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Coinbase Ventures, others invest in Indonesia’s crypto exchange Pintu

Pintu, an Indonesia-based crypto-assets exchange company, announced that it has raised an undisclosed funding round.

Coinbase Ventures (a US-based blockchain and cryptoassets-focused VC firm) led the round along with Pantera Capital (US-based blockchain and cryptoassets-focused VC) and Intudo Ventures (Indonesia-only VC firm).

Blockchain.com Ventures, Castle Island Ventures, and Alameda Ventures, also participated.

The company has not revealed what it intends to do with the funding but has been ramping up its hiring for several roles.

Pintu was founded by Jeth Soetoyo last year with the intention to help local millennials and retail users invest in crypto assets such as Bitcoin, Ethereum.

On being asked how the platform differs from its competition, Andrew Adjiputro, the COO of the company said that Pintu focuses on the mass market to reach mainly first-time crypto users, and its value proposition lies in its mobile-first app, easy user experience, and educational materials developed by the company.

Also Read: Japan plans to increase internal security in crypto exchanges

Pintu is also officially registered and licensed by Kominfo and BAPPEBTI, Indonesia’s commodity futures trading regulator

“We are witnessing immense crypto assets volume growth within less than a year of our app launch in April 2020. Frankly, this is just the tip of the iceberg given the fact that the Indonesian crypto assets industry is still five years behind the US. We have a mission to exponentially grow market adoption via crypto assets literacy, best-in-class user experience, and customer trust. In terms of next steps, our focus lies on expanding our token offerings, features, and product with a key focus on making our customers happy,” Soetoyo said.

That being said, Pintu is also not released from the immense amount of competition surrounding it. Other Indonesian cryptocurrency exchanges include Indodax, Tokocrypto, and Binance.

In 2018, the Indonesian Commodity Futures Trading Regulatory Agency (also known as Bappepti) under the Ministry of Trade of the Republic of Indonesia has elected to regulate bitcoin and other cryptoassets as commodities.

Government support has been the strong tailwind for Indonesian crypto assets development by promoting regulations that ensure safe and responsible crypto asset investing activities through legally licensed crypto assets brokers such as Pintu.

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FoodStory attracts Series B to help Thai restaurateurs optimise their F&B biz

FoodStory, a Thailand-based restaurant management startup, announced today that it has raised an undisclosed amount of funding in a Series B round led by Beacon VC, the venture capital arm of Kasikornbank.

JWD InfoLogistics, a company engaged in integrated in-land and overseas logistics businesses, also joined the round.

FoodStory (not to be confused with Indonesia’s cloud kitchen startup FoodStory) intends to use the proceeds from the round for product development, so it can in turn improve restaurant operation efficiency in the future.

Launched in 2012, FoodStory aims to enhance the Thai restaurant ecosystem by turning data into insights for owners to better understand and optimise their businesses for sustainable development.

Apart from supporting restaurant operations management, FoodStory’s solution also allows them to acquire new customers and improve sales.

On the user’s front, its smartphone app lets food lovers find and read stories, and stay in touch with the restaurants in real time.

As of now, the startup claims to have over 25,000 users on its platform.

Also Read: Dinner date with data: How F&B retailers can use retail data to drive sales in a post-pandemic world

“For the past two years, we have developed the restaurant ecosystem through a partnership with LINE MAN and Wongnai in order to help restaurants increase their revenue. We launched FoodStory Market to facilitate the online purchase of raw ingredients and address the pain points of price fluctuation, inconvenience in physical shopping, and employee fraud,” said Thagoon Chartsutipol, founder of FoodStory.

“In order to empower a comprehensive restaurant ecosystem that connects farm to folk, we need a strong financial services partner like KBank and a cold chain logistics expert like JWD to fill these gaps and successfully build on the new form of supply chain business,” he added.

“JWD Group foresees the importance and growth potential of the food industry, especially through e-commerce channels. Our investment in FoodStory is one of the e-commerce strategies to accelerate the food logistics business to cover B2B, B2C, and C2C segments in the future.

This growth will be enabled by cold chain express delivery service as well as an extensive network of temperature-controlled distribution centers and warehouses according to our business plan,” Tanate Piriyothinkul, Chief Commercial Officer of JWD InfoLogistics PCL, added.

“Despite the uncertainty within the restaurant industry due to the pandemic, Beacon VC believes that FoodStory will play a crucial role in helping restaurant entrepreneurs to survive this crisis, especially as they shift from dine-in to take-out and food delivery,” commented Thanapong Na Ranong, Managing Director of Beacon VC.

In 2018, FoodStory had raised US$1 million in funding from Wongnai.

