The US ride-hailing giant was aiming to acquire
Foodpanda Taiwan by the first half of 2025 for $950 million, merging the top
two players in Taiwan's food delivery market.
"If
Uber acquires Foodpanda, it will be completely unrestrained by
competition," Chen Chi-ming, Taiwan's Fair Trade Commission (FTC) vice
chairman, told a press conference.
"The disadvantages to market competition from
this merger far outweigh its economic benefits," Chen said, adding that
the merged companies' market share would exceed 90 percent. "No corrective measures could
sufficiently ensure competition would be maintained," he said.
Uber had described the deal, announced in May, as
one of Taiwan's largest international deals outside the semiconductor industry.
Chen said the FTC conducted an economic analysis to
assess the merger's impact on competition and received over 600 responses from
food delivery platforms and relevant agencies. Taiwan's delivery trade union welcomed the FTC's decision, with
spokesman Su Po-hao saying it secures "greater benefits for the future of
the food delivery industry." The union had argued that the merger
would have created a monopoly and led to widespread losses for delivery riders,
vendors and consumers.
The companies have also reached a separate
agreement for Uber to buy $300 million in newly issued ordinary shares of
Delivery Hero, according to May's statement.