Uber continues to demonstrate strong business growth: ride volumes, food delivery orders, and revenue are all increasing, while the company’s strategic push into autonomous transportation looks highly ambitious.
However, the market reaction was muted – Uber shares fell after the company released quarterly profit guidance that came in below analysts’ expectations.
Uber Technologies Inc. reported its financial results for the fourth quarter of 2025.

Adjusted earnings per share (EPS) for the first quarter are projected in the range of $0.65-0.72, compared with Bloomberg’s consensus estimate of $0.77. Adjusted EBITDA is expected to reach $2.37-2.47 billion, also below the market average forecast.
Despite the weaker outlook, Uber is making major strides in its long-term strategy. CEO Dara Khosrowshahi emphasized that autonomous vehicles (AV) represent a multi-trillion-dollar opportunity for the company, while expansion into new cities – including Houston, Hong Kong, Madrid, and Zurich – lays the groundwork for future monetization.
Uber plans to offer robotaxi services in more than ten markets by the end of 2026 and is actively partnering with technology leaders: Lucid to develop a robotaxi fleet using Nuro’s autonomous systems, and Joby Aviation and Blade to integrate helicopter services and, eventually, electric vertical takeoff and landing aircraft (eVTOL) into its platform.
The company’s financial leadership is also undergoing changes. Balaji Krishnamurthy has been appointed as the new Chief Financial Officer, replacing Prashanth Mahendra-Rajah. The new leadership promises a more disciplined investment approach – less speculation and a stronger focus on sustainable profitability.

Uber shares dropped as much as 9% in premarket trading before partially recovering following Khosrowshahi’s comments. This highlights that, in the short term, investors remain focused on profit guidance rather than the company’s long-term strategic potential. For long-term investors who believe in the future of autonomous mobility, Uber remains an attractive company with a powerful platform and ambitious plans to integrate next-generation transportation solutions.
Key takeaway: current stock volatility reflects near-term earnings expectations, but Uber’s long-term potential in autonomous transportation and platform expansion remains substantial.
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