Forget the silly IPO price. Deliveroo would be right to take DoorDash’s money and run

A picture


If one didn’t know Deliveroo’s stock market history, a take-out price of £2.7bn for a barely profitable food delivery app would seem a decent piece of business from the seller’s point of view.The qualification, of course, is that the likely 180p-a-share offer from DoorDash of the US stacks up poorly against the 390p at which Deliveroo listed in 2021.The moral of the numbers, though, is surely only that the flotation, or IPO market in early 2021 was infected by Covid-19 silliness.Almost everything was listed at over-inflated prices in a weird period when fund managers seemed to have lost the ability to say no to smooth-talking investment bank promoters.

Deliveroo’s “floperoo”, as the debut was dubbed, has turned out better, relatively speaking, than those of Made,com, which entered administration little more than a year after its £775m arrival, and Dr Martens, which has issued five profit warnings and is currently 85% below its £3,7bn listing price,Or, from late-2020, THG, the online beauty and protein shakes group, is even further adrift of its starting price,So, given that the old yardsticks are useless, the questions for Deliveroo today are, first, whether it makes sense to sell now and, if it does, whether it can whip up a competitive auction.

On timing, there’s a fair argument that yes, this is the moment to do a deal.A consolidation game among food apps has gone global and Deliveroo is clearly destined for the role of prey rather than predator.It is far smaller than the likes of South African-owned Prosus (acquirer of Just Eat) or Meituan, out of China, or DoorDash.The danger in trying to stick to the independent life is that you eventually get out-muscled by rivals with deeper pockets.Deliveroo is number two in the UK and in France.

Those are valuable positions but also hard to improve upon.If they are worth more to a buyer, it is rational to talk terms.As for the chances of a bidding war, it feels unlikely.In the shareholders’ dreams, Amazon, a 13% owner of Deliveroo, would emerge as saviour and blow DoorDash out of the water.The script is not impossible, but also far from straightforward when you remember that the Competition and Markets Authority spluttered over Amazon’s initial stake-building.

Even in its new government-approved “pro-growth” guise, the watchdog might demand an inquiry into Amazonian overreach in home delivery.By contrast, an exit for cash via DoorDash has the virtue of simplicity.The US firm, which doesn’t currently operate in the UK, is the obvious fit in the global jostling.Sign up to Business TodayGet set for the working day – we'll point you to all the business news and analysis you need every morningafter newsletter promotionNone of which would make 180p feel like a bonanza for anyone who bought at 390p and held.But the price would be the highest the shares have seen since early 2022, when it was already obvious we weren’t all going to stay at home and eat takeaways twice a day.

The likes of Deliveroo have developed a sideline delivering orders for supermarkets and others, but that is also a competitive field.The point about the delivery business is that profits simply haven’t appeared at anything like the rate fantasised about in 2021.Getting out a 40%-ish premium to the average share price over the past three months is not a bad outcome in shrunken circumstances.Will Shu, Deliveroo’s founder, would emerge with £172m for his 5.9% stake.

He has every incentive to judge when it’s time to cash up.
sportSee all
A picture

County cricket: Derbyshire v Middlesex drawn and five things we have learned – as it happened

The kids are alright The brave new world of international franchise cricket might sing only white-ball tunes, but bright young things still love the red ball game. Item: Farhan Ahmed, Nottinghamshire’s 17-year-old off-spinner, with the optimism of youth but the wisdom of an old head, bringing control and surprise. Item: Ben McKinney, Durham’s 2.66 metres (6ft 7in) left-handed 20-year-old opening batter, who made 153 against Warwickshire in early April at Chester le Street and played a vital role in Durham’s victory in two days on a terror track at New Road. Item: Josh Hull, another 2

