Skip to content
Tech News
← Back to articles

Uber raises stake in Delivery Hero in $318 million deal

read original get Delivery Hero T-Shirt → more articles
Why This Matters

Uber's increased stake in Delivery Hero highlights its strategic focus on expanding its global food delivery footprint amid evolving European merger regulations. This move underscores the importance of consolidation and investment in the competitive food delivery industry, especially as regulators reconsider merger policies to foster innovation and market resilience. For consumers, these developments could lead to more integrated services and broader choices in the food delivery market.

Key Takeaways

An Uber Eats courier is seen in Krakow, Poland, on Aug. 21, 2025.

Uber on Friday agreed to purchase an additional 4.5% of shares of German food delivery firm Delivery Hero from the company's biggest shareholder Prosus .

Total gross proceeds to Prosus are approximately 270 million euros ($318 million), the company said. Uber will pay 20 euros a share, which is below Delivery Hero's Thursday closing price following a 7% rally in the stock. However, it is a 22% premium to the 1-month average share price, Prosus said.

The move comes after Prosus last year offered a deal to buy European food delivery giant Just Eat Takeaway.com for 4.1 billion euros. However, that acquisition ran into scrutiny from the European Commission, the EU's executive arm, which said it would approve the deal if Prosus significantly reduced its shareholding in Delivery Hero.

"Prosus remains committed to selling the relevant portion of its stake in Delivery Hero within the required timeframe," the company said in a press release on Friday.

Prosus's now owns around 21% of Delivery Hero versus approximately 27% when the Just Eat Takeaway.com deal was announced last year, a spokesperson told CNBC.

Uber first took a stake in Delivery Hero when it purchased $300 million of newly-issued shares in 2024.

Since Prosus's Just Eat deal last year, European regulators are rethinking their approach to mergers in the EU. The Financial Times reported this week that the Commission is considering relaxing rules around large mergers by giving more weight to "innovation, investment and resilience of the internal market", when considering deals.

Europe's competition commissioner Teresa Ribera told the FT in an interview that the bloc wants to encourage "pro-competitive mergers" that allow European firms to "be relevant players in global markets."

Fabricio Bloisi, CEO of Prosus, has previously criticised Europe's approach to mergers and acquisitions.

... continue reading