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Ecosystem Roundup: Is Singaporean startup Team Labs legitimate?


Telkomsel injects US$300mn more into Gojek to further grow Indonesia’s digital lifestyle sector; The two firms will explore more opportunities to integrate their digital services, with the aim of delivering greater value to consumers, partners and businesses; Telkomsel had invested US$150mn in Gojek in November 2020.

Scrutinising the remarkable tale of this teenage Forbes 30 under 30 inductee; An investigation by TechInAsia finds inconsistencies in Team Labs’s funding and financials; The Singapore-based startup’s US$9.8mn fundraise claims from US-based Grand Canyon Capital without even a single f2f meeting between the two firms remains sketchy.

Axiata-owned ADA rakes in US$60mn from Softbank to develop AI-driven digital marketing solutions; ADA will also invest the funds in content analytics, automation of content creation and build data platforms that predict consumers’ insights; Post-deal, Softbank will own 23.07% shareholding of ADA at an enterprise valuation of US$260mn.

Thailand’s Brooker Group to invest US$48mn into decentralised projects; They include 15-plus high-growth companies, including Binance, Uniswap, Enjin and Filecoin; This new direction to digital assets DeFi and dApps will eventually make up approximately 50 per cent of the group’s total assets.

Malaysian drones services firm Aerodyne adds Japanese investors to its cap table; Investors are Real Tech Fund, Kobashi Holdings and ACSL; The capital will help Aerodyne expand its agri drones service Agrimor, globally, especially to India, Indonesia and Thailand.

NGC Ventures launches US$20mn fund, invests in decentralised exchange Dexlab; It is a strategic investor that aims to accelerate the growth and development of key blockchain projects in the Solana ecosystem; This is one of the five strategic investment funds that will bring US$100mn of new capital to the Solana ecosystem.

Tonik raises US$17mn in an iGlobe-led round to scale its neobank services in Philippines; Other backers are Sequoia India, Altara Ventures, Insignia, Citius and Baring Vostok Capital; Tonik claims to have secured US$20mn in retail deposits within just a month of its public launch in March 2021.

Vietnam’s Sky Mavis receives US$7.5mn Series A to scale its top blockchain game Axie Infinity globally; Investors include Libertus Capital (lead), Collab + Currency, Blocktower Capital and 500 Startups; Axie Infinity is a virtual world full of fierce, adorable pets, called Axies, which can be battled, collected and used to earn an income.

HashMix raises US$3mn funding to roll out its mining power NFT in June; Investors include HashKey Capital, Kenetic Capital, GBV Capital, LongHash Ventures, and Fenbushi Capital; HashMix aims to democratise and activate the mining economy by introducing a decentralised universal marketplace for various mining capacities using the NFT tech.

UglyFood in talks to raise up to US$1mn seed funding, looks to close the round by Aug; The startup operates in the fruits and vegetables space by selling excess/ugly produce, and creating content on sustainability; In addition to groceries, UglyFood also operates in three other categories: workshops, comics and games.

atato raises US$1mn to help financial institutions build blockchain-based digital assets solutions; Investors include Zipmex Asia, SOSV, and angels; Atato’s products help companies create, store and manage digital assets in compliance with the Southeast Asian digital assets regulations.

EduSpaze partners Colombian VC studio to help Asian edutech startups expand into LatAm; The Latin Leap partnership also aims to provide strategic and commercial support for Asia’s edutech startups to capitalise on the global growth momentum; It is also aimed at helping drive deeper co-operation between the Latin American and Asian tech ecosystems.

Alice Labs eyes SEA expansion after raising US$500K seed funding; Investors are Anchorless Bangladesh (lead) and HOF Capital; Alice Labs develops smart tools and conversational artificial intelligence solutions that manage and automate customer service for e-commerce and online businesses; The company’s core product, MyAlice, enables businesses to streamline customer service, making it more efficient and customer-friendly.

Givaudan and Bühler open Protein Innovation Centre in Singapore; The Centre combines the pilot technology of Bühler’s extrusion and processing equipment with Givaudan’s new culinary facilities and its world-leading expertise in flavor, taste, ingredient, and product development; At the Centre, customers can develop high-quality products suitable for Asian culinary applications at scale.

Indonesian Shariah fintech market is 5th largest in the world; Reports also noted that millennials dominate borrowers on the platform; Indonesia’s Shariah fintech market size is US$2.9bn; The first rank is Saudi Arabia with US$17.9bn, followed by Iran (US$ 9.2bn), UAE (US$ 3.7bn, and Malaysia (US$3bn).

