Uber Just Cut Prices in Dallas Again, but Don't Expect it to Last
About a week ago, on October 23, Uber announced that it was cutting prices for its UberX service in Dallas for the third time since the service made its Dallas debut in November 2013. Taking an UberX from my Oak Cliff apartment to the Observer offices costs about $7 now; the same trip in a Yellow Cab would be about $12.50 plus tip. It's a big difference -- one that's likely unsustainable. Uber, Curb (Yellow Cab) and Lyft App Screenshots One of these is cheaper than the other two. Probably a little too cheap.
As UberX becomes an established brand in Dallas and builds market share, it could become vulnerable to a predatory pricing lawsuit. Federal anti-trust law bans companies with large market shares from selling products or providing services at a loss when doing so creates a likelihood that company slashing its prices will monopolize a market.
In July, Uber was sued for predatory pricing by a group of Maryland cab companies. Now that Uber has admitted that it pays drivers more than it collects from customers in some markets where rates have been slashed, more lawsuits may follow.
To make a suit less likely in Dallas, Uber will have to raise UberX prices in the future.
"The longer that [UberX] is around, the more vulnerable [Uber] is to a predatory pricing lawsuit," Chad Ruback, a prominent Dallas civil attorney says. A judge isn't going to have a problem with a company offering a new product at a steep discount to entrench it in a market, according to Ruback, but that argument becomes less viable as people in the market become familiar with and use the service.
The pricing issue is separate from the biggest one facing Uber -- its viability in the city. City Council member Vonciel Jones Hill and the council's transportation committee continue to wade through the adoption of new transportation-for-hire regulations. Those new regulations are unlikely to make Uber change its pricing -- although Yellow Cab has said in the past that both Uber and its competitor Lyft should be subject to Dallas' mandatory cab prices -- but now that Michael Morris, the regional transportation planner from NCTCOG czar, has been brought into the process, there's no telling what could happen. Uber may not have to raise prices because it may not even be legal in Dallas.
See also: Vonciel Hill and Michael Morris Join Forces and Seek Delay on Car-Service Regulations
These are the good times for UberX users in Dallas, but enjoy it while you can. A storm, in the form of regulations or, at the very least, higher prices, is coming.
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