"...This is corporate war and the competition between us and Uber is very intense... The analogy that I gave about India is that this is like Vietnam War.
"We are the local guerillas...We have the Americans carpet bombing us but we will go into the nooks and corners of the country and we will find those opportunities in niche areas and in large areas," Ola co-founder and CEO Bhavish Aggarwal said at a TiE event here.
"We have significantly improved our bottom-line over the past year or so and we have a very clear path to profitability . Within the next two years, we will be profitable," he said.
Previously, Indian startups like Ola and Flipkart have raised concerns about "capital dumping" by global rivals like Uber and Amazon, who have deep pockets and are investing heavily in the Indian market.
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They had urged that the government should design policies that favour home grown companies. However, this also drew a flak from many quarters that viewed the statement as being protectionist.
"It is for the relevant government agencies to decide what capital dumping is and what is not. We are focussed on building a business which is impactful," Aggarwal said.
However, he added that while one may call it capital dumping or not "but the fact is money is thrown, customer gets lots of discounts, drivers get a lot of subsidies".
"The negative social effects of that is that once these are withdrawn, drivers have an issue with that," Aggarwal said.
Using another war analogy, Aggarwal said the fight between Uber and Didi in China was like World War II.
Last year, Chinese ride-hailing firm Didi Chuxing had announced the acquisition of Uber's operations in China in a USD 35 billion deal.
"Globally, rideshare is a very intense industry and I believe there is an irrational belief that it is a winner take all business and there will be one guy standing in the end. And that leads to an irrational exuberance from the investors also," he said.
"The Indian Internet ecosystem is going through an interesting phase... An investor should definitely question companies on their (investor) returns, their path to profitability.. I, as a company, have not seen investors getting jittery unnecessarily," he said.