Last year, Didi Global, China’s ride-hailing giant that dominantly eclipsed Uber in the Southeast Asia markets, got into the wrong book of the Chinese authorities. The company had just listed in New York Stock Exchange before regulators opened investigation into its operation over alleged gross wrongdoings. Chinese regulators had asked Didi to delist from the New York Stock Exchange after 26 of its apps were removed from domestic app stores mid last year. For more than a year since the probe began, Didi has been under the weather, losing billions of dollars in investment funds. Didi’s ordeal, which was part...