Peugeot maker launches ride-sharing app in US

epa05809751 A Peugeot name and logo on the bonnet of a Peugeot 208 car model is seen at the show room of PSA Peugeot Citroen Group's headquarter, during the presentation of their 2016 annual results in Paris, France, 23 February 2017. French PSA Group recently announced it is exploring the acquisition of General Motor's (GM) European brand Opel.  EPA/CHRISTOPHE PETIT TESSON

Bloomberg

PSA Group, the French maker of Peugeot, Citroen and DS autos, is introducing its Free2Move ride-sharing app in Seattle, beginning an incremental push to re-enter the US that could eventually culminate in PSA importing cars to the country.
“It’s so crowded here, the last thing you want is a billion-euro investment and not selling enough cars,” PSA’s North America chief Larry Dominique said, adding it was “very likely” that any push by PSA to sell its cars in the US would start with imported vehicles. “Initially the goal is to establish a footprint.”
The carmaker is introducing the Free2Move app to the West Coast city after a nationwide launch in Android and Apple stores in July that wasn’t actively marketed—the first step in a 10-year plan laid out last year to return to North America. The Free2Move app aggregates mobility services such as those of Daimler AG’s Car2Go and Avis Budget Group Inc.’s Zipcar, allowing drivers to access all the car-sharing providers in the city with one tool.
“Our goal is to be a service provider for customers, and to do that you need to be open to working with everyone,” Dominique said.
Europe’s second-largest auto manufacturer, which left the US market in 1991, increased its exposure to its home continent with the recent acquisition of General Motors Co.’s European division. Adding the Opel and Vauxhall brands to its portfolio means that more than 70 percent of the company’s sales now come from Europe. At the same time, PSA is struggling with slumping sales in the UK and China.
The Free2Move app is currently available in France, Spain, Germany, the UK, Italy, Austria and Sweden, with 400,000 customers and about 30 mobility operators, the company said. In Seattle, it will progressively add bike-sharing services such as Ofo, a Chinese startup backed by Alibaba and Didi.
PSA created its North American unit in June under the leadership of Dominique, a former Nissan executive who has worked for TrueCar Inc., which provides prices and information for car shoppers. Dominique manages a team of 10 that may grow as the company seeks a city for its US headquarters.
For now, PSA is not participating in a car-sharing venture with Bollore SA in Los Angeles, Dominique said, after the companies previously announced plans to cooperate.

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