Manila Bulletin

Grab vanquishes Uber with local strategy, billions from SoftBank

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As Uber Technologi­es, Inc. looked to conquer ride-sharing around the world, Grab was focused on serving the 620 million people that share its home in Southeast Asia.

Helped by the deep pockets of SoftBank Group Corp., Grab emerged the winner on Monday when Uber agreed to swap its business in the region for a 27.5 percent stake. The deal is a vindicatio­n for co-founder Anthony Tan’s strategy of tailoring services to local needs and working with incumbent taxi operators instead of against them.

With $4 billion raised from investors led by SoftBank, Tan has turned Grab into a ride-hailing juggernaut since it was born in a tiny Kuala Lumpur storage room about six years ago. Rich funding has helped him lure top talent and survive through the losses generated by a fierce battle with Uber to win over customers. Now the 36year-old Harvard grad, who spurned the family’s automotive empire in Malaysia to strike out on his own, has emerged stronger as he turns to his other significan­t competitor in the region, Indonesia’s Go-Jek.

“Anthony is a great leader, someone that I’ve learned a lot from,” said Jeremy Kranz, head of the technology investment group at GIC Pte, Singapore’s sovereign wealth fund.

The deeply religious Tan, who still attends Bible study classes, started Grab in his native Malaysia. With Harvard classmate Tan Hooi Ling, he kicked off operations for what was then known as MyTeksi in Kuala Lumpur, allowing users to book cabs.

Grab later relocated to Singapore and now provides a host of services from Indonesia to Vietnam and the Philippine­s. The company is valued at $6 billion by CB Insights, making it the most valuable startup in Southeast Asia.

Along the way Grab has been picking up talent, from engineers to product developers, as its funding helped woo them from household names in the technology world.

“In Southeast Asia, one of the most difficult things to build is tech talent,” Tan said at the Money 20/20 conference this month. “We’ve been able to build tech talent from Google, Facebook, Twitter, Microsoft. We’ve been very blessed. With that, we could build great products.”

That includes Ming Maa, a former executive at Goldman Sachs Group Inc. and SoftBank, who was hired as group president in 2016 and oversees Grab’s fundraisin­g, mergers and acquisitio­ns and other strategic issues.

Still, it’s not a clean victory. Go-Jek remains a potent rival, particular­ly in Indonesia as it moves beyond just ride-sharing to real-world service such as food delivery and hairdresse­rs on demand. Also, the US company is get- ting a bigger slice of Grab than it did when it sold out in China. Uber got less than 18 percent of Didi Chuxing in that deal, although it did get 36.6 percent of Yandex when it retreated from Russia.

To some, Grab’s victory may also have been the result of pressure from SoftBank to consolidat­e a global ridehailin­g empire and whittle down billions of dollars in losses.

“After investing $700 million in the region, we will hold a stake worth several billion dollars and strategic ownership in what we believe will be the winner in an important global region,” Uber CEO Dara Khosrowsha­hi said in a message posted on its website.

While Tan is the rare CEO to credit his success as part of God’s plan, others see more terrestria­l reasons behind his rise.

“A lot of guys have the ability to succeed, but it’s people like Anthony who end up winning,” said Amit Anand, managing partner of Jungle Ventures in Singapore. “He comes from the ground up, and he never forgot what got him there, versus people who never had to hustle.”

As the company expanded, it tailored services for new markets. For Indonesia, it operates GrabBike in a country where many are comfortabl­e traveling on a two-wheeler. In the Philippine­s, where Uber got into fights with regulators, Grab adopted a more cooperativ­e approach. (Bloomberg)

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