Taxi
booking firm Uber has completed the latest stage of a fundraising, valuing the
fast growing business at $40bn (£25.5bn).
The
San Francisco company has raised another $1.2bn from investors in a deal that
confirms its status as one of most highly valued new technology start-ups.
In
June, a sale of shares to investors valued Uber at $17bn.
In a
blog post on Thursday, Uber's co-founder Travis Kalanick said the new money
would help expansion in Asia.
The
company, which
a year ago operated in 60 cities in 21 countries, is now in 250
cities in 50 countries.
At
its current valuation Uber, which was only founded in 2009, is worth about
three times as much as either ITV or Marks and Spencer, says BBC technology
correspondent Rory Cellan-Jones.
Last
month, the company was forced to issue an apology after being accused of
planning smear tactics against journalists and of tracking its users without
their permission.
In
his blog, Mr Kalanick said: "Events of the recent weeks have shown us that
we also need to invest in internal growth and change."
"Acknowledging
mistakes and learning from them are the first steps," he added.
Uber
does not own cars or employ drivers, but connects customers and vehicles
through its app, bringing what the company says is much needed competition to
the taxi industry.
But
it has faced opposition from some governments and established taxi firms,
including from London's "black cab" drivers and in cities across
Europe and the US.
Uber
is also facing increased competition. On Wednesday,Softbank announced it had
invested $250m in GrabTaxi, a service in Southeast Asia.
Details
of Uber's new investors were not disclosed, although previous backers of the
business include Goldman Sachs, Google Ventures, Blackrock, and Amazon's
founder and chief executive Jeff Bezos.
BBC
Business
No comments:
Post a Comment