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Shipper banks US$63M Series B to compete with the likes of Waresix in Indonesia

Shipper Management Team

Shipper, an Indonesia-based digital logistics provider, announced today that it has secured US$63 million in a Series B funding round, led by DST Global partners and Sequoia Capital India.

Existing investors Prosus Ventures, Floodgate, Lightspeed, Insignia Ventures, AC Ventures and Y Combinator also participated.

This round comes less than a year after Shipper raised an undisclosed amount in Series A funding in June.

According to a press statement, the proceeds of this round will go towards hiring, product enhancement and expansion of its network.

Also Read: Logisly nets US$6M Series A led by Monk’s Hill to connect shippers with verified trucking firms in Indonesia

Launched in 2016, Shipper offers a suite of logistics solutions like multi-courier shipping, distributed warehousing and fulfilment networks for businesses of all sizes.

Besides that, it also provides a multi-carrier API that allows sellers to manage orders, print shipping labels and get tracking information from multiple providers on their phones.

Last year, Shipper said that its customers saw a surge in shipping accelerated by COVID- 19, leading to increased demand for its services.

“We started the company four years ago as a result of our personal pain points in packing and delivering packages as online sellers. Building Shipper, we have always approached the problem from the angle of a micro, small and medium-sized business because that is who we are. We are excited to play our role in further empowering this segment and strengthening the nation’s logistics
ecosystem,” Shipper co-founder Budi Handoko.

E-commerce has always been a popular sector in Indonesia that saw significant growth since the onset of COVID-19. Other players in the local market are Waresix, SiCepat, Kargo, Ritase, and Logisly, among others.

According to GlobalData, e-commerce sales are estimated to grow by 37.4 per cent, compared to the pre-COVID-19 estimate of 22.2 per cent for the same year.

Amid the crisis, many Southeast Asian logistics-tech companies, such as B2B logistics firm LogislyAndalin, Mycloudfulfillment and Flash Express (both Thailand), and Tramés (Singapore), raised financing.

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Image Credit: Shipper

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Binar Academy secures seed funding to upskill, recruit Indonesian talent

Binar Academy co-founders: (L to R) Alamanda Shantika, Seto Lareno, Dita Aisyah

Binar Academy, an Indonesia-based edutech startup, has raised seed funding in a deal led by Singaporean VC firm Teja Ventures.

Eduspaze, The Indonesia Women Empowerment Fund, Savearth Fund, and several angel investors from the Angel Investment Network of Indonesia (ANGIN), also participated in the round.

The startup said that it will use the fresh funds to accelerate the growth of its core technology and hire more educators.

Founded by ex-gojek executives Alamanda Shantika and Dita Aisyah, Binar Academy aims to equip high school and university students with the necessary skills required to succeed in the evolving digital economy.

The four-year-old company claims to have educated over 8,000 students and placed talents for jobs, leading to revenue growth of 80 per cent last year.

Also Read: [Updated] Indonesian edutech startup Ruangguru confirms US$150M Series C funding round

“In the past three years, we have continued to evolve our core product – Binar Bootcamp – to fulfill the learning experience of our students and the market demand for digital talent. We are excited for the opportunity to expand our reach, educate more students, and build a community of lifelong learners,” shared Shantika.

“The COVID-19 pandemic has driven Indonesia’s education institutions, teachers, students as well as parents to adapt to online learning. However, we still need to innovate the way education is presented to create a more approachable and enjoyable learning experience. I’m confident that the combination of enhanced learning experiences, technology, and community cultivated by Binar Academy will bring that,” she added.

According to The World Bank, skill sets of ICT (Information and Communication Technology) graduates in Indonesia fall short of industry requirements, projecting a shortage of nine million skilled and semi-skilled ICT workers up to 2030.

This is why Binar Academy believes that developing new talents and upskilling existing talents for the digital economy is becoming more urgent in Indonesia.

In a previous interview with e27, Shantika has shared about her lifelong dream of becoming an educator.

“Like when I was building the gojek team. I was doing more than just building a platform; I am building the human behind it,” she stressed.

Other prominent edutech companies in Indonesia include Ruangguru, Duolingo, Zenius Education, Sekolahmu, and more.

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Image Credit: Binar Academy

 

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Product update for March: Expert connect, credit card removal for PRO trials and website improvements

release notes

In March 2021 product updates, we wanted to give startups the capabilities at accessing knowledge of experts in certain area to better help them build their company and we removed the need to put your credit card detail when signing up for PRO membership trials so you can try it out easily.

Expert connect

Expert Connect allowed startup founders to find the right expert with certain expertise or knowledge in certain area that might not be accessible or learned from general inquiries in the internet. We have pre-select five experts from various industries and verticals as a start and more experts will be joining the program.

Start your connect now, click here.

