Six of China's Bike Rental Companies Have Shuttered in the Last Five Months
This post comes courtesy of our content partners at TechNode.
At least six bike rental companies in China have shuttered during the last five months. After Bluegogo and Coolqi, the latest to close shop was Xiaoming (小鸣) which followed a similar scenario. Staff is claiming that the company’s controller Deng Yonghao has misappropriated funds and is nowhere to be seen. The company’s CEO Kai Lushi has already left and workers have been waiting for wages since September. Reports state 99 percent of them have been laid off.
READ: Bluegogo CEO Announces Sale of Company, Admits to Management Mistakes in Open Letter
The bike rental industry is facing a bitterly cold winter and users are worried what will happen to their deposits. Estimates published in August put total deposits for rental bikes at RMB 10 billion, according to data from the China Internet Network Information Center. There is now a higher number of complaints connected to bike rental deposits than e-commerce disputes. Although the first national guidelines for the industry were issued in August, there are no clear requirements regulating deposit returns, Xinhua has reported.
Former CEO of Coolqi Gao Weiwei has suggested that the price of their bikes (RMB 650) will be enough to cover the cost of user deposits (RMB 298).
“In the worst scenario, we will allow debtors to ride our bikes home,” said Gao.
Startup database IT Juzi has analyzed the reasons behind the online bike rental industry’s demise.
1. Capital investment cool down
Compared to the first half of this year when the average number of financing deals per month was 3.7, the third quarter has brought a significant decline putting the average number of deals at 1.3 a month, IT Juzi’s data shows.
Father of Bluegogo’s founder Li Gang has admitted during a meeting with suppliers and investors on Thursday that the failure to sustain its capital chain was the reason behind the bankruptcy. Coolqi likely has the same problem.
2. Uncertain profit model
Bike rental companies are still using venture capital to finance their operation while they set up their brand. However, data shows that rent is only enough to cover maintenance costs. Even with huge deposit funds, it is still difficult to cover all the costs.
3. Intense competition
Mobike and Ofo occupy a nearly 95 percent market share of the bicycle rental industry. All other companies have to carve up the remaining 5 percent.
4. The market is close to saturation
According to incomplete statistics, there are now a total of 14 cities across the country that have stopped adding new rental bicycles. Expansion is a difficult task for latecomers.
5. Missed merger opportunities
Once the market is saturated, the capital flow will stop. IT Juzi says that companies should help each other through mergers to avoid losing their opportunity.
Image: wochacha.com, IT Juzi