1. Uber is an online retailer of taxi services.
Most two-sided platforms treat their fee as their earnings, and thus can claim a very healthy margin. Uber doesn't.