Uber shifts to asset ownership strategy — what changes for the taxi market
Uber is betting on owning physical assets—autonomous fleets and infrastructure. For years the company positioned itself as a light platform without vehicles…
AI-processed from TechCrunch; edited by Hamidun News
Uber is changing the fundamental logic of its business. The company, which for years took pride in the "we don't own a single car" model, is now actively moving toward owning real assets—from autonomous vehicles to physical logistics infrastructure. The term "assetmaxxing"—a play on words referencing internet slang "looksmaxxing"—describes an intentional strategy of maximizing one's own property.
For Uber, this means participating in leasing, co-ownership, and direct financing of autonomous fleets instead of simply connecting partners to a marketplace. The driver of change is the rapid growth of robotaxis. Waymo, Tesla Robotaxi, Zoox, and dozens of other players are preparing to scale autonomous fleets.
In this world, Uber risks becoming a middleman without leverage: if an AV-fleet manufacturer can deploy its own app, Uber's platform margin evaporates. To maintain its position, the company needs to become a co-owner of assets, not just an aggregator. In practice, this is expressed in several directions.
Uber enters co-deployment agreements with autonomous vehicle manufacturers, providing them access to its demand base in exchange for a stake in the fleet or priority access to the fleet. In parallel, the company invests in charging and service infrastructure—something without which electric or autonomous transport cannot operate. This transformation is not unique to Uber.
Lyft and a number of Asian aggregators are following a similar path. The common logic: the era of "pure platforms" in transportation is ending as the human driver as a primary asset disappears. Whoever controls the physical unit of transportation controls the economics of the ride.
For consumers, short-term changes are barely noticeable. But within a three- to five-year perspective, the pricing structure and availability of the service will be determined by whoever owns the fleet. Uber is betting that this will be itself—at least partially.
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