DiDi Chuxing, China's largest ride-hailing
firm, has invested in Middle East online taxi service Careem in a new
partnership deal that marks Didi's latest international expansion
against rival Uber.
Didi Chuxing. Reuters
DiDi is seeking to turn up the heat on
ride-sharing pioneer Uber via a string of partnerships with regional
players in Southeast Asia, Europe and Africa and now the Middle East. It
has previously done similar deals in Latin America as well as with
Uber's US rival Lyft.
DiDi said on 8 August 2017 that it would
invest in Careem to strengthen its market position across the region.
The two companies said they would cooperate on smart transportation
technology, product development and operations.
Careem and DiDi declined to comment on the size of the Chinese company's investment in Careem.
Founded five years ago, Dubai-based Careem
has 12 million customers in 80 cities ranging from Pakistan to Turkey,
Lebanon, Saudi Arabia, Jordan, Egypt and Morocco.
It is ahead of Uber in Pakistan and a
strong second player to Uber in other regional markets, according to
research firm SimilarWeb, which tracks consumer mobile and web usage
habits.
DiDi's ride-hailing system covers cities
representing 60 percent of the world’s population in 1,000 cities in
North America, Southeast Asia, South Asia and South America, it said.
Over the past few weeks, DiDi has
announced a similar investment in Estonian-based ride-hailing firm
Taxify to help it to expand in Europe and Africa.
DiDi and its backer SoftBank Group have
also said they would contribute the bulk of a new $2.5 billion
investment into Grab, a major online taxi player in south east Asia.
Careem has raised $572 million in funding
from a range of investors, including a $150 million round led by Saudi
Prince Alwaleed bin Talal's Kingdom Holding, according to Crunchbase
data. German auto maker Daimler and Japan's Rakuten are also investors.
Uber operates in nearly 600 cities in 70
countries and reported it had fare revenues around $20 billion last
year. It was Silicon Valley's most valuable private firm when it was
last valued at up to $68 billion.
DiDi is the world's second most valuable
venture-backed start-up after Uber, having last been valued at $50
billion according to venture investment tracking firm CB Insights,
having raised $13 billion in funding over the past five years.
It has 400 million customers in 400 cities
in China. DiDi is backed by Chinese Internet giants Alibaba and Tencent
and Japan's SoftBank, among others. DiDi acquired Uber's China business
a year ago, leaving the U.S. company with a minor stake in DiDi.
Over the past year, Uber has faced
regulatory setbacks, employee and driver protests and executive
departures, leading to founder Travis Kalanick being pushed aside by the
company's
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