Everyone’s Talking About Uber. Smart Money Is Watching Grab’s Profitability Inflection Instead

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By Alex Sirois Updated Published
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Everyone’s Talking About Uber. Smart Money Is Watching Grab’s Profitability Inflection Instead

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Every retail investor with a brokerage app is staring at Uber (NYSE:UBER | UBER Price Prediction) right now, drawn in by robotaxi headlines and a $152.16B market cap that has turned the rideshare giant into the default gig-economy proxy.

The data underneath the headlines tells a different story.

The Uber story has quietly broken down underneath the noise. Q4 2025 net income collapsed 95.6% year over year on a $1.6B equity revaluation charge, while non-GAAP EPS of $0.71 missed the $0.78 consensus by 8.83%. Shares are down 10.72% year to date and 14.61% over the past year, trading at $72.95 against a forward P/E of 22x. Reddit’s dominant thread now asks “If the taxi/rideshare drivers lose their jobs to robotaxis, how will Uber make money?”, with sentiment scores parked in the bearish 32 to 42 range. The bull case has narrowed to a speculative AV bet on a mature, US-centric footprint carrying $10.52B in long-term debt and rising insurance reserves. That is a crowded trade dressed up as a growth story.

The better superapp setups sit offshore, monetizing mobility, delivery, and fintech under one roof in regions where banking and e-commerce are still being built from scratch.

Grab: The Profitability Inflection Nobody Is Pricing

Grab Holdings (NASDAQ:GRAB) just delivered its first full year of net profit, posting $200M in FY2025 versus a $158M loss in 2024. Three reasons the setup stands out:

  • Earnings inflection with operating leverage. FY2025 revenue rose 20% to $3.37B, adjusted EBITDA jumped 60% to $500M, and FY2026 guidance calls for $4.04B to $4.10B in revenue and $700M to $720M in adjusted EBITDA. Management is targeting $1.5B in adjusted EBITDA by 2028.
  • A regional bank embedded inside the app. The GXS and GXBank loan book more than doubled to $1.18B, with $1.6B in deposits across underbanked Southeast Asia, where Grab operates in eight countries and over 900 cities and just crossed 50 million Monthly Transacting Users.
  • Capital return arriving early. Management authorized a $500M share repurchase against a $14.84B market cap, and the sell side is leaning in with 26 buy or strong buy ratings against one hold and zero sells.

MercadoLibre: The Compounding Machine

MercadoLibre (NASDAQ:MELI) keeps compounding at scale, quarter after quarter, with a fintech engine bolted onto a regional e-commerce monopoly. Three points:

  • 27 consecutive quarters of 30%-plus revenue growth. Q4 2025 revenue hit $8.76B, up 44.6% year over year, beating consensus, with FY2025 revenue of $28.89B (+39.06%) and net income of $1.997B.
  • A fintech flywheel inside an e-commerce engine. The credit portfolio expanded 90% YoY to $12.5B, fintech MAUs reached 78 million (+28% YoY), and total payment volume printed $83.7B (+42.1%). Q4 advertising revenue grew 67% FX-neutral.
  • Structural runway. Latin American e-commerce penetration sits at roughly half the level of the US, UK, and China, while fewer than 20% of Mexicans and only 40% of Argentines hold a credit card. The first China-to-LatAm fulfillment center opened in December 2025.

Uber is selling a future. Grab and MercadoLibre are already delivering one in markets where the next billion digital transactions are still being built. The international compounders are where the superapp narrative is currently being delivered, not just sold.

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About the Author Alex Sirois →

Alex Sirois is a financial writer with experience spanning both retail and institutional investing. He has written for InvestorPlace and held roles at BNY Mellon and Bernstein, giving him a perspective that bridges Main Street portfolios and Wall Street analysis.

Alex holds an MBA from George Washington University and has built his career across multiple industries, including e-commerce, education, and translation — a breadth of experience that informs how he breaks down complex financial topics for everyday investors. His writing is conversational, actionable, and grounded in long-term, buy-and-hold investing principles.

At 247 Wall St., Alex focuses on delivering analysis that is both accessible and useful, with a clear emphasis on helping readers make more informed decisions with their money.

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