Uber CEO Dara Khosrowshahi has been pushing to burnish the financials of a company that’s burned through $10.7 billion since its founding nine years ago. Khosrowshahi signalled during a trip through Asia last month that he’s committed to other key markets such as Japan and India. But its latest exit suggests Uber is more than ever dependent on its home market of North America, not unlike Khosrowshahi’s previous US-centric employer, Expedia Inc.
For Grab’s Tan, the truce brings to an end a bruising battle for leadership in Southeast Asia.
Grab, which started out as a taxi-hailing app in Kuala Lumpur in 2012, became the region’s dominant ride-hailing service in past years with $4 billion raised from investors. It was most recently valued at $6 billion, according to CB Insights. Today, with more than 86 million mobile app downloads, it offers a wide range of ride-hailing services in 191 cities across Singapore, Indonesia, the Philippines, Malaysia, Thailand, Vietnam, Myanmar and Cambodia.