The National - News

SCOOTER SHARING OPERATOR LIME ON THE BACK FOOT

▶ The company’s strong Chinese links in its supply chain mean that US tariffs are hampering its operations

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The scooter-sharing service Lime warned the US government earlier this year of an existentia­l threat to its business. Paying new tariffs on Chinese vehicles would require Lime either to absorb significan­t new costs, charge customers more or fundamenta­lly reshape its supply chain, the company argued in an official request for an exemption. Choosing any of these options would “stunt Lime’s growth and threaten the survival of its existing services”.

Over the last two years, a wave of scooter-sharing companies have emerged, based on the belief that American urbanites are hungry for alternativ­es to car travel. Their business models also relied on another assumption: that they would always be able to import large numbers of low-cost vehicles from China.

For Lime, based in San Francisco, the Chinese connection­s ran particular­ly deep. Brad Bao and Toby Sun, its co-founders, were both born in China, and they sold the start-up to investors as a company that maintained a foot in their home country. Having two Chinese founders “who had the relationsh­ips, and can set up that operation quickly, was a real advantage”, said Joe Kraus, who invested in Lime in 2018 as a partner at one of Google’s venture capital businesses, GV, before subsequent­ly becoming Lime’s chief operating officer four months later.

President Donald Trump’s aggressive trade policies complicate that story. Countless American companies find themselves stuck in the middle of the competitio­n between the US and China. Markets plummeted last week after the president indicated he was inclined not to make a trade deal soon – then recovered on signs that a deal could come before American tariffs are set to rise on Sunday. Companies have filed about 44,000 requests for tariff exemptions, and about 5,000 have been approved. The US Trade Representa­tive rejected Lime’s request, along with similar ones from Bird Rides and Uber Technologi­es.

Scooter imports from China to the US this year total nearly $300 million (Dh1.1 billion), according to research compiled for Bloomberg by IHS Markit’s Global Trade Atlas. This puts the importers on the hook for about $74m in tariffs, a significan­t added expense for the money-bleeding start-ups that dominate the scooter industry.

Lime has raised almost $800m since its founding in 2017, and investors valued the company at $2.4 billion in its most recent funding round in February this year. It is close to completing another round of investment that will add hundreds of millions of dollars to its coffers, according to an investor who did not want to be identified discussing private fundraisin­g plans.

Mr Bao, who has been Lime’s chief executive since May, was more sanguine about trade issues in a recent interview than the company was in its filing earlier this year. “We are not getting unnecessar­ily nervous,” he said, adding that Lime could be profitable as soon as next year. The company’s calculatio­ns rely on improvemen­ts to the durability of its vehicles, which Lime attributes largely to its manufactur­ing expertise. When asked what would happen if Chinese manufactur­ing receded as a viable option, Mr Bao waved the idea off. “That doesn’t come to our mind,” he said.

Yet Lime has already begun to take steps to relieve its exposure to tariffs. The start-up imported more than 30,000 vehicles in the months before the first round of tariffs went into effect last August, according to Steve Ferreira, CEO of Ocean Audit, which tracks the global movement of goods. Lime’s imports since that time amount to, as Mr Ferreira puts it, “almost zilch”.

Like many companies caught up in the trade war, Lime at times had trouble navigating the new landscape. Last year the company, along with a consultant it had hired, misclassif­ied Lime’s scooter imports in a way that resulted in it not paying higher tariffs even after they were implemente­d, according to sources. Lime executives later uncovered the practice, and told the government, paying for the tariffs it had avoided. The case is now closed, according to a company spokeswoma­n.

Lime is now considerin­g moving some manufactur­ing out of China and into SouthEast Asia, according to a source. Mr Kraus described relocating manufactur­ing capabiliti­es as one of many options the company has to mitigate trade-related risks but declined to say whether it has already begun doing so. “We’ve got plans in place, whether it’s short, mid or long-term,” he said. A spokeswoma­n later said the company has not moved any operations out of China.

Lime’s Chinese connection­s are a key part of its culture, said people who work there. At its Redwood City, California, office, some employees greet one another and chat in Mandarin. Shelves of scooter helmets clutter the hallways, along with stacks of dried seaweed snacks and individual packs of Nongshim Shin instant ramen. In the car park on a recent afternoon, a man in a Lime helmet waved goodbye and yelled out “zaijian” to his colleagues as he scooted away. Lime likes to see itself as hardchargi­ng even by the standards of tech start-ups. “As a Chinese company, they move fast,” said Christine Chang, who was senior manager of Lime’s logistics and supply chain operation until this summer.

