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Epost attracts US$1.4M to expand its cross-border delivery, e-commerce fulfilment services in SEA

Malaysian e-commerce logistics company Epost has raised US$1.4 million from Warisan Quantum Management, a Malaysia-based private equity management firm.

The company plans to utilise the newly raised capital to enhance its product and expand the platform across Southeast Asia.

Launched in 2019, Epost is an e-commerce logistics company that provides cross-border delivery and e-commerce fulfillment services to brands and retailers. It also provides cloud-based integrated order, inventory, and warehouse management systems to ease logistics for companies.

Currently, its services are available across Malaysia, China, Singapore, Vietnam, the Philippines, and Brunei, with 13 e-commerce fulfillment warehouses located at key locations throughout Southeast Asia.

Also Read: Locad founder on building SEA’s first cloud logistics network in the midst of COVID-19

“In Southeast Asia, the e-commerce logistics industry has plenty of room for growth, especially in services that enable connectivity across national borders. We hope to transform the industry and create more value for all players throughout the e-commerce value chain with Epost’s solutions and technology,” said Tobin Ng, CEO of Epost.

“This round of funding marks our very first investment into a Sabah-based startup. The investment made in Epost represents our aspiration and commitment to assist high-caliber local entrepreneurs in the Sabah region and we will continue to identify more quality startups to work with. If Epost is progressing well in their business growth, we do not exclude the possibility of providing follow-up funding up to RM4,000,000 (US$945,000),” said Haji Mohd Shukor Bin Abdul Mumin, Chairman at Warisan Quantum Management.

While there has been a surge in the e-commerce industry over the past few years in Southeast Asia, there has also been neck-to-neck competition in the sector. Among the leaders in the logistics and supply chain sector are Kargo, Moovaz, Waresix, and Ninja Van.

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Nium adds US$200M more to its war chest to become Southeast Asia’s latest unicorn

Prajit Nanu, co-founder of Nium

Singapore-based Nium, which offers cross-border payment services in multiple countries around the world, has become Southeast Asia’s 20th unicorn following a US$200 million Series D investment round led by US-based Riverwood Capital.

Temasek, Visa, Vertex Ventures, Atinum Group of Funds, Beacon Venture Capital, and Rocket Capital Investment also joined the round. Notable angels such as DoorDash executive Gokul Rajaram, FIS’s CPO Vicky Bindra, and Tribe Capital co-founder Arjun Sethi also participated.

This deal brings Nium’s total money raised to date to nearly US$300 million, bringing its valuation to over US$1 billion.

With the new funding, Nium aims to improve its payments network infrastructure, drive innovative product development, attract top industry talent, and acquire strategic technologies and companies. It also plans to accelerate its growth in the US and Latin America.

Earlier this month, DealStreetAsia reported that Nium secured US$78 million in a new round of funding. Days before this report emerged, Nium had announced the acquisition of Wirecard Forex India, a foreign currency exchange, pre-paid card, and remittance services provider, last week.

Wirecard Forex India was a unit of German fintech giant Wirecard Sales International Holding, which hit the headlines last year when it filed for insolvency in June 2020 due to one of the biggest accounting scandals in modern European history.

Also Read: Nium acquires India unit of scam-hit German fintech giant Wirecard

Founded in 2014, Nium (earlier known as InstaReM) is a global payments platform that enables businesses to send, spend, and receive money from around the world, in addition to empowering them to develop their own products that simplify cross-border payments.

The platform connects businesses to the world’s payment infrastructure through one API. Its modular platform for Pay In, Pay Out and Card-Issuance allows banks, payment providers, travel companies, and other businesses to collect and disburse funds in local currencies to over 100 countries, plus issue physical and virtual cards globally.

The firm claims it issues approximately 30 million physical and virtual cards today and is licensed in 11 jurisdictions, including direct card issuing capabilities in 24 countries and in 40 currencies.

According to the press statement, its revenues have grown by more than 280 per cent YoY across EMEA (Europe, the Middle East, and Africa) and APAC.

“We started Nium with the humble goal of taking out regional complexity in cross-border payments,” said Prajit Nanu, co-founder of Nium.

“Today, our sights are set higher. We believe we can be a global catalyst to increase global commerce, removing some of the payments friction which has traditionally held businesses back. We simplify the B2B payments experience by enabling critical financial services to be easily embedded – helping today’s local market players become tomorrow’s global giants,” he added.

Nium has in the past raised US$41 million Series C funding led by Vertexg Growth in March 2019 and US$18 million in Series B led by GSR Ventures in July 2017. Its other investors are MDI Ventures (Indonesia) and SBI-FMO Fund.

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Augmentus raises seed funding to launch its no-code AI robotics programming platform

Augmentus, a Singapore-based no-code AI robotics programming platform, has raised an undisclosed amount of seed investment from Cocoon Capital.

The funds will be used to support the launch of Augmentus’s platform and ramp up the hiring process across different roles including software development, business development, and partnerships.

Robot manufacturers today are using proprietary programming languages that demand extensive training and expertise. Since automation processes require a high level of customisation, approximately 75 per cent of the cost of an average industrial robot goes into software.

