There is a moment in every earnings season when a stock moves the opposite direction the headlines say it should. The release looks ugly. The wires wrap up the bad bullets. And the chart goes green anyway.
That moment is the most honest thing markets do all quarter. It is the gap between what the company reported and what the people with actual money read between the lines. The bigger the gap, the more it tells you about where the stock is really being priced.
Earnings season still runs on the old assumption that revenue is the verdict. It used to be. The past two years have quietly turned revenue into the cover charge, with the real story sitting in guidance, margin trajectory, or a single line about a product that does not show up on the income statement yet. The gap between those two reports is the most useful tell I have in this market right now.
The morning of May 6 was a clean example. Uber Technologies (UBER) reported first-quarter revenue of $13.2 billion, about $90 million below the $13.29 billion analysts expected, according to CNBC. The stock jumped roughly 8%, briefly trading at $79.41 in the session immediately after the print, according to The Globe and Mail.
That move tells you almost everything about how investors are reading this business in 2026.
Where the revenue miss actually came from
The shortfall traced almost entirely to one segment. Uber’s mobility business posted $6.8 billion in revenue, up just 5% year over year, against a $7.11 billion analyst expectation, according to CNBC. That is the unit most exposed to gas prices, which have climbed about 50% in the U.S. since combat operations began in Iran in February.
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“Uber faced a complex macro backdrop marked by weather disruptions, geopolitical tensions, and gas price volatility,” CEO Dara Khosrowshahi said in prepared remarks, according to CNBC. Delivery did the offsetting work, growing 34% to $5.07 billion and beating the $4.89 billion consensus. Australia, Japan, and the U.K. carried most of the upside.
The bigger drag on the headline number was bookkeeping. Uber’s GAAP earnings per share (EPS) came in at $0.13 against a $0.70 expectation, but stripping out a $1.5 billion mark-to-market loss on the company’s stakes in Asian rivals Didi and Grab produced an adjusted EPS of $0.72, a 44% jump from a year earlier, according to Yahoo Finance. That is a beat by any reasonable read of the operating business.
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What the bookings number really told investors
Gross bookings climbed to $53.7 billion in the quarter, up 25%, comfortably ahead of the $52.8 billion analysts had modeled, according to CNBC. The second-quarter guide landed at $56.25 billion to $57.75 billion against a $56.17 billion consensus.
In my analysis, that gap between revenue and bookings is the entire story. Bookings is what consumers are actually spending on the platform. Revenue is what Uber recognizes after pass-through costs and accounting elections, several of which the company changed this year. Investors are now treating bookings as the cleaner read on demand, and demand is fine.
To put $53.7 billion in context, that is roughly the size of Bulgaria’s annual gross domestic product. Uber processed it in 90 days, three months in which the U.S. consumer was supposed to be cracking. The numbers underneath the headline confirm the platform did not flinch.
- Monthly active platform consumers reached 199 million, up 29 million year over year, according to Investing.com.
- Total trips hit 3.6 billion in the quarter, a 20% increase, according to Investing.com.
- Uber One membership crossed 50 million, growing 50% year over year, with members spending three times more than non-members, according to The Motley Fool.
That last line is the one I would circle. Half of all bookings now come from members. Subscription frequency is what insulates a consumer business from a bad quarter, and Uber has stopped being a ride-hailing app and started being a household line item for 50 million people.
Why the autonomous vehicle story is doing the heavy lifting
The valuation argument has shifted. “The consumer is spending, they’re spending locally, and we don’t see any signs of that weakening at this point,” Khosrowshahi told CNBC on May 6. He framed autonomous mobility as “another trillion-dollar [total addressable market],” and added Uber does not see it “as being a winner-takes-all market.”
That framing is what the analyst community has been waiting on. Wells Fargo’s Ken Gawrelski cut his Uber target to $95 from $100 in March on autonomous vehicle uncertainty, but kept an Overweight rating, on the view that “any fundamental impact from autonomous vehicles is a 2027-and-beyond story,” according to 24/7 Wall St.
In other words, the bear case requires Waymo and Tesla’s robotaxi to crack Uber’s distribution moat in 12 months. The bull case only requires Uber to keep shipping demand to whoever builds the cars. The call on May 6 leaned into the bull case. Autonomous vehicle (AV) mobility trips grew more than 10 times year over year, according to The Motley Fool, and the company said it expects AV service in up to 15 cities by year-end.
There is a side plot that should not get lost. Uber said 95% of its engineers now use artificial intelligence (AI) coding tools monthly, and more than 10% of company code is “written autonomously by AI coding agents,” according to CNBC. Hiring is moderating. Operating margin expanded to 14.6% from 10.6% a year earlier.
What this quarter actually means for the stock
The consensus 12-month price target sits near $106, with a high of $150 from Evercore ISI Group and a low of $75 from Wedbush, according to Benzinga. From Wednesday, May 6’s $79 print, the spread is wide enough to drive a robotaxi through.
Here is what I would take from the report. Uber is no longer a ride-hailing pure play. It is a distribution business with a 50-million-member subscription, a delivery arm growing 34%, and a free option on whoever wins the autonomous race. The quarter Wall Street is actually pricing is not the one in the press release. It is the one Khosrowshahi described on the call.
If you own the stock for ride-hailing economics, this report should make you think harder. Mobility revenue grew 5%. That is not a growth-story number, and the gas-price exposure does not get easier from here.
If you own it for the platform, the bookings line, the Uber One flywheel, and the AV optionality did exactly what they needed to do this quarter.
Watch the second-quarter print for whether mobility stabilizes once fuel pressure eases and the insurance savings Uber flagged in California start running through the income statement. If they do, the last live bear argument loses its footing.
The miss was real. It just was not the part of the story that traded.
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