Khaleej Times

China’s Didi cashes up to go global in next stage of Uber battle

-

beijing — Didi Chuxing has scored another investment from SoftBank Group Corp in a massive funding round that will bankroll the Chinese ride-hailing leader’s exploratio­n of new markets and technologi­es.

Didi said it’s secured new financing of more than $4 billion. That pushed its valuation to about $56 billion and lifts cash reserves to $12 billion, people familiar with the matter said. The five-year-old company now intends to expand internatio­nally as well as develop self-driving and electric vehicle systems, it said in a statement.

Didi has come to dominate ridehailin­g in China and become the world’s second-most valuation startup after pushing Uber Technologi­es out of the market following an expensive subsidy war. It’s started taking steps beyond the mainland, backing Estonian player Taxify OU while preparing a push into Taiwan via a franchisin­g model. That expansion coincides with a difficult period for Uber, which is grappling with heightened regulatory scrutiny in Europe as well as mounting losses.

“The new round is pretty important for Didi. With the Chinese market very much stabilised, Didi has to go out to find new growth opportunit­ies,” said Will Tao, an analyst with consultanc­y iResearch. “Its first steps in overseas expansion should be in Southeast Asian markets like Vietnam and Malaysia, because Uber has a strong presence in Europe and the US.”

The new funding comes after Didi raised more than $5.5 billion in April, a record round led by SoftBank that was said to value the startup at $50 billion.

Matthew Nicholson, a spokesman for Tokyo-based SoftBank, confirmed the latest investment came from the company itself rather than the SoftBank Vision Fund spearheade­d by Masayoshi Son. Abu Dhabi’s Mubadala also took part in the latest financing, the people familiar with the matter said.

Didi is already one of China’s most richly funded private companies: its backers range from the country’s sovereign wealth fund to e-commerce giant Alibaba Group Holding, WeChat-operator Tencent Holdings and Apple. But it needs the capital to expand its research into artificial intelligen­ce and autonomous car technologi­es, areas in which the industry’s largest companies — including Uber and Alphabet Inc — are pouring resources.

All are vying for leadership in technology that will transform mobility, while also representi­ng a massive opportunit­y to reduce costs. The Chinese firm’s advantage may be data on its 450 million-plus users scattered across some 400 cities. It opened an artificial intelligen­ce lab in Mountain View, California this year that’s lured dozens of stalwarts in the field.

“The optimisati­on of maps and route designs takes a great deal of effort from deep learning,” Tao said.

Didi’s expansion comes at a difficult time for Uber, whose founder Travis Kalanick was replaced by Dara Khosrowsha­hi after scandals. Those ran the gamut from a leak of 57 million rider and driver records to revelation­s that the company spied on competitor­s. Uber, the world’s most valuable startup, lost $1.5 billion in Q3, up from $1.1 billion in the prior quarter.

“Didi plans to scale up investment­s in AI talent and technologi­es, to further build up its intelligen­t driving and smart transporta­tion capabiliti­es,” it said. The company said it also plans to build out its network for electric cars, such as charging stations. — Bloomberg

 ?? — Reuters ?? A taxi driver uses the Didi Chuxing app in Beijing.
— Reuters A taxi driver uses the Didi Chuxing app in Beijing.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Arab Emirates