Business

UK food giant Deliveroo set for £7.6 bil IPO

Food delivery firm on track for City’s biggest listing in 10 years thanks to boosted sales from virus lockdowns

Updated 5 years ago · Published on 30 Mar 2021 9:30PM

UK food giant Deliveroo set for £7.6 bil IPO
Over six million people ordered food and drink every month via the Deliveroo app from 115,000 cafes, restaurants and stores last year. – AFP pic, March 30, 2021

LONDON – Britain’s app-driven food delivery firm Deliveroo is set for London’s largest stock market launch in a decade with a valuation of £7.6 billion (RM43.45 billion) despite mounting criticism over its treatment of riders.

Deliveroo’s initial public offering, due tomorrow, will be priced at £3.90 per share, a source close to the matter said today.

That values the Amazon-backed group at the equivalent of US$10.5 billion.

The 8-year-old company remains on track for the City’s biggest listing in 10 years thanks to Covid-19 lockdowns boosting sales – and despite mounting concern over a business model that relies on low pay for riders.

The group “has very significant demand from institutions across the globe” for the offer, a Deliveroo spokesman told AFP separately today.

The news comes one day after Deliveroo said the IPO is being eyed at a range of between £7.6 billion and £7.85 billion.

The firm has, however, been forced to trim its IPO valuation due to recent market volatility surrounding the tech sector – particularly in Europe and the United States.

Last week, it was given an IPO market capitalisation of up to £8.8 billion.

Protests and strikes

Last year, more than six million people ordered food and drink every month via the company’s app from 115,000 cafes, restaurants and stores.

British asset management firms Aviva Investors and Aberdeen Standard have decided against investing in Deliveroo’s IPO, citing the job insecurity of its riders.

Deliveroo maintains that its self-employed riders – who total around 100,000 across some 800 cities worldwide – value the flexibility the job affords, adding that on average, its food couriers earn more than £10 per hour.

The Independent Workers’ Union of Great Britain, which has taken Deliveroo to court to win bargaining rights for its riders, said some couriers in the north of England are earning £2 per hour, well below the United Kingdom minimum wage.

Deliveroo has set aside £112 million to deal with the litigation and its possible consequences.

However, its business model has come under scrutiny, including in Britain, France and Spain, as its freelance delivery riders complain about working conditions.

The float has been overshadowed by protests, strikes and rallies in Australia, Britain and France – with more set to follow.

Deliveroo’s listing, meanwhile, is seen as a major boost to London’s financial sector, known as the City, which lost its European share trading crown to Amsterdam following Brexit. – AFP, March 30, 2021

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