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DoorDash, Inc. Class A Common Stock
As of May 30, 2026 at 24:05 UTC
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About DoorDash, Inc. Class A Common Stock
Founded in 2013 within the confines of the San Francisco application renaissance, DoorDash is an online delivery demand aggregator. Consumers can use its app to order food on demand for delivery or in-store pickup from participating merchants. Following the 2022 acquisition of Wolt, the firm also provides this service in Europe and Asia. DoorDash creates a marketplace for merchants to establish an online presence, market their offerings, and meet demand through delivery. The firm provides similar services to non-restaurant businesses, such as grocery, retail, and pet supplies. DoorDash is also rolling out emerging technologies, such as drone delivery, to continually innovate and deliver the best possible service to both supply-side and demand-side participants in its marketplace.
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Latest News
5 articlesThe global food delivery market is consolidating, with Uber and DoorDash engaged in a bidding war for Berlin-based Delivery Hero. Uber holds a financial advantage with $6.1 billion in cash and strong free cash flow, while DoorDash relies more on debt financing. However, both face significant regulatory hurdles in Europe, particularly the EU Platform Work Directive and antitrust concerns. DoorDash's strategy of acquiring only Delivery Hero's Middle Eastern and Turkish assets may be more pragmatic than Uber's all-or-nothing approach.
Uber has submitted a €10 billion indicative offer to acquire Delivery Hero at €33 per share, marking an opening bid in a contested process. The offer lacks a meaningful premium over pre-announcement prices, and activist shareholder Aspex (15% stake) and Prosus (17% stake) are expected to demand higher valuations. DoorDash is simultaneously exploring acquisition of Delivery Hero's MENA assets, creating competitive pressure. The deal's outcome hinges on shareholder negotiations rather than Uber's initial bid, with analysts suggesting fair value between €15-18 billion.
Rising gas prices ($4.56 national average) are driving behavioral shifts toward carpooling and ridesharing. Lyft is capitalizing on this trend with record 28.3 million active riders, $4.9 billion in Q1 gross bookings (up 19% YoY), and $1.1 billion in trailing-12-month free cash flow. The stock trades at $13.05, roughly 31% below analyst targets, presenting a potential buying opportunity despite risks from its smaller scale compared to Uber and unproven autonomous vehicle economics.
Amazon is expanding its 'Amazon Now' 30-minute delivery service across major U.S. cities, competing directly with Walmart and Target in the instant commerce space. The service is currently available in Atlanta, Dallas-Fort Worth, Philadelphia, and Seattle, with expansion planned for Austin, Houston, Minneapolis, Orlando, Phoenix, Denver, and Oklahoma City. Prime members pay $3.99 per delivery while non-Prime customers pay $13.99, reflecting the high cost of ultra-fast delivery despite consumer preference for free shipping.
U.S. tech stocks reached record highs on May 7, 2026, as crude oil tumbled nearly 3% on hopes Iran will accept a U.S. memorandum to reopen the Strait of Hormuz. The Nasdaq 100 gained 0.4% to 28,706 while the S&P 500 rose 0.2% to 7,376. Earnings drove significant stock-specific moves, with major winners including AAON (+36%), Datadog (+30%), and H&R Block (+26%), while notable losers included Planet Fitness (-33%), Insmed (-22%), and Zoetis (-22%).