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Ecosystem Roundup: A new seed fund for Vietnam + a new SPAC for SEA

SoftBank Group Chairman Masayoshi Son

SoftBank Group Chairman Masayoshi Son

500 Startups Vietnam’s general partners Binh Tran and Eddie Thai launch new seed fund Ascend Vietnam Ventures (AVV); AVV will invest US$500K to US$2M into 25 startups over the next three years; A third of those companies will receive follow-on investment of up to US$4mn each.

Emtek Group buys minority stake in Grab’s Indonesia unit in sign of deepening alliance; This transaction follows Grab’s acquisition of a 4.6% stake in Emtek for US$635mn in March; According to sources, Emtek is interested in buying Tokopedia’s stake in payments firm OVO.

Following the GoTo merger, should Grab buy an e-commerce marketplace?; If Grab is indeed eyeing a merger or an acquisition, then ecommerce unicorn Bukalapak is a potential candidate; This rumor was fueled by Grab’s recent alliance with Indonesian conglomerate Emtek, which backs Bukalapak and e-wallet Dana.

Singapore’s 8i Capital files to raise US$50mn for second Asia-focused SPAC; In a filing, 8i said it will pursue prospective targets in Asia, particularly businesses with enterprise value of between US$100mn and US$500mn that are preferably already cash-generative.

GoTo’s targeting US$40bn IPO valuation — is it the price of future growth?; Food delivery and financial services will likely be the most promising businesses for GoTo; By pursuing an IPO, GoTo will be looking for ammunition to compete with Grab and Sea; But the biggest challenge right now is timing.

Singapore’s drug discovery company Engine Biosciences secures US$42mn; Investors include Polaris Partner (lead), EDBI, Baidu Ventures, Vectr Ventures; Engine will use the newly raised capital to expand its portfolio of precision oncology therapeutics, prepare for its first clinical programmes, and scale its tech platform.

Indonesia’s HR and finance management startup Mekari acquires Qontak; Qontak is startup that provides CRM and omnichannel communications platforms; It aims to strengthen Mekari’s end-to-end offering for SMEs in IndonesiaThis acquisition follows Mekari’s US$21mn Series D led by Money Forward in April.

WeedHub tells you where you can source good quality cannabis from, legally!; WeedHub is an online directory for cannabis, which targets anyone who has smoked and/or consumed alcohol before; The startup plans to launch WeedHubX Accelerator in Bangkok, WeedHub Festival/PopUp Market, and its own end-to-end e-commerce platform.

Philippine mobile healthcare and medical last-mile logistics startup zennya nets US$1.2mn; Lead investors are Foxmont Capital Partners, Ignite House of Innovation, and DayOne Capital Ventures; zennya has created a virtual hospital ecosystem through integration of diagnostic laboratories, health maintenance organisations, and pharmaceuticals, wth a delivery network of doctors, nurses, therapists, motorcycle drivers, cars, and ambulances.

Philippine startup Fortuna Cools attracts funding for its eco-friendly coolers made from coconut; Lead investors are ADB Ventures and Katapult Ocean Fund; Its first product is Fortuna Coconut Cooler, which is available Philippines as a B2B product, is for fresh food packaging and the transport of perishable goods; It will soon launch its second product, Nutshell Cooler, as an eco-conscious consumer product in key international markets.

B2B marketplace for industrial hardware and supplies Eezee raises pre-Series A; Investors include Wavemaker (lead), January Capital, and Insignia Ventures; Eezee has secured a government contract to enable Singapore’s 400K civil servants to procure items directly from its platform.

Temasek invests in Forge to help grow its private securities marketplace beyond US; Forge is a marketplace for private equity, giving private and institutional investors access to top pre-IPO companies; Since inception, Forge claims to have completed more than US$9bn in transactions in nearly 400 private companies.

Indonesian crypto exchange Pintu raises funding; Lead investors are Pantera Capital (lead), Intudo Ventures, and Coinbase Ventures; Pintu is a mobile-first platform in the archipelago offering UI/UX simplicity, security, and education for the majority of Indonesians who are mostly buying cryptoassets for the first time.

Singapore’s social fantasy sports app TrophyRoom closes bridge funding; Investors are Maxify and Nest Tech and angels; A free-to-play game, TrophyRoom is taking the best parts of fantasy football, shaving off the complexities, focusing more on the thrill of the live matches and putting a card game as the cherry on top; The startup is taking steady aim at the exploding Indian fantasy sports market later this year.

US-based chat-commerce startup Yalo raises US$50mn led by B Capital; The funding will be used to expand its services to emerging markets like Southeast Asia; Yalo is building tools for businesses to use messaging apps as part of their customer outreach and sales strategies; The startup has raised US$75mn to date.

