DiDi Global Sinks on Delisting Plans and Wider Quarterly Loss

DiDi Global Inc. tumbled in U.S. premarket trading Monday after the ride-hailing giant said it’s planning to delist its U.S.-traded shares before it finds a new venue for the stock

The Didi Global Inc. app for download on the Apple Inc. App Store on a smartphone arranged in Hong Kong, China, on Friday, Dec. 3, 2021. Didi has begun preparations to withdraw from U.S. stock exchanges and will start work on a Hong Kong share sale, a stunning reversal as it yields to demands from Chinese regulators that had opposed its American listing.
By Divya Balji and Ishika Mookerjee
April 18, 2022 | 07:59 AM

Bloomberg — DiDi Global Inc. (DIDI) tumbled in U.S. premarket trading Monday after the ride-hailing giant said it’s planning to delist its U.S.-traded shares before it finds a new venue for the stock. The company also reported that its quarterly loss almost doubled.

DiDi’s American Depositary Receipts sank as much as 24% to $1.88 in early trading after DiDi set an extraordinary general meeting for May 23 to vote on delisting its shares from the New York Stock Exchange. While the company will continue to explore listing on another internationally recognized exchange, DiDi said it won’t apply until after the U.S. delisting is finished.

DiDi Global's ADRs have sunk more than 80% since its June IPO

“Although investors were well aware that DiDi Global intended to delist, the manner of delisting has taken investors aback,” said Gary Dugan, chief executive officer at the Global CIO Office.

Separately, DiDi reported that its fourth-quarter net loss widened by 95% from a year earlier to 383 million yuan on a 13% decline in revenue to 40.78 billion yuan.

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DiDi Plans Shareholder Meeting in May to Vote on U.S. Delisting

DiDi has plunged 82% since going public last June, wiping out $56 billion in market value. The Chinese government was angered by DiDi’s U.S. listing and days later launched a cybersecurity probe and forced its services off domestic app stores. The agency in Beijing responsible for data security was later said to have asked DiDi’s top executives to devise a plan to delist because of concern sensitive data may leak.

In March, the company suspended preparations for its planned Hong Kong listing after the Cyberspace Administration of China informed executives that their proposals to prevent security and data leaks had fallen short of requirements, Bloomberg News reported.

Investors had remained optimistic after Beijing regulators modified a decade-long rule that restricted financial data sharing by offshore-listed companies. The move could help U.S. regulators gain full access to auditing reports of the majority of the 200-plus Chinese companies listed in New York.

“The DiDi news only adds to poor news from China, undermining any hopes for a sustained rally,” Dugan said. “International investors will once again be put off rebuilding weighting in Chinese equities.”