China’s digital currency is coming — other major economies need to follow suit; The digital yuan is a version of the normal Chinese currency deployed on a blockchain, which is the tamper-proof online ledger technology that underpins digital coins like bitcoin and ethereum; The digital yuan bypasses the need for these banks; There is no service fee, unlike these payment alternatives, and in theory the speed of payments can be even faster.

Look beyond Singapore: Why Kuala Lumpur is an emerging tech hub alternative; At about 16mn, Malaysia has a significantly larger workforce than Singapore’s 2.3mn, and its employees are also nearly as proficient in English; With more than 32 million people, Malaysia also has an incomparably larger population of digital consumers.

When paying it forward doesn’t pay: It’s time for startup mentorship events to step up; Volunteering your time and energy in startup events and programmes is great, but here are three red flags to look out for to avoid wasting your time and making sure you’re really paying it forward.

Better workforce management leads to greater customer satisfaction. Here’s how Google did it; Learn how Google put the right people, in the right places, at the right times, for a better customer experience.

The hybrid work model will outlast the pandemic. But will one model fit all?; One hybrid model doesn’t fit all and forcing it to work across the entire organisation will lead to decreased productivity and poor employee experiences.

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Look beyond Singapore: Why Kuala Lumpur is an emerging tech hub alternative

kuala lumpur tech hub

Singapore may be a regional financial centre and expat haven but it is not the only choice. I believe Kuala Lumpur has many advantages that make it the best place in Asia to grow a technology company.

At Juwai IQI, we believe in Kuala Lumpur so much that we chose to build our 1,000-person technology and data team there instead of in the nearby Merlion City. We have already begun hiring and are fitting out the new space we will grow into. We plan to move in during the first quarter of 2022. 

Nor have we regretted our decision for a moment. While Singapore is well known for a range of startups, I believe Malaysia has more long-term potential and does more to encourage tech companies that can help it fulfil its ambitious plans to make its workforce one of the most highly skilled and gainfully employed in Asia.

For example, our technology team has received a warm welcome from the Malaysia Digital Economy Corporation. Our investment falls under the government’s MyDIGITAL initiative, which aims to attract investments worth MYR70 billion in digitalisation by 2025.

Government support is helpful, but no technology business would base their decision on where to operate on this factor alone. The truth is that Malaysia is already on its way to becoming one of the most important technology hubs in Asia.

At about 16 million, Malaysia has a significantly larger workforce than Singapore’s 2.3 million, and its employees are also nearly as proficient in English.

With more than 32 million people, Malaysia also has an incomparably larger population of digital consumers. Most technology companies need a market like Malaysia because they depend on scale to achieve profitability. Singapore just can’t offer comparable benefits. Nearby Indonesia is larger, true, but Indonesia is also a more difficult environment, due to poor logistics and its highly unbanked population.

Malaysia has an advantage over competing locations from further afield. Simply put, if you want to operate or sell in ASEAN, you need to be based in Malaysia or another ASEAN member. This is especially important since the signing of the world’s largest free-trade agreement, the Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership (RCEP) in November of 2020. When RCEP comes into force, it will encompass about one-third of the world’s population and nearly that much of its GDP.

Just look at some of the numbers. 

Mobile penetration has ramifications for any technology company due to its impact on growth in social media, contactless transactions, online retail, digital currency, smart devices, on-demand services, 5G usage and the adoption of super-apps like WeChat, Gojek and Grab. Southeast Asia is home to 400 million mobile users. (By comparison, the US has just 276 million.)

In terms of internet users, Southeast Asia overtook all developed countries as long ago as 2017, the year in which the region passed the US. Germany, the UK and France (combined) fell behind in 2014, and Japan did so more than a decade ago, in 2010.

What’s more, new research reveals that the COVID-19 pandemic spurred rapid growth in digital adoption. In Malaysia, a survey conducted in August and September of 2020 found that 36 per cent of digital consumers are new. (Similar results are reported across Southeast Asia.)

Also read: The Malaysian tech ecosystem is blooming; here’s what it looks like

It is no surprise that Malaysia has given birth to successful technology companies such as car-sales portals operator iCar Asia, Netflix competitor iflix and ride-sharing giant Grab. Their successes are one reason that private tech funding is soaring.

This leads to announcements such as the recent news from Malaysian private equity firm Creador, which sees excellent demand for its latest US$680 million fund, which will be invested in Malaysia and other Southeast Asian nations.

Realities like this make Malaysia an ideal environment for technology companies. Nor am I the only person who thinks so. 

