MyTaxi expands as parent Daimler plots future of cars
frankfurt — MyTaxi is to begin converting London users of its acquired Hailo app to the German company’s smartphone software, as the unit of Daimler AG begins its fightback against Uber in the UK capital.
The Hamburg-based cab-hailing company has already moved more than 17,000 drivers who previously used the Hailo system to the MyTaxi app and plans to start converting UK customers this week, chief executive officer Andrew Pinnington said.
In London, more than 30,000 licensed private-hire drivers use the Uber app, according to a company spokesman.
Hailo, which opened for business in the UK in 2011, briefly expanded to the US and Canada, but pulled out of these markets in 2014 amid stiff local competition to focus on the UK, Ireland and Spain.
However, Hailo’s growth stalled. The total value of fares charged through the Hailo application in 2015 fell £3.3 million ($4 million), to £97.5 million, from a year earlier, according to accounts for HNH Group Ltd, published on the British business register on January 6.
Daimler last year merged the mostly European-based MyTaxi with UK rival Hailo, as it plots a future in which ride-hailing and carsharing services will replace some automobile ownership. The Ger-
Our phrase we use is we’re a constructive disruptor Andrew Pinnington, CEO, MyTaxi
man carmaker also has deal with Uber Technologies Inc in which Daimler says it will include its vehicles on Uber’s autonomouscar network in coming years.
Pinnington says MyTaxi, which recently acquired a rival in Greece and is eyeing the competitive French market, can be a “hedge against disintermediation” for parent Daimler. “Unlike some of the other services, we work with the authorities,” MyTaxi chief executive officer Andrew Pinnington said. “Our phrase we use is we’re a constructive disruptor.”
MyTaxi, which claims 120,000 registered drivers and more than six million users, supplies its parent with “billions of data points about how people move around European cities” that can be used to develop self-driving vehicles.
Unlike Uber, Hailo, MyTaxi and other taxi-hailing apps are intrinsically limited in the number of drivers they can deploy in a given city, since they use licensed cabbies to fill demand. They also can’t set their own fares. Daimler also offers Car2Go, a car-sharing service that lets consumers pick up a car on the street. The Stuttgart-based automaker is also working with small start-ups to find a technical edge in areas including manufacturing, and electronics and entertainment systems in its cars, noted for their luxe interiors.
MyTaxi and Car2Go “provide Daimler with an early look at how urban consumer behave,” J.P. Morgan auto analyst Jose Asumendi said in a recent note to clients. Using their data lets Daimler build models of European cities that could “potentially be useful when urban centers start incorporating automated taxis”, he said.
BMW AG, Daimler’s rival in the German luxury car market, has seen higher spending on electriccar and autonomous-driving technologies crimp profitability. BMW and rental car company Six SE have a car-sharing service called DriveNow. Volkswagen AG has funded Gett, which like Uber uses private drivers but eschews socalled surge pricing during periods of peak demand.
MyTaxi operates in 10 European countries including Germany, Ireland, Italy, Spain and Poland. Pinnington said he’s prioritising expansion in Scandinavia and Eastern Europe, and would reach a decision soon about France, where MyTaxi is absent.