Tue | Jun 30, 2026

Didi ride-hailing service jumps in Wall Street debut

Published:Thursday | July 1, 2021 | 12:11 AM
In this April 27, 2017 photo, visitors walk past a sign for Chinese ride-hailing service Didi Chuxing at the Global Mobile Internet Conference in Beijing, China.
In this April 27, 2017 photo, visitors walk past a sign for Chinese ride-hailing service Didi Chuxing at the Global Mobile Internet Conference in Beijing, China.

Chinese ride-hailing service Didi Global Inc jumped 16 per cent on Wednesday shortly after making its US stock market debut.

The stock opened at US$16.65 on the New York Stock Exchange. The Beijing-headquartered company’s initial public offering of 288 million shares was priced at US$14 a share. The company said it aimed to spend 30 per cent on technology development, another 30 per cent to expand outside China, and 20 per cent on new products.

Didi’s market debut in the United States comes a day after the company said it lost US$5.5 billion over the past three years, though the company also touted its global reach and investments in developing electric and self-driving cars. Didi operates in 16 countries, though almost 90 per cent of the 493 million customers who used the service at least once in the past year are in China.

The company, founded in 2012 by Will Wei Cheng, a veteran of e-commerce giant Alibaba Group, says it aims to become the “world’s largest one-stop transportation platform” and operator of vehicle networks.

“We aspire to become a truly global technology company,” said Cheng and president Jean Qing Liu in the prospectus. Liu is a former Goldman Sachs managing director and the daughter of Liu Chuanzhi, founder of computer maker Lenovo Group.

Early investors included Apple Inc, Japan’s Softbank, Alibaba and Chinese internet giants Tencent Holding Limited and Baidu Inc.

Didi acquired rival Kuaidi in 2016 and Uber Technologies Inc’s China operation the following year, ending a battle in which the American company said it was losing US$1 billion a year.

China’s populous ride-hailing market has gone through abrupt changes as the ruling Communist Party tries to nurture development of technology while keeping control of promising industries.

Founded as a smartphone-based taxi-hailing service, it launched ride-hailing in 2014 and expanded abroad in 2018 by acquiring Brazil’s 99 Taxis and setting up operations in Mexico.

In 2015-2016, regulators tightened control in what state media said was an effort to curb traffic congestion and prevent crime linked to ride-hailing services. Drivers were required to be residents of cities and towns where they worked and to be more closely supervised.

Didi has plowed money into the development of self-driving, electric vehicles and other technology. The company launched an electric car last year with Chinese automaker BYD Auto, a unit of BYD Limited.

Didi lost 15 billion yuan (US$2.3 billion) in 2018, 9.7 billion yuan (US$1.5 billion) in 2019, and 10.6 billion yuan (US$1.6 billion) last year, according to its prospectus. It says Didi had US$3 billion in cash as of December 31.

AP