Car Rental Demand Prompts Hertz To Try Again For IPO

Hertz, car rentals, IPO,

Car rental firm Hertz exited bankruptcy in June and filed new paperwork with the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) for an initial public offering (IPO) with plans to list on Nasdaq, according to multiple reports.

The increased demand for car rentals brought about by pandemic-related vehicle shortages gave Hertz second quarter results and revenue near pre-pandemic levels. Plans for an IPO bubbled to the surface in August despite a net loss of $168 million.

In its SEC filing, Hertz put its preliminary placeholder for the size of its offering at $100 million.

See also: Car Rental Startup Turo Plans 2021 Public Offering

Headquartered in Estero, Florida, the car rental company posted net income of $21 million on $3.2 billion revenue January through July. During the same period in 2020, Hertz posted a net loss of $1.2 billion on $2.8 billion in revenue, according to media reports.

Hertz came out of Chapter 11 bankruptcy following a $6 billion deal that gave 42 percent ownership to Knighthead Capital Management, Certares Opportunities and Apollo Capital Management.

Overall car shortages have pushed vehicle rental prices to historical highs, something Hertz is benefitting from after a pandemic-era abundance of available inventory. When travel locked down, Hertz was among the many car rental companies paying for overflow parking for unrented vehicles.

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Many shareholders lost fortunes when Hertz filed for bankruptcy, but when the world started reopening as COVID-19 eased, Hertz found itself faced with not having enough cars to meet consumers’ demands. Used cars were selling out everywhere while new vehicle inventories contracted and were not replenished.

Chip shortages, supply chain snags and a lack of inventory for car buyers brought automobile rental agencies like Hertz a heightened level of demand, according to reports. As a result, Hertz is seeing higher car rental prices and a fatter bottom line.

Car rental prices have dropped 15 percent from the record highs of June, according to the most recent consumer price index, but are still more than 50 percent higher in September of this year than in 2019.