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Delivery Hero replaces disgraced Wirecard in German DAX index

Agence France-Presse

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Delivery Hero replaces disgraced Wirecard in German DAX index

(FILES) This file photo, taken on June 27, 2017, shows a logo in a lounge area of the global headquarters of online food ordering and delivery giant Delivery Hero in Berlin, Germany. - Berlin-based food delivery company Delivery Hero will take the spot of scandal-hit payments firm Wirecard in the DAX 30 on Monday, August 24, 2020, German stock exchange operator Deutsche Boerse said, after Wirecard is to be expelled from the prestigious DAX 30 index following its insolvency. (Photo by John MACDOUGALL / AFP)

AFP

Delivery Hero is a somewhat surprising entry into the elite index because it has no sales in Germany – unprecedented for a DAX company – even though it was founded in Berlin in 2011

Berlin-based food delivery company Delivery Hero has become the newest member of Germany’s blue-chip DAX index after scandal-hit payments firm Wirecard was kicked out. 

The move, announced late on Wednesday, August 19, came about after exchange operator Deutsche Boerse tweaked its rules in order to quickly expel insolvent companies. 

Delivery Hero is worth around 20 billion euros ($23.7 billion), about 3 times its value when it debuted on the German stock market in June 2017. 

Delivery Hero is a somewhat surprising entry into the elite index because, despite trading in more than 40 countries, it has no sales in Germany – unprecedented for a DAX company – even though it was founded in Berlin in 2011.

“Entering the DAX is an acknowledgement that the capital market believes in our platform,” said chief executive Niklas Ostberg.

The company’s first day of trading on the DAX 30 will be August 24.

Delivery Hero originally specialized as an online intermediary between customers and restaurants. It later set up its own delivery fleets, expanding its services to include groceries, pharmaceuticals, and even flowers.

Questions remain over the viability of its business model as the company has never made an operating profit. 

It has also attracted criticism as a face of the “gig economy” in that it classifies many of those that work for it, such as delivery drivers, as independent contractors and not employees.

Competitive field

It also must survive in a crowded field that includes Deliveroo and Uber Eats. 

Delivery Hero has acquired a number of operations in other countries, most recently South Korean competitor Woowa in 2019 for $4 billion, and plans to launch in Japan under the Foodpanda brand in the 3rd quarter.  

It lost its German operations when it sold Foodora, Lieferheld, and Pizza.de to Dutch rival Takeaway in 2018 for close to one billion euros. 

The company has raised its full-year revenue expectations for this year to $2.6 billion to $2.8 billion. 

In the 2nd quarter of 2020, at the height of the coronavirus lockdowns, Delivery Hero reported an order growth of 95% year-on-year and delivered 100 million orders in one month. 

At the current pace, it will deliver one billion orders in 2020, it said.  

As the risk of a second COVID-19 wave and further lockdowns increases, Delivery Hero could become even more attractive to investors and hungry customers.

“The shares will continue to benefit from the long-term trend for people to stay at home more” to eat their meals, said Christoph Stanger, head of Equity Markets Europe at Goldman Sachs.

German payments firm Wirecard suffered a spectacular fall from grace after it was forced to admit to a 1.9-billion-euro hole in its accounts. 

Its share price has fallen 99% in the year to date and its former chief executive has been arrested on fraud charges. – Rappler.com

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