Also read: Malaysia as springboard to the ASEAN: A tech pass for global entrepreneurs

Microsoft recently announced plans to establish its first datacentre region in Malaysia, which will enable it to locally deliver cloud services. Microsoft’s move will create some 19,000 jobs in Malaysia. The company has also announced plans to train one million Malaysians in digital skills over the next two and a half years. 

Technology employers, take note. Malaysia offers the kind of high-quality, high-skill and rapidly growing workforce that any technology company needs. If I had to name one other city in Asia where it makes sense to establish a technology team, it would be Shanghai. The Chinese powerhouse also has a highly skilled workforce, although good English skills are less common than in Malaysia.

That is why besides our Kuala Lumpur global research and development headquarters, Juwai IQI has made Shanghai our base for Chinatech R&D.

A presence in both markets gives you roots in two of the deepest beds of technology talent in the world.

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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In brief: Revere VC, Property Flow raise funding; Jim Rogers joins Life3 Biotech’s board of investors

Jim Rogers (R) with Life3 Biotech founder and CEO Ricky Lin

Jim Rogers (R) with Life3 Biotech founder and CEO Ricky Lin

Revere VC raises US$1.35M seed funding

The full story: Revere VC, a San Francisco- and Hong Kong-based asset management firm, announced the close of US$1.35 million seed round, with participation from strategic equity investor AngelList, Twitch co-founder Kevin Lin and Thailand-based Siamrajthanee Group/SeaX founder Nattaphol Vimolchalao.

The plans: The funds will be used to provide institutional investors a more holistic way to invest in venture capital, while bringing themes of productisation and curation to the asset class.

New products: Revere VC has also announced the launch of its flagship products and services — ‘The Portal’, a curated VC platform, and its inaugural fund strategy ‘Prime Access Fund’.

Thailand’s Property Flow raises US$700K

The full story: Thai SaaS proptech platform Property Flow has secured US$700,000 led by Swedish VC firm PropTech Farm, with participation from Seven Peaks Software.

Also Read: Thailand’s Brooker Group to invest US$48M into Binance, Uniswap, other DeFi projects

The plans: 

Property Flow has been initially focusing on the Thai market, and is now looking to further strengthen its position in Thailand as well as internationally through strategic partnerships.

What is Property Flow?: For small to medium size real estate businesses, the Property Flow Platform provides an end to end turn key solution, including everything from access to inventory, listing management, CRM and real-estate websites as a service.

Any person that has an interest in becoming an agent, or that is an agent can get started on Property Flow by signing up online, and within hours have access to inventory and all tools required to start doing a real-estate business.

Jim Rogers joins foodtech firm Life3 Biotech’s Board of Investors

The full story: Rogers, one of the most respected and successful names in international investing, has a more than 50 years record of spotting the next big developments and movements in business and society.

Together with George Soros, he co-founded the legendary Quantum Fund, one of the most successful hedge funds in history, and was one of the first Western investors to get into the China stock market, back in the 1980s.

Also Read: Look beyond Singapore: Why Kuala Lumpur is an emerging tech hub alternative

He was also the creator of the Rogers International Commodities Index.

Life3 is the first alternative protein company that he is advising. 

Aleta Planet forms JV with Fooyo

The full story: Singaporean cross-border payments firm Aleta Planet’s joint venture with software developer Fooyo is aimed at offering digital marketing and e- commerce solutions to meet rising demand from Singapore businesses preparing for the reopening of the China market.

The joint venture, AP Studios, will develop digital tools that will help merchants provide a richer, more interactive payment experience as well as engage their customers through the popular WeChat marketing platform in China.

With AP Studios, Aleta Planet, which is already connecting merchants to the UnionPay network in China and in 179 markets globally, will be able to offer a comprehensive and seamless marketing payment solution to these merchants.

Who is Fooyo?: It creates web and mobile apps to help users navigate tourism, retail and hospitality services. It is the developer behind the MySentosa app which allows users including many Chinese tourists, to access real-time information about the island resort. It also created the MuslimSG app, Chongqing Tourism Pass and Hongya Cave crowd monitoring solution.

Zipmex to facilitate luxury condo purchase with cryptocurrency

The full story: Zipmex, Southeast Asia’s leading digital assets exchange, announced today that it has partnered Thailand’s One.Six Development, the company behind the ultra-luxury condominium The Strand to facilitate cryptocurrency payments on Zipmex’s platform.

Also Read: Zipmex snags US$6M in an oversubscribed funding round to expand its digital assets exchange

The partnership comes on the heels of Zipmex facilitating Asia’s first Lamborghini and Tesla purchases using bitcoin. It also tracks a larger global trend of property sellers accepting the world’s most popular cryptocurrency as an alternative to fiat currency.

