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Lyft’s storm-hit outlook, 2025 surprise operating loss send shares tumbling

By Thomson Reuters Feb 10, 2026 | 3:15 PM

Feb 10 (Reuters) – Lyft forecast first-quarter adjusted core profit below expectations on Tuesday as severe U.S. winter storms weigh on demand, and reported a surprise operating loss for 2025, sending shares down ​14% after hours.

The results are a setback for Lyft’s comeback ‌narrative, capping a year of improving bookings growth, higher margins and expansion into new regions. They overshadowed the announcement of a $1 billion share buyback.

The weaker first-quarter forecast shows the effects of Winter Storm Fern, which brought heavy snow, icy conditions and prolonged extreme ‌cold to ​large parts of the United States, particularly on ⁠the East Coast, disrupting ⁠travel and dampening ride demand during the quarter.

Its 2025 operating loss came in at $188.4 million, while analysts expected a profit of $33.3 million, according to Visible Alpha data.

It expects adjusted core profit of $120 million to $140 million ​for the quarter, below estimates of $139.4 million.

Lyft forecast current-quarter gross bookings of $4.86 billion to $5 billion, with a midpoint largely in line with the average ⁠estimate of $4.95 billion.

The repurchase represents roughly 15% ⁠of Lyft’s current market capitalization and comes on top ​of an earlier $750 million share repurchase program announced early last year.

Revenue in the ​December quarter stood at $1.59 billion, below estimates of $1.76 billion. Fourth-quarter revenue ‌included a $168 million impact from legal, tax and regulatory reserve changes and settlements, without which revenue would have been about $1.8 billion, the company said.

The fourth quarter marked Lyft’s most profitable on record, supported by stronger rider engagement ⁠and a growing mix of higher-value ride modes, even as severe winter weather across parts of the United States weighs on its forecast.

Lyft generated $1.12 billion in ⁠free cash flow in ‌2025, higher than estimates of $993.4 million.

It reported adjusted core ⁠earnings of $154.1 million for the fourth quarter, above expectations ​of $147.1 ‌million, according to estimates compiled by LSEG.

Gross bookings in ​the quarter ⁠rose 19% to $5.07 billion, in line with expectations.

Growth last year was driven by an expansion into Europe, premium and larger-vehicle offerings, as well as partnerships. About 25% of Lyft’s rides in the fourth quarter were linked to a partnership, including strong momentum from its tie-up with DoorDash.

(Reporting by Akash Sriram in Bengaluru; Editing ​by Alan Barona)