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						Alibaba, Tencent, car makers set up $1.5 billion China 
						ride-hailing venture
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		 [March 22, 2019]   
		By Yilei Sun and Josh Horwitz 
 BEIJING (Reuters) - Alibaba, Tencent, 
		Suning, and car makers including Chongqing Changan Automobile have set 
		up a $1.5 billion Chinese ride-hailing venture, a move that could test 
		the dominance of ride-sharing giant Didi Chuxing.
 
 Chongqing Changan Automobile said on Friday that it has invested 1.6 
		billion yuan ($238.36 million) in the Nanjing-based investment company 
		alongside partners such as the investment units of Alibaba, Tencent and 
		retailer Suning.Com Co Ltd, and automakers FAW and Dongfeng Motor.
 
 China is home to the world's largest ride-hailing market, estimated by 
		consulting firm Bain & Co to be worth $23 billion. Of that, Didi Chuxing 
		takes 90 percent of all bookings.
 
 However, a swathe of car makers, from BMW, Geely to SAIC as well as 
		other tech firms such as Meituan Dianping have also launched their own 
		mobility services in a bid to grab a share of the fast growing market.
 
 Didi, which is backed by Japan's SoftBank Group Corp and Uber 
		Technologies, also has joint ventures with BAIC and Volkswagen.
 
		
		 
		Wijaya Ng, who tracks China's automotive industry at Ipsos Business 
		Consulting, said the new venture dovetails with a larger, global trend 
		wherein traditional automakers are entering the ride-hailing sector.
 "They see that moving forward, if car-hailing is going to be the future, 
		they want to tap into this market sooner rather than later," said Ng.
 
 Changan said that itself, Dongfeng and FAW will each have a 15 percent 
		stake in the joint venture, which will set up a ride-sharing company 
		with a focus on new energy vehicles.
 
		
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			A man stands near the logo of Alibaba Group at the company's 
			newly-launched office in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia June 18, 2018. 
			REUTERS/Lai Seng Sin/File Photo 
            
			 
Suning will be the biggest shareholder with a 19 percent stake while Alibaba and 
Tencent's investment units will together hold the remainder shares with some 
other funds, it added. 
The new ride-hailing company and its investors, which come from a range of 
fields, will help form "business synergies which will help enrich the companies' 
ecosystems", Suning said in a statement.
 FAW and Dongfeng confirmed the venture while Alibaba and Tencent declined to 
comment beyond the Changan statement. Didi declined to comment.
 
Shares of Changan and Dongfeng Automobile Co Ltd jumped by the maximum daily 
allowed 10 percent after the news. FAW Car Co Ltd shares climbed 6.6 percent.
 The growing popularity of ride-hailing services for commuting and running 
errands in congested cities such as Beijing and Shanghai is showing early signs 
of reducing private car ownership.
 
 However, the industry and Didi came under tighter government scrutiny and 
regulation last year after a Didi passenger was raped and murdered by her 
driver.
 
 (Reporting by Yilei Sun and Josh Horwitz, Additional Reporting by Julie Zhu in 
Hong Kong and the Shanghai newsroom; Writing by Brenda Goh; Editing by Shreejay 
Sinha and Muralikumar Anantharaman)
 
				 
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