Didi plans to sell the assets to AutoAi, a provider of intelligent cockpits-related software and hardware, in exchange for a stake in AutoAi, said two of the sources.
China’s largest ride-hailer expects to pull back significantly from the ultra-competitive electric vehicle market with the deal, which will value the assets at close to 500 million yuan ($70 million), said the two people.
Electric vehicle (EV) makers are competing fiercely in a consolidating Chinese market and are seeking new technologies such as smart cockpits and autonomous driving to appeal to consumers.
The deal with AutoAi could be announced in the coming days, they said, declining to be identified as the information was private.
Didi, NavInfo and AutoAi did not respond to requests for comment.
As part of the deal, Didi also plans to invest more than 200 million yuan in the currently loss-making AutoAi, also known by its Chinese name of Siwei Zhilian Technology, said two of the people.
The deal will help Didi forge a deeper partnership with AutoAi and NavInfo, one of China’s top internet mapping firms, to explore strategic cooperation in a number of areas including ride-hailing and intelligent driving, they said.
DIDI’S ROAD TO RECOVERY
Shenzhen-listed NavInfo, which offers services such as high-definition maps and navigation solutions to automakers and internet firms, provides mapping-related data and technical support to Didi.
The smart driving and cockpit assets its unit is acquiring from Didi are set for mass production, said one of the people.
The asset sale and the investment, if completed, would see Didi become the second largest shareholder of AutoAi, added another of the people.
Didi had previously pushed ahead with an EV-making project, code-named “Da Vinci”, which used to house about 2,000 employees, and had ambitions to move into manufacturing, sources have said.
It invested more than 10 billion yuan in the EV business which includes the development of vehicles, smart driving and smart cockpit since the project’s inception in 2021, said two of the sources.
Didi has in recent weeks informed potentially impacted employees, most of whom are based in Beijing, about the impending AutoAi deal, said the sources, with one source adding that about 200-300 people would be affected.
($1 = 7.1380 Chinese yuan renminbi)
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Reporting by Julie Zhu; Additional reporting by Zhang Yan; Editing by Muralikumar Anantharaman
Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.