Friday, 2024 November 22

KrASIA Weekly: Go-Jek moving closer to decacorn status

Hi there, Mars here from the Philippines.

Southeast Asia’s ride-hailing giant Grab and its fiercest competitor Go-Jek continue to dominate our tech news coverage for this week, although the spotlight was more focused on the Indonesian ride-hailing firm, which ended the week with an additional US$1 billion in its coffers, overshadowing Grab’s US$200-million fresh funding from Central Group, Thailand’s largest retail conglomerate.

Go-Jek had finalised the first close of its Series F funding, led by existing investors including Google and Tencent. The announcement confirms KrASIA’s report that the firm was raising funds that would bring the company closer to a status of a decacorn – companies valued more than US$10 billion. With the fresh mega-funding, Go-Jek is expected to further accelerate its expansion in the region, following its entry into Singapore, Vietnam, and Thailand. Although it continues to face a roadblock in the Philippines.

With ride-hailing giants Grab and Go-Jek further expanding their footprints in the region, can we expect new startups to operate in this space to challenge the “duopoly”? Probably not, according to Jianggan Li, founder and CEO of Singapore-based venture builder and investment consultant Momentum Works, which we interviewed this week for our VC Series.

This week also saw KrASIA’s exclusive report on the fundraising activity of theAsianparent, the Singaporean online parenting startup similar to China’s Babytree. According to sources, theAsianparent is in talks with investors including Alibaba’s Ant Financial and Chinese conglomerate Fosun for a new funding round at pre-money valuation of US$60 million. Both Alibaba and Fosun have invested in Babytree, which raised US$200 million in Hong Kong IPO last year.

Grab and Go-Jek are likely to continue to dominate the news next week and trust that KrASIA will also be at the forefront to report on the latest development in the region’s ride-hailing space and other sectors that are shaping Southeast Asia’s startup scene. Meanwhile, have meaningful and joyful celebration of the Chinese New Year!

Here are some stories you shouldn’t miss.

Southeast Asia

Exclusive|Singaporean online parenting startup theAsianparent to raise new round led by Fosun (update)

Philippine antitrust watchdog fines Grab for post-merger audit intervention

Grab to launch three new ride-hailing services in Myanmar this year

After a failed Uber partnership, Thai taxi operator launches own ride booking app

Malaysian startup introduces the first Muslim-friendly browser

Even with Grab and Go-Jek in the market, Singapore’s Ryde secures funding

Indonesia’s Traveloka opens R&D centre in India

Grab announces its 3 billionth ride, a new R&D centre, and streaming service

Grab reportedly to bag $200m from Thailand’s Central Group in deepened regional push

Electric scooter startup Lime to promote responsible riding culture in Singapore

South Korean unicorn Woowa Brothers to begin food delivery in Vietnam

Lazada folds online grocer RedMart into its own app

Indonesia’s startup The Fit Company announced funding from East Ventures

Fore Coffee announced US$8.5 million funding and is challenged by a new competitor

Ofo axes its Singapore operations team

Go-Jek raises $1b in first close of Series F round

Exclusive | Alibaba and Fosun are about to invest into theAsianparent, SEA’s Babytree

Feature

Neuron Mobility co-founder Zachary Wang: Businesses need to be hyperlocal

Is Indonesia better equipped to deal with hoaxes on WhatsApp in this election?

Momentum Works Jianggan predicts 2019 for KrASIA: Online giants going offline, and more down rounds

What 2019 holds for Southeast Asia’s e-commerce sector

New regulations, internet celebrities, and sweeping into the hinterland—how did the Chinese mobile internet fare in 2018?

How localisation strategies aid Tik Tok’s global reach

 

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