Business Standard

Philippine­s allows Uber to continue operations

-

The Philippine­s’ anti-trust agency said on Saturday it has ordered Uber Technologi­es Inc to continue domestic operations as it reviews the ride hailing firm’s deal to sell its moneylosin­g Southeast Asian business to rival Grab.

The move puts another hurdle in the transactio­n, following an order by Singapore’s competitio­n watchdog that Uber delay its shutdown by a week because of an ongoing review.

“Uber’s compliance with our anti-trust counterpar­t in Singapore to extend the operation of its app indicates the feasibilit­y of continuing its operations in the Philippine­s as well,” Philippine Competitio­n Commission (PCC) chairman Arsenio Balisacan said in a statement.

The Philippine business of Uber was supposed to shut down on April 8.

The anti-trust body also tasked Uber and Grab to maintain the independen­ce of their business operations, including ride hailing and delivery platforms, and customer and rider database.

Uber declined to comment while Grab did not immediatel­y comment. Uber and Grab announced the deal late last month, marking the U.S. company’s second retreat from an Asian market.

“This virtual monopolisa­tion of the market by Grab can harm the riding public,” said PCC, which started its review on Tuesday.

The Philippine transporta­tion agency caps the number of ride-sharing vehicles at 65,000 across all brands and reviews the figure every three months.

Uber previously sold operations in China and Russia to local rivals under former CEO Travis Kalanick. In Europe, the company has faced protests, court battles and bans after some local authoritie­s and taxi drivers said it did not abide by the same rules on insurance, licensing and safety.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India