China's Didi, SoftBank to roll out taxi venture in Japan

Reuters  |  SHANGHAI/TOKYO 

By and Sam Nussey

SHANGHAI/(Reuters) - Chinese ride hailing giant Chuxing said it will set up a venture with to provide for the Japanese taxi industry.

The move into underscores a recent push by to beef up its presence in markets outside China, although it will face challenges to expand its services in a country where existing taxi companies are lobbying hard against deregulation.

In Japan, ride-hailing companies face strict rules that effectively bar non-professional drivers from offering on safety grounds, and are limited to services that "match" users to existing taxi fleets via mobile platforms.

The two firms said in a statement they aim to begin in this year. SoftBank is an existing investor in Didi, which raised $4 billion to fund its global push in December at a valuation of more than $50 billion.

has expanded overseas rapidly in the past year since sealing its dominance in with the purchase of Uber Technologies Inc's local business in 2016, ending a cash-burning subsidy war that cost the U.

S. firm roughly $2 billion.

is, however, facing rising challenges at home, including a slower pace of growth, new rivals entering the market and drivers complaining that reduced subsidies mean they are working longer hours for the less pay.

In January agreed to acquire control of Brazil's 99, in a deal sources said valued 99 at over $1 billion and gave a 'significant majority' stake in the Brazilian firm.

The Chinese company is also looking to break into and is expanding its presence in regions outside the Chinese mainland including Hong Kong and

SoftBank itself holds stakes in Didi, Indian rival Ola and Southeast Asia's Last month the Japanese firm became the largest shareholder in Uber.

The for Japan's taxi fleet, which will leverage Didi's "deep learning-based demand prediction and smart dispatch systems", will initially roll out in cities including Osaka, Kyoto, and

is also trying to diversify at home. This week it announced an with 12 automakers, including local partners of and the Renault-Nissan-alliance.

(Reporting by and Sam Nussey; Editing by Edwina Gibbs)

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Fri, February 09 2018. 08:29 IST