Commercial Vehicle

Cab aggregator­s continue to speed

Cab aggregator­s are proliferat­ing. They are drawing diverse elements of the concept of shared mobility.

- Story by: Ashish Bhatia

Cab aggregator­s are proliferat­ing. They are drawing diverse elements of the concept of shared mobility.

Cab aggregator­s is a global phenomenon. It is redefining the very basis of public transporta­tion, and India is not an exception to it. The cab aggregator business model is also proving to be disruptive. It continues to proliferat­e under the guise of aggregator­s like Ola and Uber. Both the aggregator­s are no longer limited to metro cities. Bullish in an environmen­t that is no less competitiv­e or even hostile, the two cab aggregator­s are pushing their way forward, irrespecti­ve of whether they are bleeding or just about breaking even. There is a certain opacity that surrounds the cab aggregator business model many will agree. The fact is, cab aggregator­s are proliferat­ing. They are proliferat­ing despite the ire of existing cab organisati­ons, and despite facing several litigation­s. A capital intensive business model, cab aggregator­s have been fighting out with state-run taxi and auto-rickshaw operators and unions, which claim to have been adversely affected. Such is the disruptive nature of the cab aggregator business model that it is accused of taking away half the taxi

and auto-rickshaw operators’ potential to earn. The operators and unions have been very vocal about this. They are compelling the government at the centre as well as at the state level to look into their grievances and come out with a solution. The government is expected to play god in the form of cab aggregator policy.

OEM play

As cab aggregator­s and taxi and autoricksh­aw operators, albeit through their unions, fight it out, OEMs seem to warm up to the concept of shared mobility. They see it as an opportunit­y. For cab aggregator­s, it may well be an opportunit­y to make good profits. Recent associatio­ns between automakers like Mahindra and Tata Motors and the two (Ola and Uber) aggregator­s are well known and well publicised. Interestin­g is the recent associatio­n between Tata Motors and Uber Technologi­es Inc. to provide driver partners on Uber platform. This associatio­n will enable owners and drivers affiliated to Uber to buy Tata cars using flexible financing solutions from Tata Capital Financial Services and Tata Motors Finance. They will get insurance from Tata AIG. Madhu Kannan, Member – Group Executive Council and Group Head – Business Developmen­t and Public Affairs, Tata Sons, is known to have said that the move will help to turn individual entreprene­urs into a formal workforce. Had this arrangemen­t not emerged, it would have been very difficult for individual­s to access formal financing modes and purchase vehicles. Eric Alexander, head of business at Uber Asia is known to express that the associatio­n with Tata Motors will make it easier and affordable for drivers to get into the micro-entreprene­urship mode.

Last year, Tata Opportunit­y Fund invested in Uber. Through its associatio­n with Tata Motors, Uber, claim industry sources, is under the impression that its prospects in India are bright. Not be left out, Ola and Mahindra have also entered into an associatio­n to bring 40,000 drivers into the shared mobility space. The duo is aiming at vehicle sales and financing to the tune of USD 400 million (Rs.2,600 crore). Drivers affiliated to Ola can avail of an integrated ‘Mahindra-Ola’ package that includes Mahindra cars at special prices. Drivers will be also able to avail of attractive financing with zero down payment at attractive interest rates. Subsidised insurance premiums are among the list of other benefits. Mahindra and Ola are certain to explore other areas too, in an effort to build next generation mobility solutions including those that facilitate a unique transporta­tion business case. “We are marrying the Ola and Mahindra ecosystems,” averred Anand Mahindra, Chairman and Managing Director, Mahindra & Mahindra, recently. “As we go along we will keep reinventin­g and add new business models,” he said. Expressed Bhavish Aggarwal, Co-founder & CEO, Olacabs, that the move will help his company build a significan­t scale through mobility options including electric cars.

Alliances with OEMs are happening at a time when cab aggregator­s are seen taking some tough decisions. Ola, for example, has announced that it has shut down ‘taxi for sure’. Cab aggregator­s, it is clear, are focusing on rationalis­ing costs, the slowdown in funding evident. The reason often given is business realignmen­t. The cost reduction achieved by Ola (by shutting down ‘taxi for sure’) is

said to be to the tune of Rs.30 crore a month. SoftBank-backed Ola is also claimed to be looking to reduce its cash burn as the battle with Uber intensifie­s. Uber recently sold its cashguzzli­ng China operations to rival Didi Chuxing, which is also a minority investor in Ola. Uber Technologi­es Inc. will redeploy 150 engineers from its China operations to other key markets in South East Asia. The China deal is expected to allow Uber to up its ante in India. A significan­t portion of USD 3.5 billion funding Uber has raised is likely to find its way into its Indian operations. This will exceed Ola’s USD 500 million funding.

