Uber, Didi get green light in China

epa05303007 (FILE) A file picture dated 22 September 2015 shows a view of Didi Kuaidi's smartphone app for customers shown on a mobile phone along a road in Beijing, China. US technology giant Apple has invested 1 billion US dollar in the Chinese ride-sharing company Didi Chuxing (formerly Didi Kuaidi), a rival of Uber in China, the company said in a statement on 13 May 2016. Apple's investment is the largest received by the Chinese company, a leading ride-sharing company in the local market with a share of 87 percent owing to its 300 million users, who hire 11 million rides daily.  EPA/HOW HWEE YOUNG

 

Bloomberg

After pouring billions into the battle for ride-hailing supremacy in China, Uber Technologies Inc. and Didi Chuxing finally have a legal green-light in the world’s biggest market.
China plans to formally allow the services from November — even though both companies have operated in the country for years. The decision brings clarity to an industry locked in disputes with regulators and in courts across the globe.
The new regulations govern their operations and define the scope of competition, outlawing the ploy of charging less than the cost of a trip to win market share. But they turned out to be less onerous than some had feared and dispels the cloud of uncertainty hanging over companies such as Uber and Didi that till now lived in a murky gray area.
The laws, released Thursday by the transport ministry, free the world’s largest on-demand ride providers to compete for drivers and riders in a crucial market. Shares in Car Inc., an auto-rental company that also provides car-hailing in China, rose in Hong Kong after the news, first reported by Bloomberg News, emerged.
“It’s really positive for both Uber and Didi’s business in China,” said Cao Yang, an analyst at Shanghai-based IResearch. “Things to look for going forward are how the rules will be implemented and more detailed regulations on pricing and ownership.”
Uber and Didi already cover hundreds of cities and transport millions of people daily, but their battle is set to intensify. Uber Chief Executive Officer Travis Kalanick has called China his most important market, one he personally supervises. Both are raising cash at a frenetic pace and
spending billions of dollars to bankroll their expansion, a margin-eroding war that some investors are said to oppose.
The government will now encourage private auto-sharing — including car-pooling — in the interests of further developing what it called a sharing economy, Vice Minister Liu Xiaoming told reporters in Beijing. China may benefit in other ways: Uber and Didi argue their services help relieve traffic congestion and air pollution by taking cars off roads. The government is exploring ways to better the environment, an increasingly sore point with the populace following decades of growth founded on heavy industry.
Didi says it plays a crucial role in soaking workers pushed out of sunset industries by the nation’s sweeping restructuring of the state-owned enterprise sector. This month, Didi said more than a million of its drivers hailed from coal, steel and other state-controlled sectors; another 1.2 million were originally jobless. And 179,000 were military veterans.

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