Ride-hailing firm Didi Chuxing said yesterday it will buy Uber’s China operations, in a deal that will give Uber a stake in the company and end bruising competition between the two.
The deal is valued at $35bn, according to a source familiar with the matter who didn’t want to be named before the deal was made public, combining Didi’s $28bn worth and Uber China’s $7bn valuation.
Didi confirmed the agreement on its official microblog, but gave no valuation.
San Francisco-based Uber Technologies will receive a 5.89% stake in Didi – but will have disproportionate “economic interests” of 17.7% with another 2.3% interest going to Uber China shareholders.
Uber will continue to operate independently, the Didi posting said.”Cooperating with Uber will give the entire mobile travel industry a healthier order and a period of a higher level of development,” it said.
Uber CEO Travis Kalanick will join Didi’s board, while Didi Chuxing chief Cheng Wei joining the Uber board.
In an internal message to staff viewed by Reuters, Kalanick wrote: “Sustainably serving China’s cities, and the riders and drivers who live in them, is only possible with profitability.
This merger paves the way for our team and Didi’s to partner on an enormous mission, and it frees up substantial resources for bold initiatives focused on the future of cities – from self-driving technology to the future of food and logistics.”
He said Uber was operating in more than 60 cities in China and serving more than 40mn rides a week. China has been a challenging market for Uber, which has been burning through more than $1bn a year in a price war with Didi.
Uber is profitable in the United States, Canada and about 100 other cities.
“It makes huge sense. Uber faces an uphill task in China especially since Didi is multiple times larger by transaction value and city coverage,” said Hong Kong-based Richard Ji, co-founder of All-Stars Investment, which manages about $900mn and owns Didi stock.
“This will lead to favourable outcomes for both companies. The biggest benefit is cost savings, they no longer have to give out subsidies to drivers and passengers. It will give pricing power as the new entity will become the dominant player. That means profitability will come sooner than later,” he added.
Under the deal, Didi will also invest $1bn in Uber, which operates globally outside China, the source said, adding to a series of deals and joint ventures Didi has struck in recent years.
Analysts said Didi’s latest move is a signal of its readiness to step beyond its home market.
“This clearly shows Didi’s global ambitions and its desire to work together with Uber to tap Chinese travellers, who are going out in big numbers.
There’s a possibility the two could work together in other markets,” All-Stars Investment’s Ji said.
Didi said in its posting it will look to expand its international business and enter markets like Hong Kong, Taiwan, Macau, Japan, South Korea, Europe and Russia.
Didi – itself created last year from a merger of two firms backed respectively by e-commerce giant Alibaba Group and social network firm Tencent – has invested $100mn in Lyft, Uber’s main rival in the United States.
It has also formed an alliance with Lyft, India’s ride service Ola and Southeast Asia’s ride-hailing startup Grab in an effort to compete with Uber’s global dominance. The deal is the latest sign of a global Internet or technology company struggling to break into China’s cut-throat market, where local entrepreneurs have built formidable businesses, partly helped by a supportive government.
All of China’s technology heavyweights will be stakeholders in Didi, as Uber shareholder Baidu will gain a stake.
Apple Inc recently made a rare $1bn investment in Didi.
China last week issued guidelines that establish a long-awaited framework for the booming ride-hailing industry and remove uncertainty for firms such as Didi and Uber.