Uber sells Indian food delivery arm to Ant Financial-backed Zomato

Uber Eats in India will discontinue operations, and direct restaurants, delivery partners and users to the Zomato platform from Tuesday.

Update: 2020-01-21 05:06 GMT
The new Uber Eats drone can make up to three six-mile legs for an 18-mile trip.

Uber has sold its online food-ordering business in India to local rival Zomato in exchange for a 9.99 per cent stake in the startup backed by China’s Ant Financial, limiting its exposure to a crowded market where it has struggled to grow.

The all-stock deal is likely to push Zomato to the top position in India’s food delivery market, ahead of Swiggy, which counts China’s Tencent Holdings as an investor.

Zomato - valued at around USD 3 billion after raising money from Alibaba affiliate Ant this month - said Uber Eats in India will discontinue operations, and direct restaurants, delivery partners and users to the Zomato platform from Tuesday.

“India remains an exceptionally important market to Uber and we will continue to invest in growing our local Rides business,” said Dara Khosrowshahi, Uber’s chief executive officer.

Uber Eats in India accounted for 3 per cent of the business’ gross bookings globally, but more than a quarter of its adjusted EBITDA loss in the first three quarters of 2019, the U.S. ride-hailing firm said.

Uber Eats, which also pulled out of South Korea earlier this year, said it will continue to operate in Bangladesh and Sri Lanka.

While this is the first large acquisition in the Indian online food delivery market, deal activity has been heating up globally.

Earlier this month Dutch firm Takeaway.com pipped investment company Prosus to buy Britain’s Just Eat for 6.2 billion pounds (USD 8.1 billion). In December, Germany’s Delivery Hero agreed to buy South Korea’s top food delivery app owner Woowa Brothers for USD 4 billion.

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