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Uber Eats doesn’t plan on eating its competition — for now

Its competitors are consolidating, but Uber Eats says acquisitions aren’t in its near future.

Recode’s Kara Swisher and Jason Del Rey interview Jason Droege, vice president of Uber Everything, onstage at Code Commerce in New York.
Recode’s Kara Swisher and Jason Del Rey interview Jason Droege, vice president of Uber Everything, onstage at Code Commerce in New York.
Unlike other food delivery companies, Uber Eats doesn’t have any plans to gobble up the competition.
Keith MacDonald for Vox Media
Rani Molla
Rani Molla was a senior correspondent at Vox and has been focusing her reporting on the future of work. She has covered business and technology for more than a decade — often in charts — including at Bloomberg and the Wall Street Journal.

Food delivery companies might be buying each other up right and left, but that’s not on the menu for Uber Eats.

“It’s not my strategy right now,” Jason Droege, vice president of Uber Everything, the vertical in charge of Uber Eats, told Recode’s Jason Del Rey and Kara Swisher Tuesday at the Code Commerce conference in New York City.

“We don’t really think about the business that way, at least I don’t,” Droege said of whether he would acquire other food delivery companies. “My personal background — I’m typically in early-stage, I’m a builder. The business isn’t even four years old yet. Let’s just execute and get the business right. And if we do that, then if there’s opportunities to [acquire other businesses] then fine.”

Instead of consuming its competition, he said, Uber Eats is focused on organically growing the business and expanding its own offerings, like adding groceries and other options to its restaurant delivery and rides businesses.

“We think that that’s complementary with food delivery. And then you put rides in there and you get a city OS [operating system], if you will, or a remote control for your city, and you can get all the things you might transact within your city. I’m excited about that.”

Uber, which just laid off more than 400 people and whose market capitalization is half the price it was valued at on the private market now that it’s gone public, has also been trying hard to save money. The company lost more than $5 billion last quarter on revenue of $3 billion.

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