Source: DiDi via Business Insider
The Market Online - At The Bell

Join our daily newsletter At The Bell to receive exclusive market insights

  • DiDi Global sets its sights on a US$60 billion (A$79.08 billion) valuation in its planned New York Stock Exchange debut
  • It will offer 288 million American Depositary Shares (ADS) at a price range of between US$13 and US$14 (between A$17.13 and A$18.45)
  • At the upper end of that target, DiDi could raise more than US$4 billion (A$5.27 billion)
  • At that size, the listing would be the largest initial public offering in the United States this year
  • DiDi operates in 15 countries and has more than 493 million active users each year around the world

DiDi Global has its sights set on a US$60 billion (A$79.08 billion) valuation in its planned New York Stock Exchange debut, which would make the Chinese ride-sharing giant’s listing the largest initial public offering in the United States this year.

It said it would offer 288 million American Depositary Shares (ADS) at a price range of between US$13 and US$14 (between A$17.13 and A$18.45), which — at the upper end of that target — could raise more than US$4 billion (A$5.27 billion).

According to a regulatory filing submitted on Thursday, four ADSs represent one Class A ordinary share.

The IPO is expected to be one of the biggest listings in the United States by a Chinese company since Alibaba went public in 2014, raising US$25 billion (A$32.95 billion) in the process.

Still, the terms of the offering suggest a conservative approach from DiDi, which had at one point been in talks to raise up to US$10 billion (A$13.18 billion) at a valuation of almost US$100 billion (A$131.8 billion).

DiDi operates in 15 countries and has more than 493 million active users each year around the world. It counts it core business as a mobile app, which is used to hail taxis, privately owned cars, car-pool options and even buses in some cities.

The company became the top online ride-hailing business in China after market-share battles with Alibaba-backed Kuaidi and Uber’s China unit, both of which were merged with DiDi when investors sought profit from the money-losing businesses.

Uber’s arm was sold to DiDi in 2016 in exchange for a 17.5 per cent stake in the resulting entity, which also made a US$1 billion (A$1.32 billion) investment in Uber. According to the IPO filings, Uber now holds a 12.8 per cent stake in DiDi.

More From The Market Online

Well below US$5K/oz, gold’s surefire status as a safe haven has shifted

In the post-COVID-19 world, it’s almost definitely news to nobody reading this that gold prices have staged a fairly historic run.
The Market Online Video

From the Wire: Why did the RBA cut last year just to walk it all back 12 months later?

The Reserve Bank of Australia made the call to hike interest rates again in CY26, using its second board meeting to bring them
ASX concept

ASX 200 reacts to an RBA 25bps rate hike by… closing somewhat firmly in the green?

Colour me surprised – the ASX200 successfully priced something in for once, with today’s RBA rate hike not scaring the market down into
India Russia flag

Not just AUKUS indexes: USA’s war on Iran visible on India’s NIFTY; Russia’s MOEX

While the Australian market is busy watching Wall Street, gold, and oil prices – and the prices of relevant stocks exposed to those