
(Bloomberg) -- Meituan dived its most in two months after unveiling plans to hire as many as 10,000 people this quarter, a remarkable move by a Chinese food delivery giant trying to fend off a challenge from ByteDance Ltd.
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Meituan's recruitment drive - which will span the nation from Beijing to Shenzhen - contrasts with layoffs rocking the tech industry as Silicon Valley titans and startups fire people to weather a potential recession. The campaign is intended to catch an upswing in consumer consumption, the company said in a statement.
That push coincides with ByteDance's expanding efforts to get into a delivery arena that Meituan dominates, and where Alibaba Group Holding Ltd.'s Ele.me is a distant second. ByteDance's Douyin - Tiktok's cousin in China - is testing a grocery and food delivery service in Beijing, Shanghai and Chengdu, the China News reported. ByteDance representatives didn't immediately respond to requests for comment.
"Douyin seems to be expanding its ambition beyond cooperation with Ele.me and wants to do it nationwide," said Willer Chen, senior research analyst at Forsyth Barr Asia Ltd. "This will lead to more head-to-head competition between Meituan and Douyin."
If Tiktok's operator forges ahead with full-fledged services, it could re-ignite a battle for control of the market that wiped out billions of dollars in value over the span of a year, before Beijing began to crack down on "reckless expansion of capital."
Meituan, which continues to report losses, saw revenue surge 28% in the September quarter as demand held up during the downturn. China's reopening is expected to spur economic activity and benefit Meituan in the longer run.
Douyin is becoming more ubiquitous in China, much like Tencent Holdings Ltd.'s super-app WeChat. Apart from bite-sized clips and live streams, ByteDance's flagship video forum is making forays into online commerce through services like grocery and food delivery. That could help ByteDance diversify its revenue from online advertising, and reduce the influence of Alibaba and Meituan over China's app-based digital economy.
"The local services market in China is large and penetration is still low, so there can be sustainable growth for multiple players," said Vey-Sern Ling, managing director at Union Bancaire Privee. "Douyin has substantial user traffic but its local service offerings may cater more to push-based recommendations and impulse-buying, rather than Meituan's more comprehensive services."
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