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Tim Cook visits China, speaks with app developers, takes a taxi using Didi Chuxing

As reported earlier, Apple CEO Tim Cook is visiting Beijing, China this week. The earlier Reuters report suggested Cook was intending to talk with government officials about company matters amidst increasing tensions between the country and Apple, following trademark disputes and the ban on iTunes Movies and iBooks content.

On Monday, though, Cook met with Chinese app developers at an Apple Store. The talk was hosted by Jean Lui, president of taxi company Didi Chuxing, of which Apple has invested $1 billion dollars. A plethora of Chinese app publishers were in attendance, including a Groupon-esque clone ‘Meituan’,  photo app MeituPic, news provider Toutia.com, cooking app DayDayCook and game developer Tap4Fun (via CNBC).

Tim Cook tweeted that he is using Apple’s latest investment as his mode of transport to get around China, posting a photo of himself in a Didi Chuxing taxi. The company is sort of like Uber as a ride-sharing service at scale; the company has announced it serves over 300 million users. Apple is thought to have invested in the company to assist its Apple Car (Project Titan) development, as well as help with government relations.

Bloomberg is reporting that Didi Chuxing is considering an IPO (in the US) as soon as next year, which would allow Apple to quickly reap financial rewards of its $1 billion investment. The taxi company is valued at around $26 billion. However, in a statement to TechCrunch, Didi has denied plans to IPO anytime soon.

It is unclear how long Tim Cook plans to spend in China, although his duties are still expected to extend beyond visits with Chinese developers in Apple Stores. He is still expected to meet with government officials later in the week to discuss international relations, potentially including the reinstatement of iTunes Movies and iBookstore sales in the region.

As Apple is relying on China for future revenue growth, it is important that Chinese attitudes towards Apple remain healthy. Notable investor Carl Icahn backed out of AAPL stock on fears that China is unstable and could foil business for the company.

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