Update: An official at an investment firm involved in the deal confirmed to YCBB that the merger talks are happening.
Bottom line: The merger of Dinaping an Meituan will make uneasy in-laws of Tencent and Alibaba, and will likely be followed within a year by a buyout by one of the partners or IPO for the new company.
The headlines are buzzing today with word of an imminent merger between leading group buying sites Dianping and Meituan on this first day back to work after the week-long National Day holiday. The deal is certainly a landmark one, as it will create a clear leader in the emerging category of online-to-offline (O2O) companies that bring together the convenience of Internet buying with offline products and services like restaurant dining, going to the movies and hailing a taxi.
Some media are pointing out the merger will pose a major new challenge to the aggressive O2O aspirations of Baidu (Nasdaq: BIDU), which is pouring hundreds of millions of dollars into building out its own rival services. But for me, this particular marriage represents the latest chapter of an increasingly close but also uncomfortable alliance between the country’s other 2 Internet giants, Tencent (HKEx: 700) and Alibaba (NYSE: BABA), which are major stakeholders in Dianping and Meituan, respectively. Read Full Post…
Bottom line: Uber should consider forming closer alliances with local city governments to boost its chances of survival in China.
By Jeffrey Towson
Hired car services giant Uber is now in the situation you never want to be in in China: a foreign company on the wrong side of both the government and powerful local competitors. Ask Google (Nasdaq: GOOG) and Yahoo (Nasdaq: YHOO) how that worked out. However, Uber can still win in China. They have one last move that could reverse the situation. They can do what homegrown rivals Kuaidi and Didi won’t. They can ignore the advice of Alibaba (NYSE: BABA) Chairman Jack Ma and marry the government.
Ma has famously said “Never, ever do business with government. Love them. Don’t marry them. So, we never do projects for government.” Compare this to statements by Kuaidi’s CEO Joe Lee, who said “One thing we learned is if we want to grow fast, we need to make sure the government supports us. Because in China, they can stop you in one day — they shut down your server and you’re out.” Read Full Post…
Bottom line: A Yidao Yongche merger with Uber China continues the rapid consolidation in China’s hired car services, which could be followed soon by a successful bid by Uber and Baidu for Nokia’s digital mapping division.
Rapid consolidation is taking place in China’s hired car services market, with word that a new alliance is shaping up between major local player Yidao Yongche and an existing tie-up between global giant Uber and local Internet search leader Baidu (Nasdaq: BIDU). As a longtime Chinese Internet watcher, I’m quite surprised at the sudden and rapid speed of consolidation in this particular sector, since such consolidation in other areas tends to be a slow and painful process that often takes years.
A major factor behind this sudden and rapid consolidation could be the participation by all 3 of China’s top Internet players, including Baidu, alongside social networking giant Tencent (HKEx: 700) and e-commerce leader Alibaba (NYSE: BABA). Two of those companies are also involved in a related headline that is seeing Baidu and Tencent making separate bids for the digital mapping division being sold off by former cellphone giant Nokia (Helsinki: NOK1V). Read Full Post…
Bottom line: Recent raids on Uber’s offices in 2 major Chinese cities reflect resistance it is meeting from traditional taxi operators, which could significantly limit its growth potential in the politically sensitive market.
The turmoil in China’s overheated market for paid car services has cruised into the offices of global fast-riser Uber, which has been raided twice in the last 2 weeks over its aggressive move into the market. The first raid came last week, when local officials visited the company’s offices in the southern metropolis of Guangzhou, sometimes also called Canton. (Chinese article) Now the raids have extended to the interior city of Chengdu, where Uber’s offices have again been visited by local officials conducting an unspecified investigation. (English article) Read Full Post…
Bottom line: A round of April Fool’s Day pranks by China’s Internet companies marks a nice break from their usual cut-throat tactics, while the soaring valuation for a newly created taxi app leader looks more typical for the sector.
It’s a relatively quiet news day as we head into April, so I thought I’d take a break from all the latest crackdowns and controversies by looking at some of the clever pranks played by China’s top Internet names on April Fool’s Day. At the same time, one company that’s in no fooling mood is a new taxi app giant that’s being formed with a merger of the 2 top players, and could soon receive an impressive $8.75 billion valuation after a new investment.
