Shanghai Daily

Alibaba may merge food delivery units to step up battle against rival

- SERVICE (Reuters)

ALIBABA Group plans to merge its food delivery units and raise funds for the combined business, intensifyi­ng a battle with Tencent-backed Meituan Dianping for dominance of China’s booming on-demand services market.

The Alibaba units to be merged include food delivery platform Ele.me and food and lifestyle services firm Koubei, the people said.

Alibaba is looking to raise between US$3 billion and US$5 billion for the combined entity, said one source. The entity could be valued at up to US$25 billion, said another.

A Hong Kong-based Alibaba task force is working on the merger and fundraisin­g for the combined entity, according to two of the people.

Alibaba’s units and Meituan, backed by social media and gaming giant Tencent Holdings, are fighting for supremacy in China’s buoyant online-to-offline market where apps link smartphone users with bricksand-mortar businesses to provide local food delivery and other offerings.

“Alibaba and Meituan are the two main companies that can offer comprehens­ive O2O services,” said Mo Jia, a Shanghai-based research analyst with technology consultanc­y Canalys. “Alibaba’s three units are complement­ary to each other and it has strategic logic to merge them into one platform to compete with Meituan.”

One of the people said the fundraisin­g was expected to launch later this year. The person said the new unit would also include Alibaba’s Hema Fresh, a chain of cashless supermarke­ts offering fresh produce and food delivery.

Alibaba, which also handles media queries for Koubei and Hema, declined to comment. A spokesman for Ele.me denied the merger and fundraisin­g plan. All the people declined to be named as the informatio­n is confidenti­al.

The value of O2O transactio­ns in China jumped 72 percent last year to US$146 billion, according to Chinese research firm Analysys.

According to a June report by Chinese research firm iiMedia Research, Ele.me and Baidu Waimai, which Ele.me acquired a year ago, held a combined 55 percent of China’s food delivery market in the first quarter compared with Meituan’s 41 percent.

China’s biggest ride-hailing firm, Didi Chuxing, also entered the fray in April launching its own food delivery service.

Meituan Dianping is expected to raise more than US$4 billion when it floats in Hong Kong in the coming months. Last year the company was valued at US$30 billion in a fundraisin­g round.

In April, Alibaba bought the shares it did not already own in Ele.me in an all-cash deal that valued the startup at US$9.5 billion.

The e-commerce giant and its financial affiliate Ant Financial Services Group previously owned a 43 stake in the business, whose name roughly translates to “Hungry?”.

Koubei, founded in 2015 as a 50-50 joint venture of Alibaba and Ant Financial, had a valuation of US$8 billion at the end of 2017, according to a list of unicorns published by a unit under China’s Ministry of Science and Technology in March.

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