How SoftBank taught the market to love loss-making startups; With blockbuster listings of his risky bets on Asia, Masayoshi Son has defied critics who have said that his aggressive gambles on cash-burning startups would not be embraced by public market investors; Ahead, a slew of potentially lucrative initial public offerings are slated for 2021.

Real-time digital payments volume surges 48% in Singapore; In 2020, total real-time transactions reached 138.38mn, up a staggering 48% from 93.24mn in 2019, while the value of real-time transactions surged 40%, jumping from US$110bn in 2019 to US$154bn, says a 2021 Prime-Time for Real Time report.

Axiata Digital’s fintech holding arm acquires 68.75% stake in Indonesian P2P lender KIMO’s parent; KIMO will be a key growth engine for Boost Holdings to widen its reach to the underserved micro and small enterprises regionally; Boost disbursed over US$50mn via its micro financing and micro-insurance service provider Aspirasi to benefit 9K+ unique micro-enterprises in the last year alone.

Foodtech startup ChickP expanding into APAC with the launch of a new office in Singapore; The strategic move is in response to the rapidly growing demand for plant-based products in the region; ChickP has also appointed Moy Teo as its BD Director for Asia; ChickP has developed a neutral-taste chickpea protein isolates that are both nutritious and functional.

How to build a CX business case for your CFO; In a post-pandemic landscape, businesses are going to be expected to make more of an impact with fewer resources; CFOs need to be hyper-selective with investments moving forward, and in most cases, ROI is the only conversation that truly matters.

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500 Startups’s top execs set up new seed-stage VC firm Ascend Vietnam Ventures

Ascend Vietnam Ventures general partners Binh Tran and Eddie Thai (R)

Binh Tran and Eddie Thai, the general partners of 500 Startups Vietnam, have joined hands together to launch a new VC firm targeting local seed-stage startups.

Christened Ascend Vietnam Ventures (AVV), it will invest between US$500,000 and US$2 million each in 25 startups over the next three years — a third of which will also receive follow-on investment of up to US$4 million each.

“We are open to taking a look at anything tech or tech-enabled, but we do have a prioritisation of sectors this time around,” said Thai, General Partner at AVV.

Also Read: Vietnam’s Sky Mavis receives US$7.5M Series A to grow its blockchain game Axie Infinity

Startups operating in sectors such as fintech, edutech, future of work, health-tech, and enterprise SaaS will get the first priority. Priority 2 sectors are supply chain & logistics, manufacturing & robotics, agritech, e-sports & gaming, and managed marketplaces & retail enablers.

Although Thai and Tan will spend majority of their time at AVV, the duo will still continue to support 500 Startups’s portfolio companies/ founders and look to maximise returns to their investors.

“Binh and I will continue to steward 500 Startups Vietnam but will be spending the majority of our time going forward on the new firm. Besides the two of us, all other personnel will be dedicated to one or the other,” he said.

Will 500 and AVV complement each other? “500 Startups Vietnam will be fully deployed before AVV invests. So there will not be considerations of co-investment. However, AVV will be interested to investing in some of 500’s best companies, should the opportunity arise (and subject to advisory committee clearance),” Thai elaborated.

To a question on why there is a need for a new seed VC firm in Vietnam, Thai said: “If one were to look only at raw gunpowder, it might be said that there is ‘enough’ seed capital available (in Vietnam). But as we know by now, it’s not enough for founders to simply see that there is money around.”

The right founders have to be able to access the right amount of capital at the right time but that’s just not happening, he said. Due to differences in experience and market knowledge, etc., there are still all kinds of capital market inefficiencies in the early-stage financing space.

“Beyond that, founders could use robust support from their investors to help ensure that they build strong foundations for the long term. But they don’t always get that support either,” Thai explained.

According to Thai, when the duo first considered launching 500 Startups Vietnam, the startup landscape in Vietnam was completely different from what it is today. Back then, tech startup founders were few and far between, toiling away with limited resources or guidance.

There were just a handful of early-stage investors in a tech ecosystem where terms like convertible notes, minimum viable products, and cap tables were foreign.

Also Read: Naver, Sea, Vertex invest in Vietnamese VC firm Do Ventures’s US$50M fund I

“To give a sense of how young the ecosystem was, the total amount of venture capital invested in Vietnam in 2017 was US$48 million, a minuscule amount for a country of almost 100 million people. Fast forward just two years later to 2019 and that number has approached US$1 billion,” he said.

“Startups like ELSA, Trusting Social, Axie Infinity, and Earable have attracted global investors such as Sequoia, Founders Fund, Gradient (Google’s AI-focused fund), and Mark Cuban,” he noted.

