DoorDash consumers benefited from the on demand convenience and habits formed: DoorDash CFO

In This Article:

Prabir Adarkar, DoorDash CFO joins the Yahoo Finance Live to discuss the company’s first earrnings report.

Video Transcript

AKIKO FUJITA: We begin today, though, with earnings out from DoorDash. We've seen the stock. They're coming off of the lows in this session. But it is still down about 5%. Even after the company beat Wall Street estimates on the top and bottom lines, revenue was up 226% year on year to $970 million. The company posting adjusted earnings of $94 million in the quarter, while its key metric, marketplace gross order value, jumped 227%.

Let's bring in the CFO of DoorDash, Prabir Adarkar joining us today. Prabir, this is a pretty strong quarter all around. But there does seem to be this underlying concern right now in the market. That, how much of this momentum that you saw in the quarter is simply the result of these COVID-related restrictions that were in place? How do you think investors should be looking at the momentum that will inevitably slow as more and more people opt to go out to restaurants instead of ordering in?

PRABIR ADARKAR: Thank you. It's a pleasure to be here. Let me share some specific insight on what we're expecting to see, certainly in the near-term versus the long-term. We're rooting for the restaurants to reopen. It's important for them to reopen so that they can get back on their feet. And we're hoping that people go back into these restaurants. And so over the near-term, there will certainly be a phenomenon where people go back into restaurants.

But in our experience, consumer habituation tends to persist over the long-term. And what I mean by that is consumers have discovered DoorDash. They've ordered from their favorite restaurants. They've benefited from the luxury of on-demand convenience. And new habits have formed. And so over the long term, we expect that these habits will persist.

And what we've seen in markets across the US, particularly those that were relatively advanced in terms of reopening compared to others like Texas and Georgia and Florida, is even against that context of the markets reopening, our volumes, our weekly orders continue to grow. And so we're hopeful that over the long-term consumer habits persist. But in the near-term, certainly we hope that people get back into the restaurants.

And that uncertainty with respect to what consumers are going to do, frankly, with respect to whether workers go back into their offices or whether remote work continues to persist, these types of uncertainties are what's embedded in our outlook.

AKIKO FUJITA: Well, we saw huge growth in the quarter. We also saw the losses surge-- the number there $312 million compared to $134 million in this same period last year. I know a significant chunk of this are costs related directly to the IPO. But you also made it pretty clear on the earnings call yesterday that you plan to invest and continue to invest in a significant way. How should we be looking at that number in the context of where you want to go, to put more money towards the growth side of the company?