India ride-hailing firm
Ola sideswiped as Uber, Didi team up in China
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[August 09, 2016]
By Aditya Kalra and Aditi Shah
NEW DELHI (Reuters) - Didi Chuxing's
acquisition of Uber's China business last week reshapes the
landscape in Asia's growing ride-hailing sector, and leaves India's
Ola more vulnerable to attack by Uber in its $12 billion home
market.
Four months ago, Ola executives met with Didi hoping the Chinese
firm would invest fresh capital to help it fight Uber Technologies
Inc which, with its deeper pockets, has made rapid inroads into
India.
They were told Didi wanted first to sort out its own challenges in
China, said a person with direct knowledge of Ola's plans. Didi and
Uber have raised and spent billions of dollars in a discount
slugfest to win drivers, passengers and market share in China.
Didi, now worth around $35 billion, last year invested about $30
million in Ola, which is also backed by Japan's SoftBank Group, and
the two are allies in an anti-Uber group that also includes
U.S.-based Lyft and Southeast Asia-focused Grab.
"This (Didi/Uber China) deal changes the dynamics of how they (Didi)
will invest in India," said the person, who didn't want to be named
because the discussions were private. If Didi invests more in Ola,
it's effectively betting against Uber, its new partner in China, the
person said.
It's not clear whether Didi would provide equity or debt to Ola,
which has raised around $1.3 billion in funding and is valued at
over $5 billion. SoftBank Capital, Ola's key investor, faces its own
financial issues and is selling assets to raise cash and reduce
debt, which may pose another fundraising challenge for Ola, which
was aiming to raise another $1 billion this year.
Ola did not respond to an email request for comment. Didi said in an
email that it will focus in the coming months on "ensuring smooth
integration internally." It did not comment on its meeting with Ola.
Didi has no immediate overseas investment plans, said a person with
direct knowledge of the matter.
The stakes are high in India, already one of the world's fastest
growing taxi markets. Ola and Uber have burned through investors'
money and clashed in legal battles over alleged dirty-tricks tactics
and pricing.
After the Didi deal, Uber is even more focused on India, which it
has previously called its No. 2 priority overseas market, doubling
down on resources, staffing and technology deployed there, said two
people familiar with Uber's plans, one of whom is based in the
United States.
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Bhavish Aggarwal, CEO and co-founder of Ola, an app-based cab
service provider, poses in front of an Ola cab in Mumbai March 3,
2015. REUTERS/Shailesh Andrade/File Photo
MISSION INDIA
Ola, founded by two graduates from India's premier technology
institute, commands half of the country's taxi market as of end-June
in terms of the number of cars registered on its platform, according
to Counterpoint Research, with Uber on around 30 percent market
share, and catching fast.
Uber has previously launched a bike taxi and autos service in India
- a sign that it wants to localize transport options and a lesson
from China where it focused on privately-owned cars in big cities,
where car ownership has historically been low.
Uber declined to comment for this article.
In February, Uber opened an engineering center in Bengaluru and has,
according to LinkedIn, brought in ex-Google executive Apurva Dalal
to lead its India product build. It has also hired more than three
dozen engineers in India in six months and plans to add dozens more
by the end of the year, said one of the people familiar with Uber's
plans.
Two executives heading Uber's mapping efforts, Brian McClendon and
Manik Gupta, visited India in June to work on making the Uber app
more localized and boosting the mapping capabilities, the other,
U.S.-based, individual said.
While Uber has pushed into cities and markets worldwide, Ola
operates only in its home market. Ola is in 102 cities versus Uber's
27, according to Counterpoint, and offers a wider range of products
- from auto rickshaws to shuttle buses, as well as taxi rides.
The Didi/Uber deal "will put Ola in a corner, and the pressure will
rise," said Neil Shah, research director at Counterpoint. "The money
Ola has will not last forever and it will require a lot of funding
with Uber gaining financial strength."
(Reporting by Aditya Kalra and Aditi Shah, with additional reporting
by Heather Somerville in San Francisco; Editing by Euan Rocha and
Ian Geoghegan)
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