Founded in 2019, Augmentus wants to solve this by allowing companies to deploy complex industrial robots with high accuracy in a matter of minutes instead of weeks.

Its proprietary technology incorporates an easy-to-use graphical interface that eliminates the need for coding enabling up to 17 times faster programming and integration across various industrial applications.

Also Read: To cut down the cost of building robotic systems, Augmentus enables people to create one using an iPad

Some of the company’s clients include global robot manufacturers, like ABB, Universal Robots, TM Robots, Kuka, Nachi, and Mitsubishi Electric, to support over 60 per cent of the industrial robots in the market.

“With the growing adoption of industrial robots in industries such as manufacturing, automotive, and farming, Augmentus is on a mission to bring greater efficiency to the industry by lowering the time, cost, and skill barriers. Ultimately, we want to make robotics accessible to everyone to use in any application imaginable”, said Leong Yong Shin, co-founder of Augmentus.

“The quick embrace by leading robotics manufacturers is unique as early-stage companies usually take years to get this level of top executive attention. We are excited to partner with Shin and his team to accelerate a more automated, efficient, and robust manufacturing industry in a post-COVID world”, said Will Klippgen, Managing Partner at Cocoon Capital who also recently joined the Augmentus board of directors.

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In brief: Tamasek, Mirae-Naver Asia co-lead ShareChat’s US$145M Series F

Ankush Sachdeva, co-founder and CEO of ShareChat

Moj & ShareChat parent raises US$145M

The story: India-based Mohalla Tech, the parent company behind Moj and ShareChat, has raised US$145 million as an extension of Series F at a valuation of US$2.88 billion.

Lead investors: Temasek, Moore Strategic Ventures (MSV), and Mirae-Naver Asia Growth Fund.

Plans: This is an additional investment beyond the US$502 million raised in April this year. This will help the company double down its strategic priorities of building AI Feed, attracting and incentivising a diverse creator base, and amplifying platform health and safety. The company has hired senior executives in the AI/ML spaces in recent months in the UK and the US and continues to aggressively look for more senior talents in this space.

What is Mohalla Tech: Founded in 2015, Mohalla Tech owns and operates Moj and ShareChat.

Moj is is a short video app, providing the talented community of artists a platform to express their creativity and inspire millions of people. Available on both iOS and Android, click here to download Moj on your smartphone.

ShareChat is a social media platform, with over 180 million monthly active users, that allows users to share their opinions, record their lives and make new friends — all within the comfort of their native language.

Freightify announces US$2.5M pre-series A

The story: Freightify, an India-based ocean rate management platform bringing advanced e-booking functionality to freight companies of all sizes, today announced it has secured US$2.5 million in pre-Series A funding led by Nordic Eye Venture Capital.

Tradeworks VC, Venture Catalysts, 9Unicorns, Blume Founders Fund, existing investor Vinod Kumar Talreja also participated.

Plans: The firm will use the proceeds to invest in expansion into the US and Europe. The company also plans to invest in its product ecosystem covering other stakeholders of the container supply chain.

What is Freightify: Freightify (formerly FreightBro) enables freight forwarders of any size for the digitization of global trade. The brand empowers freight forwarders by providing white labelled rate automation solutions to digitize their rate procurement, rate management, and quotation processes with ease.

It features a suite of pricing and sales tools for the ocean freight industry and already serves customers in over 10countries. Freightify’s platform handles more than US$400 million in freight revenue for customers and a corresponding GMV of US$2 billion while the SaaS model can scale as the customers grow.

Gumlet raises US$1.6M from Surge

The story: Media processing company announced has received US$1.6 million fresh funding from Sequoia India’s Surge programme.

Other investors: Aakrit Vaish, Miten Sampat, Swapan Rajdev, and Yash Kothari.

What is Gumlet: With an aim to build a media delivery infrastructure for the internet, Gumlet’s founders have created SaaS platform that solves the burden of publishing different types of media files, such as images, GIFs, videos, and animations, across platforms. It helps developers deliver high-quality media that are automatically resized and optimised per end user’s device or browser at the lowest possible bandwidth.

The company claims to have achieved 25 per cent month-on-month growth of media files delivered via Gumlet since the start of 2020. The files come from online stores, news sites, blogs, edutech startups, travel sites, and crowdfunding portals.

Image Credit: ShareChat

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How Thailand’s Ricult uses deep tech to improve the lives of smallholder farmers

Last year, the global economy saw the worst economic contraction since the Great Depression in the 1930s. According to the International Monetary Fund, the economy shrunk by 4.4%.

This comes as no surprise. The pandemic has triggered nationwide shutdowns across the world, bringing entire industries like tourism, aviation, and hospitality to a grinding halt. Even with vaccination drives underway, travel restrictions, new waves and virus variants, and lower consumption levels continue to wreak havoc on the global market.

Unemployment rates surged with the closure of businesses, especially small- and medium-sized enterprises. Lockdowns, staff shortages, and logistical challenges led to supply chain disruptions. Stock markets crashed, with the Dow Jones recording its largest-ever single-day loss on 16 March last year.