For the past three decades, Vietnam has been the fastest growing market in Southeast Asia and is forecast to continue to play a critical role in the region for years to come.

“We believe that Vietnam in the near future will be a new tech capital. Rather than take a protectionist stance, Vietnam’s openness to global players creates a competitive environment forcing tech founders to be scrappier, data focused, and more open to international collaboration and expansion,” he pointed out.

Meanwhile, local and foreign founders alike find themselves in an attractive and accessible place with a low cost of living, a safe and stable society, and a large and affordable talent pool with some of the best engineers in Southeast Asia.

In addition, many of the problems, spending capabilities, and behaviours of consumers and SMEs that exist in Vietnam are likely to be found also in emerging markets across Asia Pacific and beyond.

Also Read: Indonesia, Singapore, Vietnam the most attractive fintech hubs in SEA, says study

Asked where he sees the country’s startup ecosystem in the next five years, Tan said: “What has happened in Vietnam since we announced 500 Startups in 2016 indeed shows how much is possible in a fairly short span of time (and with relatively few resources compared to other countries in Southeast Asia).”

“Even so, we’re thinking in decades, not days, and on that horizon, there is little doubt in my mind that Vietnam can be a global tech hub. Different people can make different prognostications about what hub will be larger or grow faster than which other one, but the bottom line is that there is much that can be done to improve the human condition, and I believe Vietnam will inevitably be a part of that,” Thai elaborated.

Image Credit: Ascend Vietnam Ventures

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In brief: MiCare nets US$60M, Yalo eyeing SEA expansion

MiCare raises US$60M from IFC, Mitsui Asia

Plans: The strategic investment will be used to fund MiCare’s expansion in key Southeast Asian markets, including Indonesia and Vietnam, as well as to set up a new regional headquarters in Singapore.

What is MiCare: A subsidiary of Zuellig Pharma, MiCare is a managed care organisation  that administers, processes and manages medical claims of policyholders and members on behalf of insurance companies and self-insured corporate clients.

The company also builds applications linking key players in the healthcare sector such as doctors, patients, hospitals, clinics and pharmacies to facilitate management of medical claims.

Currently, MiCare claims to have more than 13 million members in three countries — Malaysia, Thailand and the Philippines — and is looking to continue to grow and expand in the region.

MiCare currently processes medical claims of approximately US$400 million annually. The company manages and administers medical claims for over 45 insurers in the region, serving more than 6,500 corporate clients in over 5,000 hospitals, clinics and pharmacies.

B Capital leads US$50M in Yalo

What is Yalo: Founded in 2015, Yalo is a US-based chat commerce startup for businesses.

It offers an artificial intelligence-powered CRM (Customer Relation Management) that allows businesses to handle sales and build personal relationships, at scale, on Facebook Messenger, WhatsApp, and WeChat.San Francisco-based chat commerce startup,

Plans: For expansion into Latin America and Southeast Asia.

Grab partners with Stripe

The story: Grab has announced a partnership with payments giant Stripe to offer GrabPay Wallet as a payment method through Stripe.

This news was first reported by TechInAsia.

More about the story: To be first launched in Singapore and Malaysia, the partnership will allow payments to be processed in both Singaporean dollars and Malaysian ringgit.

Also Read: Early-stage learnings from former Grab employee on building a startup to help labour in Indonesia

“With e-commerce’s increasing popularity here, we believe that Stripe’s expertise and technology will help us deliver an enhanced payments experience for Southeast Asians,” said Grab Financial Group’s managing director and head of GrabPay, Chris Yeo.

Meet the 5 Asian agtech startups competing for the Future Food Asia Award 2021

What is the programme about: Future Food Asia Award is a platform that showcases agritech and food tech innovations in the APAC region.

The story: 10 startups from across the world will be competing for the Future Food Asia Award out of which 5 are from Asia. They will competed for a funding of US$100,000.

Here are the selected startups from the APAC region –

Allozymes (Singapore)

Uses microfluidics technology to develop custom-designed enzymes for cleaner and sustainable manufacturing of complex natural products.

Fasal (India)

An end-to-end farming app that helps horticulture farmers make smart decisions in order to maximise their yields and minimise wastage of resources.

Also Read: Fasal’s IoT device increases yield, reduces wastage by helping horticulture farmers make smart decisions on crops

IXON (Hong Kong, China)

Enables the storage of fresh meat, fish, and seafood at room temperature for up to two years.

REharvest (South Korea)

A food-upcycling company that repurposes by-products from beer and shikhye (traditional Korean drink).

Senior Deli (Hong Kong, China)

Provide quality care and promotes healthy lifestyles for the elderly.

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