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Mobike, Ofo Investors Are Said in Talks to Merge China Startups

Mobike, Ofo Investors Are Said in Talks to Merge China Startups

(Bloomberg) -- Mobike and Ofo investors are in early talks to push China’s two largest bike-sharing startups into a merger, aimed at ending a costly competitive battle and creating a single dominant player in the fast-growing business, according to people familiar with the matter.

Investors in both companies have been holding talks to sort through issues such as how to split equity as a precursor to getting the companies to the table for negotiations, said the people, asking not to be identified because the matter is private. The pair’s combined valuation would likely exceed $4 billion. The discussions are in a preliminary stage, and may not be consummated, they said.

The companies are separately backed by China’s two biggest internet giants -- Alibaba Group Holding Ltd. and Tencent Holdings Ltd. -- which have a track record of investing in competing startups and then combining them as a leader emerges to save money. Unlike in ride-hailing for cars however, China’s bike-sharing startups are the global pioneers and are plotting expansions abroad. A truce at home would give them more resources to gain ground in the U.S., Europe and other parts of Asia.

Shi Shaochen, a spokesman for Ofo, registered as Beijing Bikelock Technology Co., declined to comment. Mobike, formally Beijing Mobike Technology Co., said in a statement that it is not contemplating a merger.

“Mobike is the clear leader in the global bikesharing industry, supporting 30 million rides in 180 cities around the world every single day,” the company said. “We are fully focused on extending our global success.”

With Tencent backing Mobike and Alibaba siding with Ofo, the startups have flooded major cities such as Beijing and Shanghai with their trademark orange and yellow bicycles just a few years after their founding. They’ve raised more than $1 billion in venture money combined and, with smaller rivals, have waged one of the strangest and most colorful battles in the technology world. Alibaba and Tencent have used the duo as proxies for a battle in mobile payments, cloud computing and winning user data.

In June, Tencent, Sequoia Capital, TPG and Hillhouse backed a $600 million funding round for Mobike and its fleet of orange bicycles. The next month, Ofo, with its canary yellow two-wheelers, raised more than $700 million from investors including Alibaba, Hony Capital and Citic Private Equity.

Mobike is valued at $3 billion, while Ofo is $1 billion, according to researcher CB Insights. ; Ofo was seeking funding in June at a $3 billion valuation. The companies have forced some smaller operators out of business. Ofo has said it plans to have 20 million bikes in 20 countries by the end of the year.

Ofo was founded in 2014 on the grounds of Beijing’s prestigious Peking University as a student project. Once emblematic of China’s socialist working class, bicycles are rapidly gaining popularity among students and commuters tired of inching their way through jam-packed vehicle traffic. 

Instead of using docks, users unlock an Ofo or Mobike off the street using just a smartphone and electronic wallet, ride them to their destination and then dump them. 

Merging Ofo and Mobike would follow a familiar pattern for Alibaba and Tencent. Ride-hailing services they backed separately eventually merged to form Didi Chuxing, which drove Uber Technologies Inc. out of China, while local services giant Meituan Dianping was formed in a similar way.

Such mergers have not always resulted in peaceful settlements. Meituan riled Alibaba after agreeing to a merger, leading to the e-commerce giant selling off most of its shares and forming its own neighborhood services unit to compete. The mergers have often also led to the ousting of founders of the companies that end up with the smaller stake.

There have been signs the bike startups would follow a similar path. Allen Zhu, an early investor in Ofo, said at a conference last week that Ofo and Mobike could only become profitable if they merged, Sina reported.

A combination would allow the startups to raise prices, which are usually about 1 yuan an hour (15 cents) and are sometimes discounted to free to attract customers. Mobike and Ofo could also cut back on the number of bikes they distribute around cities, saving themselves money and avoiding conflicts with locals inconvenienced by the havoc.

The bike-sharing boom has boosted demand for bicycles from companies such as Shanghai Phoenix Enterprise Group Co., Zhonglu Co. and Taiwan’s Giant Manufacturing Co. Shanghai Phoenix shares surged in May when the company disclosed an agreement to supply Ofo with at least 5 million bikes.

To contact the reporter on this story: Lulu Yilun Chen in Hong Kong at ychen447@bloomberg.net.

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Robert Fenner at rfenner@bloomberg.net, Peter Elstrom