KEY POINTS
  • SoftBank's two Uber board members are waiting for clearance from the U.S. government.
  • The CFIUS review of SoftBank's investment along with the government shutdown is complicating the company's anticipated IPO.
  • Uber is expected to be the most high-profile debut in the class of 2019.
Dara Khosrowshahi, chief executive officer of Uber Technologies.

Between the stock market's extreme volatility of late and the three-week-old government shutdown, the IPO market faces plenty of uncertainty in 2019. But for Uber, there's another complicating aspect — the company's biggest investor is still waiting for its board seats.

When Uber sold a 15 percent stake to SoftBank last January, the ride-hailing company agreed to give the Japanese conglomerate two board positions out of an eventual total of 17. SoftBank said its seats would go to Marcelo Claure, the company's operating chief and executive chairman of Sprint, and Rajeev Misra, the head of SoftBank's Vision Fund.