U.S. law firm Hughes Hubbard & Reed has advised Singapore’s Grab, the dominant ride-hailing service in Southeast Asia, on its acquisition of Uber Technologies’ business in the region, with Morrison Foerster representing Japan's Softbank Group, which has invested in both Grab and Uber.

According to Reuters, this marks the U.S. company’s second retreat from an Asian market after China. This is also the industry’s first big consolidation in Southeast Asia. 

Reuters added that an industry shakeup became likely earlier this year when SoftBank’s Vision Fund made a multi-billion dollar investment in Uber. SoftBank owns stakes in most major global ride services companies, and executives have indicated they favoured consolidation.

Under the terms of the agreement, Uber will take a 27.5 percent stake in Grab, and Uber CEO Dara Khosrowshahi will join Grab’s board. Grab was last valued at $6 billion after a $2.5 billion financing round in July, Reuters said.

However, since the announcement of the deal, first Singapore, and then the Philippines and Malaysia said that they would consider whether the Uber-Grab deal hinders competition. The expanded scrutiny of the deal in Southeast Asia could pose a major hurdle to the U.S. firm’s attempt to improve profitability by exiting its loss-making regional operation, noted Reuters.

In a rare move, Singapore proposed interim measures to require Uber and Grab to maintain their pre-transaction independent pricing until it completes a review of the deal, saying it had “reasonable grounds” to suspect that competition had been infringed, Reuters added.

The Hughes Hubbard team on the transaction was led by New York-based partner Ken Lefkowitz. The law firm also advised Grab in its July financing round last summer.

 

To contact the editorial team, please email ALBEditor@thomsonreuters.com.

Related Articles

R&T, WongP, Lee & Lee advise on $595 mln TCM deal

by Nimitt Dixit |

Singapore law firms WongPartnership, Lee & Lee and Rajah & Tann (R&T), and R&T’s Malaysian member firm Christopher & Lee Ong have advised traditional Chinese medicine firm Eu Yan Sang International (EYS) and its shareholders on the sale of 86 percent of EYS’ shares.

Skadden advises Cemex on $650 mln Philippines divestment

by Nimitt Dixit |

U.S. law firm Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher & Flom has advised Mexico-based multinational building materials company Cemex on the sale of its operations and assets in the Philippines to Dacon Corporation, DMCI Holdings, and Seminara Mining and Power Corporation.

KPMG Hong Kong law firm founder heads to CRS

by Nimitt Dixit |

UK law firm Charles Russell Speechlys has hired a team of four attorneys from SF Lawyers, KPMG’s law firm in Hong Kong, led by the firm’s founder and managing partner, Shirley Fu.