Toyota invests in Uber rival Grab to extend foray into ride-sharing
Will work on services in Southeast Asia
Toyota Motor is pushing deeper into the ride-sharing business.
Toyota Tsusho, the automaker’s trading arm, will invest an undisclosed amount in Grab, Southeast Asia’s leading ride- hailing operator. Toyota Motor said it will work with Grab to provide services in the region, a year after the carmaker bought a small stake in Uber Technologies Inc. as it explores new revenue models.
“Through this collaboration with Grab, we would like to explore new ways of delivering secure, convenient and attractive mobility services to our fleet customers in Southeast Asia,” Shigeki Tomoyama, a senior managing officer at Toyota, said in a statement Wednesday.
Automobile manufacturers are working with and competing against technology companies to figure out how to make money from services to drivers as automation, electrification and on- demand transportation threaten to reshape the current model of individual car ownership. Honda Motor Co. has also invested in Grab, its first in a ride- sharing company, in a partnership aimed at expanding motorcyclehailing operations in Southeast Asia.
Grab is aiming to raise $ 2.5 billion from the latest round of funding, of which it has previously announced $2 billion in investment from Didi Chuxing and SoftBank. That will take Grab’s valuation north of $6 billion, a person familiar with the matter said in July.
Toyota will record and analyze driving patterns in 100 Grab cars in Singapore, and offer recommendations on what connected services it can provide Grab drivers, the two companies said in separate statements.
“We are confident this will benefit our driver partners,” Grab co- founder and CEO Anthony Tan said in one of the statements. “We look forward to exploring other ways to collaborate with Toyota in the future.”
Carmakers globally are racing to place bets on which companies will emerge as the dominant players in ridesharing. General Motors has joined forces with both Uber and Lyft, while Volvo partnered with the former and Tata Motors’ Jaguar Land Rover with the latter. Volkswagen has created a mobility services division under the Moia brand and invested $ 300 million in ride- hailing provider Gett Inc.