Temasek, Singapore’s state-owned investment firm, has jumped into China’s on-demand cycle war after it backed MoBike. China’s ride-sharing war is last..
Temasek, Singapore’s state-owned investment firm, has jumped into China’s on-demand cycle war after it backed MoBike.
China’s ride-sharing war is last year’s news. The big battle between Uber and Didi Chuxing is essentially over after the latter agreed to buy the former’s China-based business. The new startup drama du jour is in bikes — services that let you find a rental in the city using a mobile app and GPS-enable cycles — and MoBike is the busiest startup out there.
Beijing-based MoBike announced a $215 million Series D round led by Tencent in early January, and a strategic investment from manufacturing giant Foxconn weeks later. Today, it revealed a new (and also undisclosed) investment led by Temasek, an early Alibaba investor that backed Uber rival Grab in Southeast Asia, with participation from existing backer Hillhouse Capital.
Home
United States
USA — software Temasek jumps into China’s bike rental startup war with investment in MoBike