Thailand, too, faced similar problems. Before the pandemic, tourism comprised about 20% of the country’s GDP, double that of the world average. Despite moves to open up the country — the once-bustling beach destination of Phuket, for example, is marketing itself as a quarantine-free experience for vaccinated travellers — new and more severe waves of infections continue to bring tourism to a standstill. The central bank even recently slashed its annual growth forecast from 4% to 1.8%.

But, if there is one silver lining to have come out of these lacklustre economic prospects, then it must be from the tech industry.

Accelerated digital transformation

With the pandemic forcing businesses online and spurring digital adoption, the tech industry is flourishing, and Thailand’s is no exception. Across Southeast Asia, there were 40 million new internet users, making it such that 70% of the region’s population is now online, according to the 2020 Google e-Conomy SEA report.

Within Thailand itself, 30% of internet users were new and adopted digital services precisely because of the pandemic. Even more promisingly, 95% of them intend to stay even after the pandemic is over. People are also online more than ever. Thais spend an average of 4.6 hours on the internet every day, an increase of almost an entire hour as compared to before the pandemic.

Also read: How Thai food supply chain startup Freshket weathered through the pandemic

It is no surprise, then, that the Thai startup ecosystem has successfully leveraged the acceleration of digital adoption.

Since the pandemic struck last year, some of Thailand’s startups have seen revenue growth in the double digits.

Among them is e-commerce solutions company eCommerce, which reported year-on-year growth of 130% last year. Since being established in 2013, the startup has seen consistent growth and raised a total of US$118.8 million. Another prolific startup is Lightnet, which provides blockchain-based fintech solutions. By zooming in on cross-border payment capabilities, the Bangkok-based startup has raised US$32.2 million so far.

Perhaps the most recent success story is that of Thailand’s first unicorn, which refers to a startup that is valued at more than US$1 billion. The title went to logistics firm Flash Group after it bagged US$150 million in its latest Series D+ and E funding rounds, merely three years into operations.

How Ricult addresses the agri-data gap with deep tech

Another up and coming player in the Thai startup ecosystem is Ricult, which uses deep tech, artificial intelligence (AI), and machine learning to streamline agricultural work.

Ricult hopes to help farmers process and manage their work efficiently and accurately. Their solution is straightforward: farmers can use Ricult’s app to obtain useful data and access agriculture-specific services, such as farm-specific weather, rain forecasts, bank loan applications, and remote crop health monitoring, in order to improve their yield and increase profitability.

Also read: Bringing the gold standard when it comes to gold trading powered by fintech

Ricult does this by collecting data from farmers across the country and selling this data to stakeholders. For example, farmers who use Ricult’s app log information such as farm coordinates, what kind of crops they grow, and the quality of their soil. On one end, this data is used to calculate useful information for farmers, such as credit scores. On the other end, this data, which is not usually readily available, is also passed onto external parties like financial institutions and agribusinesses.

The startup-slash-social enterprise, which also operates in Pakistan, ultimately aims to improve the quality of life for Thailand’s farmers and boost the sustainability of the food system.

Co-founder Aukrit Unahalekhaka grew up in a Thai family that was involved in agriculture and saw firsthand the problems that smallholder farmers dealt with. Challenges like supply chain fragmentation, lack of financing, and poor market access made farmers especially vulnerable.

During his stint as a graduate student at the Master’s at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), he met Usman Javaid, who comes from Pakistan and observed the same issues in Pakistan’s agriculture industry. They decided to create a solution for these challenges and help uplift smallholder farmers — this eventually culminated in Ricult.

Most recently, Ricult closed a Pre-Series A fundraising round with a total funding of US$3.5 million, bringing their total fundraising to US$6 million to date. The latest investment will be used to expand its operations in Thailand and Pakistan and improve its product.

What makes Ricult truly unique is that they fulfil a niche in the system by providing hard-to-obtain data about smallholder farmers, while offering products and services for a large but underserved demographic.

Also read: How TikTok co-creation strategy is supercharging Southeast Asian SMBs

Ricult’s solutions have gained traction. Last year, the platform experienced blistering growth of 500%. Across both Thailand and Pakistan, Ricult serves almost 500,000 farmers and records more than US$300 million in crop value flowing on its platform. The startup also reports helping farmers increase revenue and farming productivity by at least 20%.

In the future, Ricult intends to expand to neighbouring countries such as Laos, Vietnam, and Indonesia.

“Despite the pandemic, Thailand has demonstrated its strength in a number of sectors, including food/agriculture and healthcare,” said Mr Unahalekhaka.

Because of Thailand’s resilience in several sectors, startups like Ricult were able to remain resilient and persevere. Thailand’s startups also benefit from being interwoven in a strong, supportive startup ecosystem that has managed to thrive amidst the pandemic. The country’s ecosystem is a growing one with a large pool of talent and potential, making it an ideal environment for any startup to grow, both during the pandemic and beyond.

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This article is part of NIA’s Startup Thailand Marketplace project.

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