The ride-hailing service says it wants to expand the number of rides it
offers in India to a million each day, up from a reported 200,00 daily
trips.
Uber to spend $1B over nine months for India expansion
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Car-hailing service Uber is looking to dramatically broaden its presence in India.
The
company will invest $1 billion over nine months to expand across India,
Uber said on Friday. The cash will be used to bring its service to more
cities across the country, as well as to let the firm offer new
products and payment options to customers, Uber said.
"Uber
has grown exponentially in India, a global priority market for us,
which has also quickly become the largest market geographically for Uber
outside the US," Uber India President Amit Jain said in an e-mailed
statement. "We are extremely bullish on the Indian market and see
tremendous potential here."
Uber, which celebrated its fifth birthday last month, currently operates in more than 300 cities around the world. The company enables customers to hail a car
and pay for a ride by way of a mobile app. Central to Uber's efforts is
connecting drivers and riders in countries around the world.
In total, Uber operates in 18 cities across India. The company provides 200,000 rides per day there, according to
Reuters, which cited industry sources. Jain said Uber has hopes of
boosting that number to 1 million within the next nine months.
Still,
questions remain over how willing some cities may be to welcome Uber,
and whether the company will need to jump through regulatory hurdles to
realize its vision.
As Uber has grown, it's
increasingly faced criticism and controversy in several countries around
the world. Indeed, the company's plan for rapid expansion in India
could be met with challenges from Indian regulators who have proved
difficult for Uber to work with.
New Delhi, India's
capital city, has been of particular concern to Uber since last year
when one of its drivers was accused of sexually assaulting a rider. Soon
after, the service was banned by local regulators, citing inappropriate
licensing. In January, despite its ban, Uber went back on the roads in New Delhi,
saying that it was applying for a radio taxi license. In June, New
Delhi authorities rejected the application and started impounding Uber
cars.
Earlier this month, a court in New Delhi lifted that ban,
saying Uber should be allowed to operate in the city if provided a
license by regulators. The company's victory in the New Delhi court came
after Uber petitioned the court, saying that its license denial was
inappropriate. The company pointed to the same regulators approving the
license of a local ride-sharing service named Ola. The courts agreed
with Uber that it was being treated unfairly and the company will now
have an opportunity to resubmit a license application. Meanwhile, Uber
is allowed to operate in the city.
Uber's plan to invest $1 billion in India comes just a month after the company said it would invest the same sum in China.
At that time, Uber said it would bring its service to 50 more cities in
China during the next year, in response to a rapidly growing user base
in that country.
Uber's investments are made possible by
the nearly $6 billion in venture funding the company has raised over the
past five years. Indeed, there's no shortage of investors who want to
partner with the company. Uber has raised around $1 billion in a new
funding round, according to a report Friday in The Wall Street Journal
(subscription required). Uber is valued at around $51 billion,
according to the Journal's sources, making it the most valuable
venture-backed company in the world.
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