Speaking alternatel­y in Mandarin and English, she said she was drawn to the company because of its Chinese-born founders and Chinese-speaking staff.

Mr Bao switches between downplayin­g and celebratin­g Lime’s ties to China. “We are born and bred in the US,” he said, pointing out that Lime was founded in California. A few minutes later he argued that Lime was better prepared than its competitor­s to navigate sensitive internatio­nal relationsh­ips. His Chinese upbringing, he said, “does really help with that”. Mr Bao traces his own entreprene­urship to an ill-fated attempt to sell Nirvana T-shirts on the streets of Wuhan, China, when he was 14. It was the early 1990s, and the band was at the peak of its prominence. Yet Chinese teenagers didn’t wear band shirts, opting instead for plain T-shirts. The business flopped. The lesson Mr Bao took away, he said, was not to get too far ahead of the market.

Mr Bao, 44, moved to the US in 2003 to attend Berkeley’s business school. After graduating, he joined Tencent Holdings, as the general manager of its US operation. The job came with a $48,000 annual salary and no equity in the company, which is now worth $400 billion. After a stint as an investor, he started Lime in January 2017 with Mr Sun, who he knew through a business school alumni group.

The two men were fixated on

Lime has raised almost $800m since its founding in 2017, and investors valued it at $2.4bn in its last funding round

the growing Chinese trend of bike-sharing, where companies blanketed city streets with vehicles and let people unlock them with smartphone apps. They thought it would work in the US. There was more interest for bike-sharing than there had been for Nirvana T-shirts in 1990s China, but not much more. Lime only began to look like a huge hit when it added scooters following the sudden success of Bird in late 2017.

In the US, the main distinctio­ns between Lime and Bird’s product offerings are the colour schemes. When Bird and other rivals first launched their scooter-sharing businesses, they used off-the-shelf vehicles, adding their own software and branding. But Lime has always claimed a more sophistica­ted supply chain operation than its rivals.

From the beginning, it maintained operations in both China and the US. Its business in Shenzhen is run by Adam Zhang, who is described within the company as its third founder. Mr Zhang, who was previously CEO of a Beijing e-bike company, is responsibl­e for leading Lime’s Shenzhen team in hardware design, production and supply chain management, according to his LinkedIn profile. About 90 of the company’s 750 employees are based in China. The decision to invest in a full-time Asia operation was critical to their strategy, said Connie Chan, general partner at Andreessen Horowitz, an early Lime investor.

Through its wide network of Chinese manufactur­ers, Lime was able to seek deeper control from day one, according to Bo Hu, its director of engineerin­g. The company sourced components from various suppliers – a battery from one factory, a controller from another, a motor from a third, said Mr Hu. The custom-made scooters are intended both to develop vehicles with Lime-specific features, and to build longer-lasting vehicles, because the rate of deteriorat­ion is one of the major factors determinin­g the economic viability of scooter-sharing companies.

“To get your vehicles to last a long time, you have to build them from scratch,” said Mr Kraus. (Bird now says it also works with multiple partners to make custom vehicles for its service.)

Lime’s manufactur­ing record has not been spotless. Last year it pulled about 2,000 vehicles from the streets after some began to smoulder or even catch fire. The company blamed manufactur­ing problems related to the battery used by Segway Ninebot, one of its suppliers. The two companies stopped working together shortly thereafter. Lime works with at least three Chinese manufactur­ers, including Dong Guan Honglin Industrial, according to sources. Replacing these relationsh­ips with new ones outside China would come with at least short-term increases in cost, according to Ms Chang, the former supply chain manager.

Even if Lime did choose to move manufactur­ing facilities to a country such as Vietnam, it would likely have to ship raw materials from China, or source locally. Lime would also lose the benefit of its experience in China. “When you go to another country, they have a lot of quality issues, manufactur­ing issues,” said Ms Chang.

Lime’s decision to stock up ahead of the tariffs is also leading to a new liability in the coming months. The company maintains at least a dozen warehouses across the US, where it keeps unused vehicles overnight, or for longer stints.

At times there have been tens of thousands of scooters sitting in storage. Storage capacity can be stretched in the winter in cold-weather cities, when many of Lime’s scooters enter a state of semi-hibernatio­n. All those tariff-free scooters Lime bought in last year will have to go somewhere, and warehouse space isn’t free.

 ?? Bloomberg ?? Lime cofounders Toby Sun and Brad Bao at the company’s headquarte­rs in San Mateo, California
Bloomberg Lime cofounders Toby Sun and Brad Bao at the company’s headquarte­rs in San Mateo, California
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