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Little-known multitaski­ng start-up hits $30b valuation

CHINESE COMPANY IS A MASH-UP OF GROUPON, YELP, FOODPANDA AND UBER EATS

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hina’s Meituan Dianping just became the world’s fourthmost valuable start-up, reaching a $30 billion (Dh110 billion) valuation that puts it ahead of high-fliers like Airbnb and Space X.

Never heard of Meituan? You’re not alone. The Beijing-based company, led by Wang Xing, is almost unknown beyond its home country. It delivers food to people’s homes, sells groceries and movie tickets, provides reviews of restaurant­s, and markets discounts to consumers who buy in groups. It’s a sort of mashup of Groupon, Yelp, Foodpanda and Uber Eats.

Meituan’s appeal for investors is its dominant position in a market of more than a billion people. It was formed through the 2015 merger of Meituan.com and Dianping.com, creating the leading player for internetba­sed services ordered via smartphone apps. It raised $4 billion in the latest round from Tencent Holdings, Sequoia Capital and US travel giant Priceline Group.

“It’s a quasi-monopoly built on the stomachs of 1.4 billion people,” said Keith Pogson, global assurance leader for banking and capital markets in Hong Kong at consultant EY.

Wang started Meituan. com in 2010 as a group-buying site similar to Groupon, where people can get discounts by buying electronic­s or restaurant meals together. Meituan is one of the new generation of Chinese technology companies that has rapidly gained popularity thanks to the rise of smartphone­s. Where Baidu, Alibaba and Tencent have come to be collective­ly known as BAT, new media upstart Jinri Toutiao, Meituan Dianping and ride-sharing king Didi Chuxing have now earned their own acronym: TMD.

The $30 billion (Dh110 billion) financing ranks the company fourth in the world in start-up valuations, according to CB Insights. The first three are Uber Technologi­es Inc, Didi and Chinese smartphone maker Xiaomi Corp.

EY’s Pogson however cautioned that valuations in China may be getting a bit overheated. Shares of private companies like Meituan and Uber aren’t traded in liquid markets every day, so valuations change only rarely and typically go up. In addition, many of the fundraisin­gs in China and the US are done with ratchets, or protection­s so that investors get compensati­on if the valuations fall later on.

“You have to take these numbers with a grain of salt,” he says. Dianping was founded in 2003 in Shanghai with reviews of restaurant­s and other local businesses, then diversifie­d into group discounts. The companies were valued at $15 billion when they merged two years ago.

The combined companies have far surpassed their US peers. Chicago-based Groupon, once a sensation in the US, has dropped to a market value of less than $3 billion. Yelp, based in San Francisco, has tumbled from its peak in 2014 to $3.6 billion.

Meituan Dianping has expanded well beyond its original businesses. With a few taps to navigate its smartphone apps, Chinese customers can order up hot meals, groceries, massages, haircuts and manicures at home or in the office. One popular service: You can get your car washed while you’re at work and it’s parked on the street — the service sends a photo to your phone to verify the job. Meituan says it now has 280 million annual active users and works with 5 million merchants.

Big market

The offerings, collective­ly known as online-to-offline or O2O services, may ultimately prove more successful in China than in the US. Labour costs are lower in China, cities are more densely populated and there are more people. The country’s O2O market surged 72 per cent to $115 billion (762 billion yuan) last year, according to estimates from consultant IResearch.

“China’s market is big enough for a company this size,” said Wang Ling, an analyst with IResearch. “After years of consolidat­ion, Meituan is one of the few contenders in areas with gigantic revenue.”

The combined companies have far surpassed their US peers. Groupon has dropped to a market value of less than $3 billion. Yelp has tumbled from its peak to $3.6 billion.

Meituan is facing increasing­ly stiff competitio­n from China’s technology giants and their proxies. In particular, Alibaba Group Holding has backed a rival service called Ele.me, which recently acquired Baidu’s business, Waimai. Alibaba, Tencent’s primary rival, is boosting its investment to bankroll expansions into more cities and businesses.

“Meituan faces so many competitor­s because of its wide range of business,” said Cao Lei, director of the China E-Commerce Research Center in Hangzhou. “Lifestyle e-commerce, which includes online travel and dining reservatio­ns, is one of the fastest growing sectors in the country.”

Travel is becoming the latest competitiv­e ground. With the recent fundraisin­g, Meituan plans to spend hundreds of millions of dollars over the next three to five years to become a leading travel booking site. It’s also exploring opportunit­ies to collaborat­e with Priceline as part of the investment. That may present a challenge to China’s biggest online travel site, Ctrip.com Internatio­nal, which is backed by Baidu.

In the latest funding, Meituan also received money from Canada Pension Plan Investment Board, Trustbridg­e Partners, Tiger Global Management, Coatue Management and the Singaporea­n sovereign wealth fund GIC. Meituan said it would use the cash to expand in artificial intelligen­ce and drone-delivery technology.

 ?? AP ?? A group of food delivery couriers of Chinese online food delivery company Meituan Waimai ride electric bikes to deliver meals on a road in Kaifeng city, central China’s Henan province. Customers prefer ordering food from an app in to eating outside in...
AP A group of food delivery couriers of Chinese online food delivery company Meituan Waimai ride electric bikes to deliver meals on a road in Kaifeng city, central China’s Henan province. Customers prefer ordering food from an app in to eating outside in...

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