From not turning a profit, to being beat by competitors on self-driving cars, here's what's keeping Wall Street analysts up at night.
A major chunk of that spending was on two things: stock-based compensation and driver rewards, both stemming from the company's IPO in May.
The ride-hailing giant's total losses and revenue fell short Wall Street's expectations, and the stock was down as much as 12% after.
The company's amended IPO filing Friday included our first look at its 2019 financials.