Could Tesla Ride-Hailing Network Overtake Uber and Lyft’s Distribution?
When Singular Capital came up with the reasoning of the time frame of when autonomous taxis would commercialize, Uber and Lyft will not be able to collect the 20–30% take rates they enjoy today. Now, however, they could be facing a more immediate threat: a Tesla ride-hailing network.
Elon Musk has said that, before launching an autonomous driving network, Tesla could debut a ride-hailing service with drivers, for good strategic reasons. Most important, a human-driven ride-hailing network would allow Tesla to collect real-world driving data to feed its autonomous driving artificial intelligence (AI) training system.
In addition to AI training data, we believe a human-driven network would give Tesla four more competitive advantages relative to other ride-hailing players:
Lower Maintenance & Operating expenses;
More efficient financing and insurance;
Higher trade-in or residual values;
Premium Brand Positioning
1.) Lower Maintenance and Operating Costs
According to Singular Capital’s research, the cost to drive a Model 3 is roughly 30% less than that of a Toyota Camry, as shown below. In other words, both Tesla and its ride-hailing drivers could benefit from operating costs lower than those at Uber and Lyft.
Based on Singular Capital’s analysis, 20,000 ride-hailing service miles and 13,500 personal use miles per year, the cost to operate a Tesla Model 3 will be roughly 26 cents per mile, 30% lower than the 38 cents per mile to operate a Toyota Camry.
Tesla’s cost per mile advantage could play out in a number of ways: higher take-home pay for drivers, lower prices than Uber and Lyft, and/or higher platform fees for Tesla. A combination of all three could be possible.
2.) More Efficient Financing and Insurance
While Singular assumed the same insurance costs for both vehicles in the analysis above, Tesla probably will self-insure and offer lower rates to its drivers.
With the ability to collect driving data continuously from its vehicles and to provide discounts for the use of Autopilot, we believe Tesla will be able to offer rates lower than traditional insurance companies.
While Uber does not breakout insurance costs, in 2019, Uber’s short-term insurance reserves totaled $941 million at the start of the year, or approximately 13% of cost of goods sold for the full year. Lyft’s insurance cost, inclusive of scooters and bikes, was 19% of cost of goods sold in 2019. For personal car insurance, Tesla’s rates are nearly 30% below average, as shown below.
With a vertically integrated network, Tesla should be able to offer attractive financing terms to prospective ride-hailing drivers, say $7,000 for down payments and the balance paid from a cut of driver earnings on the network. Coming off lease, used Model 3s could seed the network at launch.
Moreover, Tesla should be able to finance its own vehicles, while Uber and Lyft pay fees — another layer of costs — to third party partners. While traditional auto loans are risky, Tesla will be able to disable ride-hailing vehicles, potentially retrieving them autonomously, if owners stop driving them on the network.
4.) Premium Brand Positioning.
With Tesla’s head start and it’s moving faster than anyone else- and that combination means its lead is set to widen in light years ahead of its competition. Moreover, Tesla could charge premium prices for its service, like an Uber Select or an Uber Plus which are $1–4 per mile more expensive than Uber X, depending on the trip length and region, as shown below. Of course, Uber Select drivers also are completing UberX trips, so average take-home pay averages out closer to $1 more per mile. Premium priced services already in the market suggest customer segmentation possibilities, with higher take rates for luxury cars.
Most automobile companies underestimate Autonomous Driving technology, but Tesla took so seriously that Tesla’s ride-hailing service could spell disaster for Uber and Lyft.
Uber & Lyft catching up to their IPO prices in recent weeks, both are still unprofitable today, even more so after the coronavirus crisis.
If it were to launch its ride-hailing service within the next year, as fears of crowded subways and buses linger, Tesla could capitalize on pent up demand, perhaps hiring former or current Uber and Lyft drivers, particularly given their respective decisions, both before and during the pandemic, to limit new driver applications. With better take home pay potential, not to mention biodefense mode, the Tesla ride-hailing network could offer a compelling value proposition to both drivers and customers as they emerge from the COVID-19 crisis.