DiDi Global has reached a $740M settlement with $DIDI investors to resolve claims related to the company’s U.S. IPO.
In June 2021, DiDi raised more than $4 billion in a highly anticipated U.S. initial public offering. Within days, Chinese regulators launched a cybersecurity investigation into the company and ordered DiDi’s apps to be removed from app stores, citing data security concerns. The company’s share price fell sharply, and investors later filed a lawsuit. In December 2025, DiDi agreed to settle the case for $740 million.
June 30, 2021: DiDi completes its U.S. IPO, raising more than $4.4 billion.
July 2, 2021: China’s cybersecurity regulator launches a formal investigation into DiDi.
Mid–2021: DiDi discloses that it is subject to a cybersecurity review and ongoing regulatory restrictions.
May 2022: DiDi announces plans to delist from the New York Stock Exchange.
December 2025: DiDi agrees to a $740 million settlement to resolve an investor lawsuit related to these events.
January 12, 2026: The court gives final approval to the settlement between DiDi Global and $DIDI investors.
When DiDi Global went public on the NYSE in June 2021, the company was presented to investors as a leading Chinese technology platform with a dominant position in ride-hailing.
In its IPO materials, DiDi highlighted its large and growing user base, strong market share and long-term growth potential.
DiDi’s registration statement acknowledged that the company operated in a heavily regulated environment and warned that future regulatory changes could affect its business. These disclosures, however, were framed as general risks.
The IPO filings did not state that Chinese regulators had already raised concerns about the company’s U.S. listing and warned DiDi to postpone its IPO until a data-security review was completed.
Two days after DiDi’s shares began trading, the Cyberspace Administration of China (CAC) announced that it had opened a cybersecurity investigation into the company.
Regulators ordered DiDi to stop registering new users, and its apps were removed from Chinese app stores shortly thereafter, according to official CAC notices.
Following these events, $DIDI declined sharply and continued to fall as the regulatory restrictions remained in place.
With user growth effectively halted and regulatory pressure increasing, the company later announced plans to delist from the NYSE, locking in significant losses for investors.
In response, shareholders filed a lawsuit claiming DiDi misled them about regulatory risks in China.
What Can Investors Expect Now?
DiDi Global has reached a $740M settlement with $DIDI investors to resolve claims related to the company’s U.S. IPO.