China's Uber Rival Didi Scores $7 Billion in Fundraising -- 2nd Update
16 June 2016 - 2:13PM
Dow Jones News
By Juro Osawa and Rick Carew
HONG KONG -- China's homegrown competitor to Uber Technologies
Inc. has raised $7.3 billion in its latest fundraising effort,
giving it a host of powerful allies including Apple Inc. to fend
off the global ride-hailing champion locally.
Didi Chuxing Technology Co., the country's biggest ride-sharing
company, said Thursday that it closed a $4.5 billion fundraising
round that attracted new investors such as Apple, China Life
Insurance Co. and the financial affiliate of online shopping firm
Alibaba Group Holding Ltd. The round valued the company at nearly
$28 billion, people familiar with the matter said.
In addition, Didi said it has secured a $2.5 billion syndicated
loan arranged by China Merchants Bank Co. Didi also raised roughly
$300 million in debt from China Life, the country's biggest
insurer.
The fundraising will leave Didi flush with cash to help it
battle Uber in China's competitive ride-hailing market. Didi said
it now has about $10.5 billion in disposable funds following the
new fundraising round through equity and debt.
Uber and Didi are duking it out for China's potentially
lucrative ride-sharing market by spending huge sums to attract
drivers and passengers to their competing services.
The battle between Uber and Didi for global investment allies
has only intensified in recent months. Uber raised $3.5 billion
from the investment arm of Saudi Arabia earlier this month as part
of a financing round totaling more than $5 billion, the largest to
date raised by a private, venture-backed company.
Uber is separately turning to the so-called leveraged-loan
market for the first time to raise as much as $2 billion, The Wall
Street Journal reported this week.
Uber has hired Morgan Stanley and Barclays PLC to sell a
leveraged loan of $1 billion to $2 billion to institutional
investors in the coming weeks, according to people familiar with
the matter.
While Uber's business in China has expanded rapidly during the
past year, the company still faces an uphill battle against Didi,
which not only has a larger share of the private car-hailing market
where Uber competes, but also dominates the country's taxi-hailing
segment.
Didi, which was formed last year by the merger of two rival
Chinese taxi-hailing apps, is backed by influential domestic and
foreign investors. Its growing list of investors includes two of
China's biggest internet companies -- e-commerce company Alibaba
and social-network company Tencent Holdings Ltd., as well as Apple.
Didi said Tencent and Alibaba both put additional money into the
latest fundraising round, without disclosing the exact amount.
Other big investors in the round included several Chinese banks
and insurance companies that made investments of more than $100
million each, according to a person familiar with the matter.
As the two biggest ride-hailing companies scour the globe for
capital, a few of the same investors are putting money into both
companies.
China Life, the state-owned insurer that this month invested in
Didi, had already invested in San Francisco-based Uber last year.
Hillhouse Capital Group, a China-based investment firm, was an
early investor in Didi but also led a convertible-bond deal to
invest in Uber's global operations. Similarly, Tiger Global
Management LLC has backed Didi in China and has invested in Uber's
global operations.
Competing startups dislike overlapping shareholder bases because
the companies often share confidential strategy and financial
results with investors. It's unclear whether Didi and Uber have
made any special arrangements for those investors.
Write to Juro Osawa at juro.osawa@wsj.com and Rick Carew at
rick.carew@wsj.com
(END) Dow Jones Newswires
June 15, 2016 23:58 ET (03:58 GMT)
Copyright (c) 2016 Dow Jones & Company, Inc.
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