Is It Too Early to Invest in Food Delivery Companies?

In This Article:

Anyone who thought that investment interest in online-based food-delivery services might be waning need only look at the latest funding round of privately held DoorDash. Held in late May, this investment series valued the briskly expanding delivery service at $12.6 billion, just three months after a previous round of funding pegged its valuation at $7.1 billion.

The delivery sector obviously still fascinates both institutional and retail investors. Total restaurant industry sales are projected to reach $863 billion in the U.S. this year, and the off-premises food delivery business is on track to hit $19.5 billion in 2019, at an impressive annual growth rate of 8.5%.

In the investing world, it often makes sense to jump into a nascent market, especially if you possess the patience and appetite for the often-chaotic stock trajectories that accompany early battles for market share dominance among a few pioneering players. But the food delivery market isn't close to crowning a clear winner yet. Moreover, there are several risks to take into account before you allocate precious portfolio dollars to this trend.

A delivery person hands over a food order to a customer.
A delivery person hands over a food order to a customer.

Image source: Getty Images.

Assessing the industry

There are only a handful of pure-play food delivery companies an investor can buy on public exchanges at the moment. Delivery pioneer Grubhub (NYSE: GRUB) went public in 2014 at $26 per share, and shares now trade at $63. But over the last 12 months, Grubhub's stock has lost 42% of its value, as intensifying competition and higher spending on operations infrastructure and sales and marketing have taken their toll on financial results. In the company's latest quarterly earnings report, sales jumped 39% year over year to $324 million, but operating margin plunged by nearly 11 percentage points to just 2.7%.

Formidable competitor Postmates has filed for an IPO, and its shares are expected to price this summer, giving investors another viable delivery leader to invest in. Postmates submitted its S-1 registration statement to the SEC in February, and investors will see Postmate's financials roughly two weeks before its begins presentations to investors, so a long-awaited peek under the company's hood should be around the corner.

You can also invest indirectly in online platform delivery businesses. An obvious choice is newly public Uber Technologies (NYSE: UBER), which priced at $45 on May 9; shares are trading near $40.50 as of this writing. The company's delivery business, Uber Eats, happens to be its fastest-growing revenue stream.

Uber reported its first quarter as a publicly traded company on May 30. In the filing, investors learned that Uber Eats revenue increased nearly 90% over the prior-year period to $536 million, making up 17% of the company's total quarterly revenue of $3.1 billion.