Global taxi aggregator Uber Technologies Inc is in discussions with a group of investors, including Japan's SoftBank Group and Chinese ride-hailing company Didi Chuxing, to raise a fresh round of investment, according to a media report.
The consortium of potential investors includes US equity firms Dragoneer Investment Group and General Atlantic besides SoftBank and Didi Chuxing. Chinese Internet conglomerate Tencent Holdings has also shown interest in the deal, Bloomberg reported citing persons familiar with the development.
The deal, which is worth as much as $12 billion, consists of two components, the report said. One, a fresh investment of $1 billion to $1.5 billion at the same valuation from last year and the other, a share buyback plan that will allow a set of its current shareholders to exit at a lower price than the current valuation.
Earlier this month, SoftBank Group CEO Masayoshi Son had said he was interested in investing in ride-hailing firms Uber and Lyft. âWe are interested in discussing with Uber and Lyft. We have not decided which way,â Son told reporters after the company announced its quarterly results.
Uber has been engaged in a fierce battle for market share with Indiaâs Ola and Southeast Asiaâs Grab. While SoftBank is the largest shareholder in Ola, it was recently reported that Grab is raising $2.5 billion from SoftBank and Didi Chuxing, both of which are existing investors in the company.
The Bloomberg report said the proposed investment doesnât warrant an immediate merger with any of these companies.
Last month, the company had agreed to merge its operations in Russia and five neighbouring countries with local market leader Yandex. A year earlier, Uber had sold its China business to local rival Didi Chuxing.
However, the proposed deal can materialise only if Uber can resolve the ongoing court battle between venture capital firm Benchmark Capital and Uberâs former chief executive officer Travis Kalanick, the report said.
As per the lawsuit, the venture capital group wants to force Kalanick off the board of the company and quash his rights to fill three board seats. It accuses Kalanick of hiding a number of misdeeds from the board and plotting to retain his authority at the firm even after he was forced to step down as CEO in June following a series of scandals.
Refuting the allegations, Kalanick issued a statement calling the lawsuit âcompletely without merit and riddled with lies and false allegations.â
Kalanick had stepped down from the company in June this year in the face of mounting pressure from investors.
The company is looking for a new CEO.
Kalanickâs move followed an investigation into the companyâs culture and practices by US Attorney General Eric Holder, after a former female employee publicly accused it of promoting sexual harassment.
Since February, Uber has lost or sacked over a dozen senior executives after a law firm investigated 215 cases of sexual harassment, discrimination and bullying at the company. Around the same time, Emil Michael and Eric Alexander, two of Uberâs top employees reportedly close to Kalanick, also resigned. While Michael courted controversy in 2014 over remarks about prying into the private lives of journalists, Alexander was sacked after a media report said he had mishandled the rape case of an Uber passenger in Delhi.
Uber has also been in a legal tangle with Waymo, Googleâs self-driving car unit, over intellectual property theft.
Waymo has accused Uber of stealing trade secrets and infringing on patents of its self-driving programme.