"The battle in China had become global. We had sovereign wealth of China being invested in our competition globally. We had American tech companies that were being compelled to invest in our competitor in China. And so China battle had become a global battle," Kalanick said at the TiE Global Summit here.
In August, the Chinese ride-hailing firm Didi Chuxing announced acquisition of Uber's operations in China in a USD 35 billion deal. While Didi acquired Uber China's brand, business operations and data, Uber received 5.89 per cent share of the combined entity, totalling 17.7 per cent economic interest in Didi Chuxing.
"At some point we realised that we can't do everything ourselves. So we partnered in China so that we can focus on other interesting things we are doing worldwide like Ubereats, what is going on in India, driverless cars. There are whole bunch of things that we needed to focus on. We could not do everything ourselves. We did put our heart and soul in that effort (China operations)," he said.
Kalanick, who is on a five-day trip to India, yesterday said the company was losing USD 200 million a month in China and that merging was a "great strategy".
Asked about his views on the ideal number of co-founders for a successful startup venture, Kalanick said: "The thing is when you have too many co-founders...It takes too long to arrive at a decision. Solo, likewise, is a tough road too."
In India, many of the Unicorn Club members (private companies with valuation of over USD one billion) like Flipkart (Sachin Bansal and Binny Bansal), Snapdeal (Kunal Bahl and Rohit Bansal), Ola (Bhavish Aggarwal and Ankit Bhati) and Zomato (Deepinder Goyal and Pankaj Chaddah) have two co-founders.