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Economy

Alibaba in talks to sell stake in Meituan-Dianping, says report

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2015-11-24 14:15chinadaily.com.cn Editor: Wang Fan
An employee at a Dicos outlet, a Western-style fast-food chain, in Zhengzhou, Henan province. The food chain has teamed up with Meituan, a group-buying service promoted by e-commerce giant Alibaba Group Holding Ltd. (Photo/China Daily)

An employee at a Dicos outlet, a Western-style fast-food chain, in Zhengzhou, Henan province. The food chain has teamed up with Meituan, a group-buying service promoted by e-commerce giant Alibaba Group Holding Ltd. (Photo/China Daily)

E-commerce group Alibaba is in talks to sell its stake in Meituan-Dianping, China's leading online provider of restaurant bookings, movie ticketing and other on-demand services, reported the Wall Street Journal.

Alibaba is shopping its roughly 7 percent stake in the company created by last month's merger of two rival startups namely Meituan.com and Dianping Holdings Ltd, which could be worth $1 billion, said the paper citing people familiar with the situation.

The move comes as the e-commerce giant seeks to focus on the Koubei platform that it launched in June with Ant Financial, its payment affiliate, and take on Baidu and Tencent in online to offline (O2O) service.

Koubei, with an initial investment of 6 billion yuan ($939.34 million), aims to be a local life and service platform and to integrate the company's online strength with its offline resources, as Alipay is becoming more commonly used in places including restaurants, supermarkets, hospitals and airports.

Meituan-Dianping has been seeking to raise as much as $3 billion from investors to bankroll its expansion, reported the Journal citing people familiar with the matter. Among them, Tencent is planning on investing $1 billion.

The online-to-offline service in China is expected to generate a market size of 7.2 trillion yuan by 2017 from the current 6 trillion yuan, according to a report from Beijing-based research consultancy iResearch.

The country's BAT Internet giants, Baidu, Alibaba and Tecent, are in the lockup battle, splurging billions of cash acquiring O2O service companies ranging from map navigation, ride-sharing to food deliveries, manicure and movie ticketing.

 

  

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