By Jake Spring
BEIJING (Reuters) - Uber Technologies Inc's China unit boosted its valuation to more than $8 billion after it raised over $1 billion in its latest funding round, although the U.S. ride-hailing app is not yet profitable in the mainland due to intense competition.
Uber and its larger China rival, Didi Kuaidi, have spent heavily to subsidize rides to gain market share, betting on China's Internet-linked transport market becoming the world's biggest.
Travis Kalanick, CEO of Uber Technologies, told reporters in the Chinese capital on Friday he recognizes that spending on subsidies is "how you win" in China and that the company aims to beat Didi Kuaidi by spending subsidies more efficiently.
"I worry about it every day," he said, regarding the heavy spending on subsidies. Uber currently operates in 22 cities in China but Kalanick said it does not turn a profit in any city.
Didi Kuaidi, backed by Chinese Internet heavyweights Alibaba Group Holding Ltd and Tencent Holdings Ltd, has the country's biggest market share of car-hailing apps.
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Uber China's recently-closed Series B fundraising brought in "well over $1 billion", Kalanick said. A spokeswoman for Uber said the series had raised over $1.2 billion but declined to give an exact figure.
"I thought we did remarkably well especially given some of the macro trends that were going on," Kalanick said.
In September, Kalanick had said the unit had already raised $1.2 billion. The CEO did not comment on Friday on precisely how much had been raised in the four months since then. Before the latest fundraising, Uber's China unit was valued at $7 billion.
Kalanick warned that the market for fundraising would calm down at some point and the current high spending on subsidies cannot continue forever.
Uber's profits in other markets can be invested in Uber China and that income will eventually become a more important source of investment than fundraising, he said.
Kalanick acknowledged the unsuccessful history of U.S. technology companies in China, where companies like Google and Facebook have been largely shut out of the market, but brushed off concerns about that track record.
"I'm an adventurer and I want to try to make the impossible possible," he said.
(Reporting by Jake Spring; Writing by John Ruwitch; Editing by Muralikumar Anantharaman)