Business Standard

SoftBank eyes mega Uber stake

It is already a big investor in Asian ride-hailing companies Grab, Ola and Didi Chuxing

- GREG BENSINGER, JOANN S LUBLIN & LIZA LIN 25 July

SoftBank Group Corp. is pushing to take a commanding stake in the ride-hailing market, angling for a piece of Uber Technologi­es Inc. after spreading its bets across a trio of Asian startups.

The Japanese tech giant has approached Uber about taking a multibilli­on-dollar stake in the San Francisco company, people familiar with the matter said, an offer that would muddy an already confusing mix of alliances and competitor­s in the global ride-hailing business.

SoftBank is a big investor in the three largest Asian ride-hailing companies: Singapore’s GrabTaxi Holdings Pte., India’s Ola and China’s Didi Chuxing Technology Co. On Monday, SoftBank confirmed it and Didi would lead a $2.5 billion fundraisin­g round in Grab, giving the startup more ammo in its battle against Uber across Southeast Asia.

SoftBank’s talks with Uber are described as preliminar­y and onesided, and any deal would likely be on hold until Uber hires a new chief executive, which isn’t expected for weeks, the people familiar with the matter said.

An Uber spokesman declined to comment. SoftBank didn’t immediatel­y respond to a request for comment.

While it is rare for SoftBank to hedge its investment­s, an offer could mean it hopes Uber combines its operations with Grab and Ola, as it did last year with Didi. Such a merger would give SoftBank a formidable SPECIAL share of the Asian market.

Uber, which is struggling with management challenges at home and strong competitio­n from rivals overseas, has shown a willingnes­s to retreat from costly battles around the world. Earlier this month it said it plans to combine its operations with Russian rival Yandex.Taxi, owned by Yandex NV.

Uber co-founder Travis Kalanick relinquish­ed his role as chief executive last month after an investigat­ion into sexual harassment and sexism at the company, although he remains a director.

SoftBank and Didi will pour as much as $2 billion into Grab, which operates private-car, taxi, motorcycle and carpool bookings across seven countries Asia.

The deal would value Grab at more than $6 billion, making it the region’s most-valuable startup, according to a person familiar with the situation.

Southeast Asia’s ride-hailing market could grow to $13.1 billion by 2025-from $2.5 billion in 2015accord­ing to a report last year by Alphabet Inc.’s Google and Singapore state-investment firm Temasek Holdings.

Source: The Wall Street Journal

 ?? PHOTO: ISTOCK ?? SoftBank’s talks with Uber are described as preliminar­y, and any deal would likely be on hold until Uber hires a new chief executive
PHOTO: ISTOCK SoftBank’s talks with Uber are described as preliminar­y, and any deal would likely be on hold until Uber hires a new chief executive

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