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在线翻译:
szdaily -> Business -> 
Alibaba in talks to invest US$3b in Grab
    2020-09-15  08:53    Shenzhen Daily

ALIBABA Group Holding Ltd. is in talks to invest US$3 billion into Southeast Asian ride-hailing giant Grab Holdings Inc., according to people familiar with the matter.

The Chinese e-commerce giant, a sole investor in the round, will spend a portion of the funds to acquire some of the Grab stock held by Uber Technologies Inc., one of the people said. The deal may represent one of Alibaba’s biggest bets on Southeast Asia since its first investment in Lazada in 2016.

Alibaba has previously had limited forays in ride-hailing but a potential tie-up with Grab gives it access to data on millions of users in eight countries, a growing delivery fleet as well as a stake in digital wallet and financial services.

The funding, about a fifth of Grab’s last known valuation of US$14 billion, comes amid growing questions over the company’s ability to live up to its lofty price tag as it grapples with the impact of the coronavirus pandemic. CEO Anthony Tan said the company is facing its “single biggest crisis,” while co-founder Tan Hooi Ling warned in May of a “long winter.” Existing investors have also been frustrated by what they see as value-destroying competition with Grab’s regional arch-rival Gojek.

The world’s biggest ride-hailing companies have waged years of costly battles in each others’ territories before they agreed to stay out of each others’ core markets. The truce left Uber with considerable stakes in its rivals worth more than US$9 billion, including a 23.2 percent stake in Grab at the end of 2018. Under the terms of a deal that Uber struck to exit Southeast Asia, Grab is on the hook for more than US$2 billion to the San Francisco-based company if it doesn’t go public by mid-2023.

Masayoshi Son’s SoftBank Group Corp., an investor in all of the world’s biggest ride-hailing companies, is at the center of the discussions. The Japanese company has used its position as a major shareholder to push Uber to unload stakes in Grab, Didi Chuxing of China and Russia’s Yandex, the person said.

Uber said in April it would write down about US$2 billion in those investments after the coronavirus pandemic upended the ride-hailing business. Representatives of Grab declined to comment, while Uber and Softbank didn’t immediately reply to queries. Alibaba offered no immediate comment.

SoftBank has also pushed Grab to make peace with Gojek. Even as speculations about a possible merger have re-surfaced, the two are far from reaching a deal, according to people familiar with the matter. The negotiations are hampered by a hostile relationship between the two companies and the complexity of coordinating between so many investors, they said.                        (SD-Agencies)

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