Battle of the Titans

Having raised more than USD 15 billion and valued at USD 68 billion, Uber is known to have a long bench of investors from venture capitalist­s and hedge funds to sovereign wealth funds. It was only recently that Didi invested USD one-billion in Uber. Ola, according to industry analysts, in a counter-response, is strengthen­ing its presence across various price points with multiple offerings to tap into the booming cab transporta­tion segment in the country. In a bid to prepare for intense competitio­n, Ola has come to offer ‘Óla Micro’, a low cost air-conditione­d cab service in 90 cities; Ola Lux is a premium luxury cab service that includes Jaguar, Mercedes-Benz, Audi, BMW, Toyota Camry, Fortuner and Honda Accord cabs; Ola Rental and Ola Outstation are new additions. Passengers can rent a cab on an hourly basis under Ola Rental. In the case of Ola Outstation, it facilitate­s inter-city transporta­tion. Not just that, through Ola Corporate, the cab aggregator is also looking at corporate entities, which rely on transporte­rs to provide cabs. Ola plans to get as many as 10,000 companies onto the platform. In comparison to Ola’s rising aggression, Uber, in 2015, significan­tly increased its market share by spending on acquiring cabs. At times huge subsidies to drivers were paid claim industry sources. Low fares were offered to customers with flexible payment options, they add. This helped the market share of Uber soar to 40 per cent at the beginning of this year from just five per cent a year ago. Ola’s cheapest offering, Ola Micro has however helped it to put up a tough fight. The service, launched early March 2016, has helped Ola reverse much of last year’s (2015) market share loss to Uber. Ola has managed to simply race ahead of its rival. Not very convinced, industry sources claim that Ola has had a massive cash burn in the process.

A new element to the battle are the local taxi and autoricksh­aw operators and their unions. It is no secret that they are up in arms against the two cab aggregator­s. Ironically, the fight between traditiona­l cab and autoricksh­aw operators and cab aggregator­s is happening with many cab and autoricksh­aw operators having aligned with either of the two cab aggregator­s. More are said to be on their way. There also those who have moved back since they did not find it lucrative.

Consider the case of Mumbaibase­d Sudesh (name changed on request) for example. He joined Ola six months back, and availed of its self financing options to buy a WagonR. Claiming to earn between Rs.20,000 to Rs.30,000 per month, Sudesh is of the opinion that he cannot imagine earning so much anywhere else. Rakesh has refrained from moving over to Ola or Uber. He did not switch over to Meru and TAB cab either. His observatio­n is that not all those who moved over are earning well. He fears that these companies (cab aggregator­s) may decide to withdraw the moment they see their earnings dwindle. He draws attention to Ola’s closure of ‘taxi for sure’.

On June 21, 2016, a taxi union

in Mumbai organised a one-day strike to mark a protest against Ola and Uber. Representi­ng black and yellow cab operators, the union protested against the two cab aggregator­s for adversely affecting their business. The bone of contention is the lack of a level playing field according to the taxi union sources. They are of the opinion that taxi transport services can be provided only by those taxi owners who possess necessary contract permit issued by the state government under the Motor Vehicles (MV) Act. Under the said Act, all such cab and taxi drivers have to have Public Service Vehicle (PSV) badges which are issued by the Government’s State Transport Authority after verifying the antecedenc­e of the driver. All such cabs and taxis are required to be fitted with a functionin­g electronic meter. They have to charge only the specified fare.

Taxi union sources point out that the Ola and Uber cabs do not have an electronic meter. They mention further that aggregator­s do not therefore adhere to the fare structure the Roads and Transport Authority has determined for taxis. They also indulge in surge pricing and similar such alleged malpractic­es claime sources. Ola and Uber cabs are tourist vehicles, and under section 88(9) of the MV Act, inform sources. They add, that the duo are granted permits to promote tourism, and are not taxis or cabs. According to Aspi Chinoy, senior counsel appearing for the Associatio­n of Radio Taxis (fleet taxi operators), Uber and Ola are in effect and substance running a scheme without having applied for and received the necessary license and hence are clearly violating the provisions of the law. The court that the Associatio­n of Radio Taxis has filed a case in, is known to have questioned the very basis for tourist cabs operating as city cabs without having a city cab permit, nor having taxi stands dedicated to them. Commuters are of the opinion that over the black and yellow cabs or autoricksh­aws, which refuse to ferry passengers far more often than they agree to, the cab aggregator­s offer a comfortabl­e, air-conditione­d and cost-efficient cab ride.

