Gulf News

Alibaba to lead $1b funding for start-up

Financing from the Chinese eCommerce giant and Ant Financial to value Ele.me at $5.5b to $6b

-

Alibaba Group Holding Ltd and its financial services affiliate plan to lead an investment round of at least $1 billion (Dh3.67 billion) in Ele.me, one of the largest players in a crowded Chinese food-delivery service arena, people familiar with the matter say.

The financing from Alibaba and Ant Financial will value Ele.me at $5.5 billion to $6 billion and help it compete with a rival service backed by Tencent Holdings Ltd, the people said, requesting not to be named because the matter is private.

Alibaba is vying for supremacy with the Tencent-backed start-up, Meituan Dianping, in a local services industry primed for growth as people turn to their smartphone­s or the web to order food, schedule beauty treatments and hire domestic helpers. Sales of such services are expected to reach 7.28 trillion yuan ($1.1 trillion) this year.

The funding for Ele.me underscore­s how venture-capital flow in China remains resilient despite the nation’s economic slowdown: start-up investment­s surged 40 per cent to $6 billion in the first quarter, CB Insights estimates.

While meal-delivery businesses around the world have struggled for profits, China’s two largest internet companies see on-demand services as a way to promote their lucrative online payments services. Growth in domestic food and restaurant transactio­ns also outstrips many other retail segments in the world’s second largest economy. Alibaba is already the biggest shareholde­r of Ele.me, which it uses to complement a separate service called Koubei that provides restaurant bookings and spa treatments.

Now, Tencent too intends to ramp up investment to catch its rival. It currently holds only a minor stake in Ele.me after a $1.25 billion fund-raising from Alibaba and Ant Financial in April 2016 diluted its holdings. The company, valued at about $4.5 billion at the time, had discussed a merger with Meituan — one of Tencent’s largest investment­s in the market — but talks fell apart, people familiar with the matter have said.

Tencent is now “putting up quite a big initiative around the restaurant vertical” to propel WeChat Pay, President Martin Lau told analysts on a postearnin­gs conference call in May. It had lost market share in restaurant­s but is “putting aside a pretty good budget to get back on the competitio­n front.”

 ?? Reuters ?? Alibaba headquarte­rs on the outskirts of Hangzhou. Alibaba is vying for supremacy with the Tencent-backed start-up, Meituan Dianping, in a local services industry.
Reuters Alibaba headquarte­rs on the outskirts of Hangzhou. Alibaba is vying for supremacy with the Tencent-backed start-up, Meituan Dianping, in a local services industry.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Arab Emirates