Didi Gets Slammed

Regulatory Crackdowns Are Here To Stay

The shares of Didi Global last traded at about $12, well below their initial price of $16.65 on June 30 - a fall in market capitalisation of about $19 billion. Didi was the largest listing of a Chinese company in the United States since Alibaba raised $25 billion in 2014.

The ride-hailing giant's app was ordered on Sunday by the Cyberspace Administration of China (CAC) to be taken down from mobile app stores in China. CAC said it had ordered apps stores to stop offering Didi's app after it found the company had illegally collected users' personal data. Didi sait that it had no knowledge of the investigation before the IPO.

"Didi's app ban will hurt its user growth and, at the same time, the existing users of Didi's app will also have a certain level of reservation over using the company's app due to fear of compromising their personal data [...] So it is obvious that Didi's top line will be affected." Shifara Samsudeen, by Scott MurdochThyagaraju Adinarayan for Reuters

The CAC also announced cybersecurity investigations into other Chinese companies whose parents have been listed in the U.S.


BENCHMARK’S TAKE

  • China’s technology stocks have been pressured by political hurdles as the governing party tries to reign in the power of its own tech giants
  • We believe that the technology-crackdown driven by the government in the last months is temporary and not meant to break China’s champions
  • China’s technology champions are, for the most part, showing healthy growth rates, stable margins and growing influence over China’s neighbour (Southeast Asia and Europe)

Disclaimer

Please note that this article does not constitute investment advice in any form. This article is not a research report and is not intended to serve as the basis for any investment decision. All investments involve risk and the past performance of a security or financial product does not guarantee future returns. Investors have to conduct their own research before conducting any transaction. There is always the risk of losing parts or all of your money when you invest in securities or other financial products.

Credits

Photo by wu yi on Unsplash.