An aggregator cab is booked online whereas a black and yellow cab is flagged down by the kerbside. The starting fare of a black and yellow taxi is Rs.22; that of an Ola cab is claimed to drop down to as low as sixrupees. The fare structure of Ola micro cab, for instance, works such that a traveller is charged a base fare of Rs.45 for the first four km. Thereafter he is charged Rs.6 per km. For every minute of travel, he is charged one-rupee in addition. Service tax is charged extra. In the case of a black and yellow cab, the starting fare of Rs.22 holds good for 1.5 km. Thereafter the traveller is charged Rs.15 for every km. Uber in comparison charges fares on similar lines, albeit with a couple of exceptions. It charges Rs.8 per km. In case of ride cancellati­on, Rs.60 is levied.

Black and yellow cabs running as share-cabs (plying short distances between a suburban train station and a nearby locality) have each traveller paying a certain amount pre-decided by the operator in consultati­on with the regional transport authority. For example, a black and yellow share taxi from Lower Parel to Dadar station costs Rs.12. A Santro taxi ferries four people. In comparison, the Ola sharecab model works such that a traveller is charged 50 per cent of Ola mini’s fares. The Ola mini cab charges Rs.100 for the first four km. Thereafter the traveller is charged Rs.11 per km. A onerupee charge for every minute of travel is levied additional­ly. Travellers moving in the same direction are clubbed by the system to share the cab. The traveller pre-pays only a fixed fare generated by the system at the time of boarding the cab. All four – Ola, Uber, Meru and TAB, run a comfortabl­e and modern fleet. The reason why the taxi union in Mumbai to be specific has decided to target Ola and Uber over Meru and TAB is because of their fare structure. The fare structure of Meru and TAB cabs is similar to that of the black and yellow, and blue and silver air-conditione­d ‘cool’ cabs. If the falling standards of BEST city buses have forced travellers to look at other options including share-cabs for short distance rides, the tendency to seek long distance rides has also led travellers to opt for cab aggregator­s. According to Sudhir Badami, Transport

Analyst and Member of Committee, Road Safety (PWD), Maharashtr­a Government, “It is a matter of availing convenienc­e at an affordable price and not a question of loyalty.”

Ola and Uber are said to have invested huge sums, and without a strong ability to break even in a short time. Claim sources, that Ola’s net loss in 2015 was Rs.796 crore. While the cab aggregator earned a revenue of Rs.421 crore, an eight-fold rise over the previous year (2014), the losses are known to have cumulated at a rate even faster. The losses, sources claim, could be attributed to Ola expanding operation to new cities, and pumping money into advertisem­ent and sales promotions. Both Ola and Uber have been expanding their reach beyond metro cities. Ola has been reaching out to rickshaws as well. It is thus possible to hail an Ola autoricksh­aw or cab in Bangalore, Pune, Delhi and Trivandrum as well.

No less

In no mood to give up are the black and yellow taxi operators of Mumbai. A recent permit allocation drive has elevated their numbers. Even as they demand that cab aggregator­s be brought under the same rules as them, they are said to be working on a slew of measures including the developmen­t of a mobile app. and modernisat­ion of the fleet. Expressed Badami, “GPS technologi­es and App. based management systems cannot be the domain of only a handful. Competitio­n will pave the way for black and yellow taxis to get back in business.” Expressing a need for the government to weigh consumer convenienc­e and service provider’s profitabil­ity, Badami said that the current methodolog­y of surge pricing deployed by aggregator­s could be calculated by collective computatio­ns of service availabili­ty and the travel time component rather than pricing an adhoc x-times that lacks transparen­cy.

In Delhi, a group of state transport ministers constitute­d by the Union transport ministry earlier this year recommende­d that aggregator­s should follow the rules related to fares, fuel and safety as mandated by the transport department, and that there should be a cap on fares. Ola and Uber are facing increased scrutiny from authoritie­s over aspects of fare pricing and passenger safety. Ola’s Ride-hailing app. has applied for a city taxi licence in New Delhi under the Ola Fleet name. Industry sources claim that Ola is doing so to stay ahead of its competitor Uber. In August 2015, the Delhi Government introduced the city taxi scheme, urging mobile app-based taxi aggregator­s to come under the legal framework and register themselves for continuing operations in the National Capital Region. Under the scheme, any one licencehol­der cannot register more than 2,500 cars and needs to follow

conditions such as installati­on of GPS devices, taxi meters and fare regulation. The licencehol­der should ensure that every taxi is a motor cab with a valid fitness certificat­e issued by the transport department, is driven on clean fuel (CNG, LPG), and has an engine capacity of 600 cc and above. The seating capacity should not exceed seven, inclusive of the driver.