Credit card removal for PRO trials

We noticed that, a lot of you were interested the test out our PRO features but bounced out because you were afraid that you might forget to cancel the subscription before the trial ends. Though we are quite confident that our PRO benefits are worth it, we’ve been there before, and know how it feels to commit. So we got you covered! Now you can sign up for trials without any credit card details. Just click here and voila. (terms and conditions applied)

Website improvements

Nothing fancy, we picked up the broom and dustpan and finally cleaned up our kitchen. You should notice some improvements in speed and loading time. *pats back*

Editor’s note: e27 aims to foster thought leadership by publishing contributions from the community. This season we are seeking op-eds, analysis and articles on food tech and sustainability. Share your opinion and earn a byline by submitting a post.

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Co-founders of Grab Philippines, Zalora join cloud kitchen startup Kraver’s Canteen’s US$1.5M seed round

Kraver's
Kraver’s Canteen, a Philippine cloud kitchen startup, has secured US$1.5 million in a seed round led by Foxmont Capital.

Angel investors participating in the round include Lance Gokongwei (Chairman of JG Summit, Robinsons, Cebu Pacific), Brian Cu (co-founder of Grab PH, gojek, Zalora), and Paulo Campos III (co-founder of Zalora).

The fresh funds will go towards expanding Kraver’s operations by building 100 kitchens across the Philippines and investing heavily in regional metropolis hubs like Cebu, Iloilo, and Davao.

It will also develop smart kitchen technology to support increased kitchen operations and upgrade its delivery infrastructure.

Launched in 2020 by Eric Dee, Victor Lim and Victor Mapua, Kraver’s cloud kitchen supports brands including Tiger Sugar, Yogost and Tonkatsu Maisen (Bench Group). The company shared it is looking to partner with Taco Bell, Pizza Hut and Dairy Queen in the coming months.

“As more customers begin to eat out more and office life resumes, we’ll likely see a shift in customer behaviour. It’s important to remember that cloud kitchens are not designed to replace the brick-and-mortar experience, they are designed more as an expansion tool for brands to take advantage of the growing pie created by delivery aggregators,” said Dee.

Also Read: How Loship gives its rivals a run for their money in Vietnam with a unique combination of food delivery and podcasting

“Ordering food online is a consumer behaviour that is here to stay, and as long as customers are ordering, the cloud kitchen ecosystem will continue to grow. Whether consumers notice this or not, more of the food they order to their home or office will be coming from cloud kitchens over time,” he added.

“The Philippines is at the precipice of a major digital evolution. A big part of that will be a change in the way that Filipinos consume food. Cloud kitchens will soon be part of the natural fabric of the F&B industry, and we believe Kraver’s is the right startup to lead the way in the Philippines,” said Franco Varona, Managing Partner at Foxmont Capital Partners.

In November last year, MadEats, a similar cloud kitchen startup headquartered in Manila,  received an undisclosed sum in pre-seed investment, led by Tinder co-founder Justin Mateen, with participation from Paymongo co-founder Luis Sia.

The on-demand food delivery of Southeast Asia is expected to grow 4x by 2025, from US$4 billion to US$8 billion, according to research from Dataspring.

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Image Credit: Kraver’s Canteen

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Is everything hunky-dory with public listing via SPACs?

The stage is set for Southeast Asian ride-hailing behemoth Grab’s public listing in the US. The Singapore-headquartered company has confirmed its partnership with Altimeter Growth Corp., a special purpose acquisition company (SPAC), and plans to list its shares on the NASDAQ at a valuation of US$39.6 billion in the coming months.

The SPAC merger for Grab, which also includes private investments in public equity (PIPE) of a sum exceeding US$4 billion, is to date the largest US equity offering by a Southeast Asian company.

Experts believe that this sets a record-breaking benchmark for aspirant unicorns originating from Southeast Asia. It is also a momentous motivation booster for many startups in the new digital economy of this region, as listing via SPACs is unlocking a new path to liquidity and public markets.

No doubt, this will inspire many a tech unicorns in SEA to take the SPAC route for public listing.

However, is everything hunky-dory with listing via SPACs? Isn’t it a backdoor way to take a company public with questionable investors?

We posed these questions to a few industry watchers, mostly venture capitalists, in Southeast Asia.

Also Read: Traveloka in talks for a merger with Peter Thiel’s SPAC to go public: Report

Here is what they said to us (comments have been edited for clarity, style and lack of space).

Carman Chan, founder and Managing Partner of Click Ventures

In general, SPAC listing does carry higher risk but sometimes it can also generate a potential higher return if the company outperforms the prediction,  similar to late-stage startup investing.

One of the differences between SPAC and traditional IPO is the baseline revenue that is used to value the company. In a traditional IPO, a company cannot use projections to justify its valuation, whereas SPAC allows a company to use projected revenue to justify a higher valuation.

Therefore, the risk/reward is tied to the projection versus the actual realised numbers. Also, the sponsors of a SPAC usually are able to obtain ownership at a discounted price when the SPAC makes an acquisition (this is called D-SPAC).

