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This Article is From Sep 02, 2021

China Tells Meituan, Didi to Fix ‘Misconduct’ by Year-End

STOCKS IN THIS STORY
Goenka Business & Finance Ltd.
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Cosco (India) Ltd.
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Nifty Capital Markets
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Nifty Top 20 Equal Weight
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USD-INR
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MSCI World
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Pritika Auto Industries Ltd
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Nifty EV & New Age Automotive
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Cons Discretionary Goods & Serv
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SAB Events & Governance Now Media Ltd.
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MSCI AC Asia ex-Japan
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Kanishk Steel Industries Ltd.
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Lycos Internet Ltd.
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Space Incubatrics Technologies Ltd.
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Regency Investments Ltd.
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SVC Industries Ltd.
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TMT (India) Ltd.
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Bharat Rasayan Ltd.
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Chinese regulators ordered car-hailing services run by Didi Global Inc., Meituan and Alibaba Group Holding Ltd. to rectify instances of what the government considers misconduct by December, amping up scrutiny over an industry that employs millions of people.

Officials from the transportation ministry and other departments summoned executives from 11 companies -- including Didi, Meituan and Alibaba's ride-sharing and navigation unit Amap -- and criticized them for disrupting fair competition and hurting the interests of drivers and passengers, according to a statement published Thursday.

Regulators highlighted violations including recruiting unlicensed drivers and the need to strengthen user data protections, they said in the notice. Some companies used “vicious” competition and undermined the safety and stability of the industry. The 11 companies were required to carry out self-inspections, fix those issues and draft compliance plans before the end of the year, according to the statement.

Meituan shares pared their gains after the notice and were little changed in Hong Kong. Alibaba's U.S. depositary receipts were up 1.43% in New York, while Didi's U.S.-traded shares were down 1.9%.

Xi's Crackdown Keeps Strategists Wary of China Tech Stock Bounce

Beijing is moving swiftly to ensure the country's sharing-economy behemoths improve the welfare of the millions of low-wage workers they depend on to power growth. That stems from Xi Jinping's “common prosperity” campaign to get the private sector to share the enormous wealth accumulated during a decade-long internet boom. 

The sudden removal of Didi's ride-hailing apps in July -- the result of an investigation into data privacy violations -- has energized rivals who see a rare opportunity to chip away at a leader holding 90% of the market. Didi is now helping workers establish their first union, a groundbreaking decision its fellow tech giants may soon follow as China imposes rules to curb excessive work and protect millions of blue-collar workers from exploitation.

Read more: Didi Crackdown Shakes Foundations of Chinese Ride-Share Industry

©2021 Bloomberg L.P.

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