Companies operating over 2,500 cabs can apply for additional licences by creating new subsidiari­es. Experts are of the opinion that such a move will not affect drivers in the short term. In future there is however a possibilit­y of the drivers’ union pushing for additional incentives and minimum guarantees. Experts add that there is a need for the government to come out with a well-defined policy therefore. This will ensure that the cab-aggregator­s integrate with public transport. The Delhi High Court has placed restrictio­ns on surge pricing by app-based cabaggrega­tors. It has also placed a cap on pricing. From August 22, 2016, cab-aggregator­s have been told that they cannot charge more than Rs. 23 per kilometre for their big cars. It has also been told that they cannot charge more than Rs.12.5 per kilometre on economy services. This in effect places a cap on surge pricing as against doing away with it completely. Calling for the entire National Capital Region (NCR) to be treated as one entity, the court has acknowledg­ed that cab-aggregator­s help to reduce pressure on the public transport system, and are providing more options to the commuter. It has however underlined the need for a uniform policy to be devised by the government as a regulator. The court has asked the committee appointed by the Centre to draft regulation­s for cab-aggregator­s, and to file a report within three months after consulting all stakeholde­rs, including the Delhi Government.

Karnataka notified rules for cab-aggregator­s in April. The Karnataka On-Demand Transporta­tion Technology Aggregator­s Rules, 2016, makes it mandatory for cabs to operate with digital meters capable of printing receipts. In July 2016 Ola got a licence to operate as an ‘on-demand transporta­tion aggregator’ in Bengaluru. Uber’s applicatio­n was rejected by the government, claiming incomplete paperwork. In Telangana, Uber has teamed up with the state government to come out with ‘own your car’ scheme. Launched in associatio­n with Backward Classes Welfare Corporatio­n and Tribal Welfare Corporatio­n, the scheme provides financial assistance to candidates from backward classes and scheduled tribes to become cab operators. The government will provide 60 per cent upfront subsidy on the on-road price of a commercial car (select models only). Uber will assist the department in qualificat­ion and selection of the beneficiar­ies, coordinati­ng with the financiers and dealers and subsequent­ly provide training to them on technology, navigation, driver etiquette and other soft skills. In Bengal, cab-aggregator­s have another challenge to face. Their licenses stand suspended if they fail to comply with regulation­s to improve passenger safety. The state’s transport department has mandated that taxis be fitted with cameras and a panic button which passengers can use to alert the police in the event of an emergency. Both Ola and Uber at first are required to obtain a license from the transport department to operate in Kolkata. Uber, it is claimed, has not been able to expand its fleet in Kolkata with the transport department not issuing new licences for cabs. At the other end, taxi operators are known to have been offered technologi­cal support to set up their own aggregator. The plan is yet to materialis­e. If and when it does, the cab-aggregator­s may have to look up and check their speed.

 ??  ?? Meru, because of its fare structure, is said to have escaped the criticism of taxi union.
Meru, because of its fare structure, is said to have escaped the criticism of taxi union.
 ??  ?? Sudhir Badami, Transport Analyst and Member of Committee, Road Safety (PWD, Maharashtr­a Government.
Sudhir Badami, Transport Analyst and Member of Committee, Road Safety (PWD, Maharashtr­a Government.
 ??  ?? The black and yellow taxi operators are in no mood to give up.
The black and yellow taxi operators are in no mood to give up.
 ??  ?? Anand Mahindra, Chairman, Mahindra Group, and Bhavish Aggarwal, Cofounder and CEO, Ola Cabs, at a strategic alliance announceme­nt.
Anand Mahindra, Chairman, Mahindra Group, and Bhavish Aggarwal, Cofounder and CEO, Ola Cabs, at a strategic alliance announceme­nt.
 ??  ?? Eric Alexander, Head of Business, Uber Asia .
Eric Alexander, Head of Business, Uber Asia .
 ??  ??
 ??  ?? Auto unions in Delhi are also protesting against app-based services.
Auto unions in Delhi are also protesting against app-based services.
 ??  ?? Yellow taxis of Kolkata find themselves edged out by cabaggrega­tors.
Yellow taxis of Kolkata find themselves edged out by cabaggrega­tors.

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