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![]() by Staff Writers Shanghai (AFP) April 2, 2018
Chinese e-commerce giant Alibaba said Monday it was acquiring full ownership of leading food-delivery firm Ele.me in a deal that values the Shanghai-based start-up at $9.5 billion. The deal is the latest salvo in the intensifying turf battle between tech heavyweights Alibaba and Tencent in the fast-growing Chinese markets for online food ordering and digital payments. Alibaba and its financial arm Ant already owned 43 percent of the app-based Ele.me and said in a statement that it would acquire all remaining shares. It said the takeover puts Ele.me's value at $9.5 billion. Alibaba did not say how much it was paying for the remaining stake. Ele.me, which means "Are you hungry?", said it operated in 2,000 Chinese cities and had 260 million users as of mid-2017, employing an army of three million scooter-borne delivery drivers. The statement by Alibaba, an e-commerce leader through its hugely popular Taobao online shopping platform, implied that it would expand Ele.me's delivery business beyond mere meals. "Ele.me's fast local delivery service will build on its core expertise in food delivery to provide consumers with a wider range of products and services on demand," Alibaba said. "This expansion of offerings will allow Ele.me to efficiently utilise its large delivery force that currently fulfils orders in cities across China." Ele.me has been competing fiercely with its main rival Meituan, which is backed by Tencent, the Chinese social media, messaging and online payments heavyweight. Users of meal-ordering platforms tripled in two years to 343 million in 2017, the China Internet Network Information Center said. The vast majority use mobile apps. Alibaba has been trying to integrate its online e-commerce services with offline bricks-and-mortar services to ensure growth momentum. azk/dma/sm
![]() ![]() Trump slams Amazon on taxes, postal deal Washington (AFP) March 29, 2018 US President Donald Trump took a new swipe at Amazon on Thursday, claiming the tech giant fails to pay its share of taxes and takes advantage of the US Postal Service. A tweet by the president about Amazon - a company he also criticized while on the campaign trail - renewed concerns that the online giant could face scrutiny by antitrust regulators. "Unlike others, they pay little or no taxes to state & local governments, use our Postal System as their Delivery Boy (causing tremendous loss to ... read more
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