SYDNEY (Reuters) –Didi Chuxing Technology Co Ltd will begin offering its service this month in Australia, its first foray in a Western-style country.
The scheduled June 25 launch in Australia’s second biggest city Melbourne sets Didi up for a showdown with the US rival it bought out in China in exchange for a stake.
Didi started expanding outside Asia in Mexico earlier this year, and has said globalisation is a core strategy.
Its move into Australia will be a test of how it can compete in Western-style markets that might tend more towards US brands than, say, southeast Asia or Latin America, where China has traditionally had a stronger influence.
“I think overall penetration rates for ride sharing versus overall transportation is still low so the market has great potential,” Dillon Ye, who heads up Didi’s Australian operations, told Reuters on Friday when asked about competition.
Didi’s announcement on Friday about the launch shows business deals between China and Australia are being struck as normal, even as relations between the two governments have hit a speedbump after the Australian federal government proposed anti-foreign interference laws directed at Beijing.
Mr Ye said political tensions had not had any effect on the firm’s plans in the market. Didi is backed by bluechip investors including SoftBank Group Corp and Apple Inc.
Australian exporters have blamed anti-Beijing rhetoric for delays clearing product through Chinese customs.