Indonesia’s Go-Jek rejected in the Philippines
FILE PHOTO: A driver and passenger ride on a motorbike, part of the Go-Jek ride-hailing service, on a busy street in central Jakarta, Indonesia December 18, 2015. REUTERS/Darren Whiteside/FIle Photo

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Indonesia’s Go-Jek suffered a setback to its expansion plans on Wednesday after the transportation regulator in the Philippines rejected its application to launch a ride-hailing service, saying its domestic unit did not meet local ownership criteria. However, the setback may only be temporary as the firm, whose backers include Google, could appeal the decision or team up with Philippine investors.

“Go-Jek can get a local partner that will own at least 60 percent of the ride-hailing entity to comply with the law,” said January Sabale, head of communications at the Land Transportation Franchising and Regulatory Board (LTFRB).

The decision comes as Go-Jek seeks to expand in Southeast Asia, having evolved from a ride-hailing service founded in 2011 to provide a one-stop app through which users can order food and services such as massages and make payments online.

The firm has raised billions of dollars from investors such as Tencent Holdings, JD.com and Temasek Holdings to challenge market leader Grab.

Several Philippine ride-hailing firms have been operating in the capital Manila and in major provinces since March 2017, but have had limited success in wresting domestic market share away from Singapore-based Grab, which stands at over 90 percent.

“Homegrown firms are not making a dent on early player Grab, because the cars they can enroll now have to go through the LTFRB’s filtering hurdles,” said Rene Santiago, a transportation expert and president of Bellwether Advisory in Manila.

Go-Jek applied for a license to operate in Manila in August through wholly owned subsidiary Velox Technology Philippines. Later the same month, ride-hailing was added to a list of industries where foreign ownership is limited to 40 percent.

Velox “did not meet the citizenship requirement and the application was not verified in accordance with our rules,” regulator chairman Martin Delgra said

A spokesman for Go-Jek said: “We continue to engage positively with the LTFRB and other government agencies, as we seek to provide a much-needed transportation solution for the people of the Philippines.”

There are around 37,000 registered ride-hailing vehicles across eight accredited firms, Delgra said. The Department of Transportation has capped the total at 65,000.


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