A picture

ICC rejects Ben Stokes’ plea for review of over-rate penalties in Tests

Ben Stokes’ plea for changes to the system of over-rate penalties that led to England being docked 22 points in the World Test Championship and condemned them to a fifth-place finish has been rejected by the International Cricket Council. The ICC Board has opted to maintain the existing rules that impose fines and points deductions on fielding sides who fail to bowl an average of 15 overs per hour in the next edition of the WTC, which begins with England’s five-Test series against India in June.Stokes first raised complaints about the issue when England and New Zealand were docked three WTC points and all their players were fined 15% of their match fees after the tourist’s eight-wicket win in Christchurch last December. The England captain revealed he had been refusing to sign the over-rate sheets presented by the ICC’s match referee in protest at the system since the 2023 Ashes. England were docked 19 of the 28 WTC points they had won during the thrilling 2-2 series due to their slow over-rate

A picture

NFL draft 2025 winners and losers: bold Jags to a very weird Falcons weekend

It can take years to properly evaluate if a prospect works out. But here are a few early takes on the ups and downs from this year’s selection processGrading NFL drafts right after they happen is like grading a meal after you order it: all you know is what was said on the menu. That said, drafts do tell you a great deal about how NFL teams think about themselves at a particular point in time – what they need, where they’re lacking, and how they want it all to come together. Whether right or wrong in the end, there’s no more clear indicator of team philosophy than the annual three-day exercise, and that’s why it’s important beyond the players who are actually selected.While it will be years before we know how wise each move was in the 2025 draft, here are those who benefited most and least, as well as the decisions we feel are worthy of applause, and the ones that had us shaking our heads

A picture

Mitchell puts pressure on New Zealand and maintains England’s World Cup focus

“New Zealand have more pressure on them to win the upcoming Rugby World Cup than us because they are on for the three-peat,” the England head coach, John Mitchell, said as his focus turns from celebrating Six Nations success to the looming global tournament.The Black Ferns have won the past two Rugby World Cups, beating England in the 2017 and 2022 finals. But they have done a four-peat in the competition as they won the trophy from 1998-2010.The Red Roses, who won their seventh consecutive Women’s Six Nations title on Saturday with a 43‑42 victory against France, have not won the Rugby World Cup since 2014 despite dominating the sport in all other competitions in the past few years: in their past 62 games they have lost only one, that coming in the World Cup final three years ago.Mitchell was asked if he and his coaches are keeping an eye on New Zealand pre-World Cup, particularly now that the Rugby World Cup all‑time try-scorer ­Portia ­Woodman‑Wickliffe has come out of retirement to compete in it

A picture

Eubank Jr and Benn face inevitable rematch but Hearn urges caution

“I want my revenge, man,” Conor Benn said quietly in the early hours of Sunday morning as his bruised face reflected his emotional pain after he lost against Chris Eubank Jr in a wild brawl at the Tottenham Hotspur Stadium. “I want my revenge.”Those typical boxing words echoed the misguided clamour for a rematch with Eubank Jr. Eddie Hearn admitted that he would prefer Benn to move back down two divisions to welterweight but the promoter grinned helplessly: “The public, His Excellency, everybody’s going to want the rematch.”Turki al-Sheikh heads Saudi Arabia’s General Entertainment Authority which splurges billions of dollars while controlling the fight game

A picture

‘Best day of my life’, ‘surreal and special’: Australian victories at Bells Beach mean more to local surfers | Kieran Pender

Each of the 11 stops on the World Surf League regular season count for the same amount of points as the world’s best surfers vie to secure a spot in the year-end finals. But there is no doubting that the Bells Beach Rip Curl Pro, which wrapped up its 62nd edition over the weekend, has a unique place in surfing folklore. Winning the longest running event in competitive surfing and ringing its iconic bell trophy means more than most triumphs on the WSL circuit.“This is the best day of my life,” said Australia’s Isabella Nichols, minutes after defeating junior world champion Luana Silva in the women’s final on Sunday afternoon. Having clinched the victory in the water, Nichols surfed a gentle wave towards the shore – lifting her arms and ringing an imaginary bell as she went