These 2 particular headlines don’t really have much in common, since one is largely playful and meant to be fun while the other involves the far more serious business of determining a company’s value. The April Fool’s stories are a nice break from the usual competition and wars of words that are standard fare on China’s Internet. By comparison, bidding up valuations to inflated levels like we’re now seeing with the pending merger of DidiDache and Kuaidi Dache has become standard fare on China’s Internet, as investors bet big on future growth in the market. Read Full Post…
The following press releases and media reports about Chinese companies were carried on April 1. To view a full article or story, click on the link next to the headline.
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China To Delay Bank Tech Restrictions, US Treasury Official Says (English article)
Merged Didi, Kuadi Taxi App Value Could Reach $8.75 Bln After New Stake Sale (Chinese article)
Bottom line: The Baidu-led union of Uber and Yidao in China looks like a smart move for all 3 parties, but could come under strain due to internal and external factors that could ultimately lead Baidu to buy out the venture.
China’s rapidly evolving paid car services realm is creating some strange marriages, bringing together e-commerce leader Alibaba (NYSE: BABA) and social networking giant Tencent (HKEx: 700) last month with a merger of their taxi app services. Now we’re getting word of another unusual marriage, this time as leading search engine Baidu (Nasdaq: BIDU) steers domestic heavyweight Yidao into a union with global giant Uber.
This latest deal would come just 3 months after Baidu made a large investment in Uber, reportedly worth $600 million, and would give Baidu a solid foothold in the fast-growing market for Internet-based car hiring services. China’s other 2 Internet majors, Tencent and Alibaba, already had major Internet hired car assets through their strategic stakes in industry leaders Didi Dache and Kuaidi Dache, respectively, which surprised the industry when they announced a plan to merge last month. (previous post) Read Full Post…
The following press releases and media reports about Chinese companies were carried on February 26. To view a full article or story, click on the link next to the headline.
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Lunar New Year Eve SMS Volume Down 25 Pct, Data Traffic Up 70 Pct – MIIT (Chinese article)
Bottom line: China’s regulators are unlikely to veto the merger of taxi apps Didi and Kuaidi, and should encourage similar consolidation to allow for creation of Internet firms that can be globally competitive.
Just a day after China’s leading 2 taxi apps announced their plan to merge, a series of observers are voicing concerns that the marriage would be anti-competitive and should be vetoed on antitrust grounds. The sudden debate about the merger of Kuaidi Dache and Didi Dache isn’t too surprising, since it would create a company that would control the vast majority of China’s market for taxi and private car services. But the regulator will need to decide whether such talk of monopoly is justified, since in many ways the newly merged company is still quite small and will also face strong competition from global rivals. Read Full Post…
Bottom line: The merger of Didi and Kuaidi taxi apps could mark the start of a new round of consolidation between non-core assets of China’s major Internet firms.
After 2 years of making nonstop headlines due to their intense rivalry, leading taxi apps Didi Dache and Kuaidi Dache are leading the news once more with a new and quite unexpected merger. But equally interesting was the fact that this merger also marked an unusual shift in the equally bitter rivalry between Internet titans Alibaba (NYSE: BABA) and Tencent (HKEx: 700), which are Kuaidi’s and Didi’s main backers, respectively. That element of the story has huge implications, as it shows that China’s “Big 3” Internet companies of Tencent, Alibaba and Baidu (Nasdaq: BIDU) may be willing to consider similar mergers of their non-core assets, paving the way for a new and much-needed round of consolidation in areas like online video, mapping and group buying. Read Full Post…
Bottom line: Disappointing results for fund-raising by Wanda Cinema Line and Kuaidi taxi app show a recent boom in new funding for private Chinese companies may have crested and will wane for the rest of the year.
The crest of a huge wave of new fund raising for private Chinese firms may have passed, with word that 2 major new deals that should have attracted big investor interest have instead met with weaker-than-expected response. The first of those has seen investors give a lukewarm reception to a domestic IPO for Wanda Cinema Line, the nation’s first major movie theater operator to list. The second has seen taxi app operator Kuadi raise $500 million in a private funding round, which doesn’t sound too bad. But the figure is actually quite a bit lower than Kuaidi’s earlier plan and is also lower than a similar recent fund-raising round for leading rival Didi. Read Full Post…