Oman Daily Observer

Uber to sell stake to Japan’s SoftBank

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NEW YORK: Scandal hit ride-sharing company Uber on Sunday announced a deal to sell a stake to Japan’s SoftBank, as the firm looks to turn a new page ahead of its planned IPO by 2019.

The move was unveiled shortly after reports emerged that its former CEO Travis Kalanick and an influentia­l investor had buried the hatchet in a long feud that paved the way for the acquisitio­n.

“We’ve entered into an agreement with a consortium led by SoftBank and Dragoneer on a potential investment,” Uber said in a statement. “We believe this agreement is a strong vote of confidence in Uber’s long-term potential,” it added.

“Upon closing, it will help fuel our investment­s in technology and our continued expansion at home and abroad, while strengthen­ing our corporate governance.”

The Japanese group, founded by billionair­e Masayoshi Son, expressed an interest several months ago in investing around $1 billion in Uber for a stake of at least 14 per cent.

But the deal was threatened by conflict between Kalanick and US venture capital firm Benchmark.

The latter filed a lawsuit against Kalanick, accusing him of fraud, breach of contract and of plotting to manipulate the board of directors to allow him to return as CEO following his resignatio­n in June.

The two parties reportedly reached an agreement on control of board seats, which included Benchmark putting its lawsuit on hold — while Kalanick will allow directors to vote on his future appointmen­ts to the three seats he oversees.

A deal would be positive for Uber, which is looking ahead to the future in the wake of recent repeated scandals.

Meanwhile, SoftBank has been diversifyi­ng through investment for several years, and has ventured into sectors outside its core mobile technology business — completing deals with the likes of French robotics firm Aldebaran and e-commerce with Chinese giant Alibaba.

It is sending tremors through the tech world with a its massive new Vision Fund — a venture capital fund with $100 billion coffers intended for startups and expected to dominate the industry so thoroughly it’s playfully referred to as a “gorilla.”

“SoftBank shows a remarkable amount of bravery, confidence and optimism to look to apply this much money in technology,” said Bill Maris, who started Google Ventures nearly a decade ago and runs his own California-based investment firm Section 32. “I can’t say it’s a wrong bet, if you think the trends in tech will continue in the future. I would be much more worried if SoftBank was saying tech is dead.”

Some investors worry that the Vision Fund will buy into start-ups at high prices, overinflat­ing the market, while crowding out other investors and prolonging the time it takes for young companies to go public.

SoftBank has outlined plans to focus on late-stage investment­s when startups are more establishe­d, and on investment­s of at least $100 million.

 ?? — Reuters ?? A man shows Uber app logo displayed on a mobile phone, as it is held up for a photograph in central London.
— Reuters A man shows Uber app logo displayed on a mobile phone, as it is held up for a photograph in central London.

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