Uber pave way for SoftBank investment deal.
Uber Technologies Inc’s warring board members have struck a
peace deal that allows a multibillion-dollar investment by SoftBank
Group Corp to proceed, and which would resolve a legal battle between
former Chief Executive Travis Kalanick and a prominent shareholder.
SoftBank, a Japanese conglomerate that has
become a heavyweight in Silicon Valley tech investing, is joined by
Dragoneer Investment Group in leading a consortium of investors that
plans to invest $1 billion to $1.25 billion in Uber, and in addition,
will buy up to 17 percent of existing shares from investors and
employees in a secondary transaction. The terms were signed on Sunday,
although the tender offer would likely take weeks to complete.
Completing
the SoftBank deal would allow Uber to open a new chapter after a year
of controversy, including the resignation of Kalanick, the ouster of
several top executives, sexual harassment and discrimination
allegations, and multiple federal criminal probes. The deal is also tied
to new governance rules that aim to distribute power more equally and
bring more oversight to the company.
Uber plans to run newspaper ads informing investors about
the share purchase, and SoftBank will propose a price at which it will
buy stock. The company has threatened to invest in ride-hailing rival
Lyft if it does not get the Uber deal done.
The deal gives early investors such as Benchmark, whose Uber stake is worth nearly $9 billion, the opportunity to cash out a very lucrative investment.
Venture capital firm Benchmark, an early investor
with a board seat in the ride-services company, and Kalanick have
reached an agreement over terms of the SoftBank investment, which could
be worth up to $10 billion, according to two people familiar with the
matter.
The Uber board first agreed more than a
month ago to bring in SoftBank as an investor and board member, but
negotiations have been slowed by ongoing fighting between Benchmark and
Kalanick. The agreement struck on Sunday removed the final obstacle to
allowing SoftBank to proceed with an offer to buy to stock.
Uber confirmed the deal was moving forward.
“We’ve
entered into an agreement with a consortium led by SoftBank and
Dragoneer on a potential investment,” an Uber spokesman said. “We
believe this agreement is a strong vote of confidence in Uber’s
long-term potential.”
Uber is valued at $68 billion, the most highly
valued venture-backed company in the world. SoftBank’s roughly $1
billion investment of fresh funding is expected to be at the same
valuation. The secondary transaction, or the purchases from employees
and existing investors, would be at a lower valuation.
A
spokeswoman for Benchmark did not immediately respond to a request for
comment, and a spokesman for Kalanick declined to comment.
“Uber had a
remarkable first six or seven years, a bumpy past two years, and now the
SoftBank deal allows for a full reset,” said Bradley Tusk, an Uber
investor and political strategist who works with tech companies.
It
would also be a major victory for Uber’s new CEO, Dara Khosrowshahi,
who often served as a mediator to help broker the agreement, according
to a third person familiar with the matter.
To
allow the deal to go forward, Benchmark has agreed to immediately
suspend its lawsuit against Kalanick, which it filed in August in an
effort to diminish the ex-CEO’s power at the company and force him off
the board, one of the sources said.
On the successful completion of the SoftBank investment, Benchmark would drop the lawsuit entirely, the person said.
In
turn, Kalanick must receive majority board approval should he want to
replace the board seats over which he has control, according to the
source. In addition to his own seat, Kalanick controls two more, which
are occupied by Ursula Brown, the former Xerox Corp CEO, and former
Merrill Lynch & CO Inc CEO John Thain. Kalanick appointed
them in September without first consulting with the board.
“Ending
the litigation is a big step forward if it finally ends the specter of
Kalanick retaking control,” said Erik Gordon, an entrepreneurship expert
at the University of Michigan’s Ross School of Business.
Uber’s
board already approved a slate of governance reforms that are
contingent on completion of the SoftBank deal. They include removing
super-voting rights that gave Kalanick and his allies outsized power,
adding new independent directors and increasing the size of the board to
17.
The deal gives early investors such as Benchmark, whose Uber stake is worth nearly $9 billion, the opportunity to cash out a very lucrative investment.