Therefore, they are incentivised to get a deal done instead of maximising the return. This is a misalignment with the investors whose focus is to maximise the internal rate of return (IRR).

However, there are reasons that motivate both investors and companies to go for the SPAC route and that’s why it became so popular since last year.

First of all, listing in the US is substantially more expensive than listing in other markets or listing via SPACs. Also, a traditional IPO requires a lot of roadshows and physical meetings, which are not possible due to the COVID-19 crisis.

This is why SPAC has become one of the go-to solutions because of its lower cost. It is also more time-efficient and doable in the current environment.

Also Read: Asia-focused tech SPAC Poema Global announces US$300M IPO in US

Also, if you look at a bigger picture, the US is actually opening up its private market to non-accredited investors — starting from launching Job Act a few years ago, allowing retail investors to acquire startup shares online through approved crowdfunding for equity websites, to making new regulatory reforms by the SEC.

Therefore, SPAC is more like an extended form of this type of higher risk and provides investment opportunities for later-stage startups, and more people are going to have access to this type of high-risk opportunities.

Sergei Filippov, Managing Partner, Morphosis Capital Partners

Grab’s listing, no doubt, prepares the stage for more Southeast Asian companies — such as gojek, Bukalapak, Tokopedia and Traveloka — to go public through SPACs. However, this won’t have effect on SEA’s startup ecosystem, as behemoths like Grab and gojek are no longer startups, technically speaking.

Grab is considered to be past-Series H stage with outstanding US$10.1 billion already raised to date. There’s basically no room for it to raise next round, other than launching an IPO — which was considered a possibility by CEO Anthony Tan in November 2019, if and when Grab’s entire business would be profitable.

However, the profitability part never happened. According to documents filed to the SEC by Altimeter Growth on April 13, we can see that Grab posted net loss of US$2 billion+ for three consecutive years through 2020. Net loss in 2020 alone was US$2.7 billion, while net revenue was US$1.19 billion.

Grab forecasts that its EBITDA is going to be positive by US$500 million, while for 2020, it was negative at US$800 million. Presentation goes creative in convincing how EBITDA is positive, for example, for some of the businesses (i.e. in the mobility segment since Q4 2019).

Also Read: What does Peter Thiel-backed Bridgetown’s IPO mean for SEA’s startup ecosystem?

Grab’s valuation before the SPAC deal was around US$15 billion, but with the SPAC and IPO deals, it is now valued almost US$40 billion. The market signal, I think, is that even with negative EBITDA and past-Series F and H stages, a company can still go for an IPO and remain highly attractive for investors — which I think is giving a controversial message to young startups.

In contrast, for investors, it means there’s still a possibility for a good exit even at the latest stage. SPACs, despite the criticism they receive, serve as a good solution for late-stage companies that are hungry for more investments.

Michael Lints, Partner, Golden Gate Ventures

The Grab listing is positive for the startup ecosystem. It will expose the ecosystem to more international institutional investors. Also the listing will be a good exit for early investors and employees who subsequently might re-invest that capital in startups.

The rise of SPACs have changed how the market views them. Well-known institutional investors have been backers of several large SPACs. A few years ago, SPACs might have had a questionable reputation but I don’t think that is the case now.

Sanjay Zimmermann, Principal, White Star Capital

Prior to 2020, SPACs were not as common and not always used in the best settings, hence some of the criticism But the main criticism today is that there may be too many SPACs in the market, leading to some SPAC sponsors overbidding or not making the best investments in an effort to close a transaction before the end of their investment period which tends to be 24 months.

Also Read: Catcha joins SPAC bandwagon, files for a US$250M IPO in US

There are great SPAC managers and less experienced ones and they should ultimately be evaluated on a case by case basis, but can’t be characterised as a category as a whole as being a good or bad investment.

Grab’s move appears to be a landmark transaction as the largest SPAC in the history of SPACs and the most valuable SEA company to be listed in the US which certainly sets an impressive precedent if completed successfully for other large exits to come.

Dave Ng, General Partner, Altara Ventures

SPAC is just one mechanism to go public and not all SPACs are equal. This is similar to the fact that not all IPOs are equal as well.  What matters more is always the underlying asset and business fundamentals in consideration, whether via a SPAC or typical IPO listing.

In Grab’s case, there are some serious backers, which include the likes of Fidelity, BlackRock, T. Rowe Price, Temasek, PNB, Mubadala, and Janus. These are top-tier investors that any company going public would love to have on its book.

Robson Lee, Partner at Gibson Dunn’s (Singapore)

Grab’s listing puts paid to the perception that the SPAC route to the stock market is a back-door capital market entry for companies that either lack fundamentals, have questionable prospects and/or shady management. There would always be the unavoidable black sheep in every market.

Grab’s listing structure and terms show that the management is focused in expanding its burgeoning footprints with the funds from the listing. The CEO has made it clear that Grab will be a force to be reckoned with in its core businesses, underscored by a respectable financial performance in 2020.

Photo by Rayson Tan on Unsplash

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