Image Credit: Life3 Biotech

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impress.ai raises US$3M to make hiring less tiring for recruiters

impress.ai, a Singapore-based AI chatbot for hiring, has raised US$3 million in a pre-series A funding round led by Summit 29K.

Seeds Capital, the investment arm of Enterprise Singapore, also participated in the round.

This development was first reported by TechInAsia.

The AI startup will use the newly raised capital for product development, hiring, and expansion across Australia, Hong Kong, and Taiwan.

One of the biggest complaints of job seekers is that employers don’t respond to their requests. However, very often it can be physically daunting for hiring managers to respond to each and every request.

Also Read: What will the next wave of VC investment in HR tech look like?

Founded in 2017, impress.ai seeks to solve this problem through its chatbot, which allows hiring managers to interview, engage and shortlist candidates quickly.

To make the hiring process even easier, the bot conducts structured interviews using techniques from Industrial-Organizational Psychology.

The company told TiA that it reached its operational break-even point in May last year.

In 2017, impress.ai had raised an undisclosed amount of funding from the Javelin Startup-O Victory Fund, a Singapore-managed seed capital fund.

The global human resource management market size had been valued at US$16.01 billion in 2019 and is expected to exhibit a CAGR (Compound Annual Growth Rate) of 11.7 per cent from 2020 to 2027.

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UglyFood in talks to raise up to US$1M seed funding, looks to close the round by Aug

(L-R) UglyFood General Manager Sean Goh and co-founder Augustine Tan

UglyFood, a food waste management company based in Singapore, is in discussion with three investors to raise its first round of seed financing of up to US$1 million, a top company executive told e27.

The capital being raised will be used to fund the foodtech startup’s marketing and outreach efforts, mainly for its games section.

“We expect to close this (fundraising round) by August this year,” said General Manager Sean Goh.

Also Read: Bringing innovation to the table: Why foodtech is the next frontier in Southeast Asia

UglyFood was founded in 2017 by Lee Zhong Han, Yeo Pei Shan, Foo Lin Geng, and Augustine Tan — all in their 20s — with a mission to eliminate food waste and revamp the food ecosystem. Its aim is to make sustainability a part of people’s everyday lives.

The startup operates in the fruits and vegetables space by selling excess/ugly produce, and creating content on sustainability.

In addition to groceries, UglyFood also operates in three other categories: workshops, comics and games.

As for workshops, the company hosts negotiation and educational workshops for companies and schools. Currently conducted in person, the venture is moving this virtually to expand its addressable market.

UglyFood also creates comic content(by its in-house designers team). The aim is to educate about food waste in a fun and lighthearted way. The company gets corporate sponsors for this project, and it also works with companies to create specific messages.

“The mobile game, Uglyfood Matchwars, will be launched this month. It is a multiplayer puzzle game that teaches players the difference between perfect, ugly/blemished and spoiled produce. The aim is to encourage and nurture environmentally friendly behaviors, through repetitive learning in gameplay,” shared Goh.

Geographic expansion is also on the anvil for UglyFood, with markets like Indonesia, Thailand and Vietnam on the list of the first phase. “These are important agricultural countries in Asia. Singapore is just a sandbox for us and the potential is outside the city-state,” said Tan, who co-founder at UglyFood.

Speaking of the main challenges facing the industry, Tan explained that the food and beverages industry has been slow in adopting technology and is filled with traditional businesses that prefer to stick to their usual ways. Much of the supply chain is still human-intensive.

“There’s a saying ‘if it works, why change it’. Though there’s been progress in digital adoption due to the COVID-19 spread, there’s still a long way to go. With government efforts and the public becoming more aware, their view on clearing excess supply has taken more of a priority,” Tan concluded.

Also Read: Foodtech startup Next Gen Foods shares the secret behind their successful expansion, fundraising

In Southeast Asia, food waste management — which has many facets and branches– is relatively a new industry. Among the early players, TreeDots is probably another player, whose product comes close to that of UglyFood’s.

TreeDots is basically a wholesale distributor of surplus and imperfect food supplies in Southeast Asia. It leverages on technology to better match supply and demand and streamline transactions.

It helps suppliers recover cost from perfectly edible, imperfect and unsold inventory, and to assist food service providers and households in sourcing for affordable food supplies.

Image Credit: UglyFood

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Meet the 5 SEA startups attending GROW’s Impact Accelerator programme

GROW, a Singaporean accelerator programme aimed at driving change in the global agrifood system, has unveiled the second cohort of its latest initiative, the Impact Accelerator.

Out of the 10 selected startups, five hail from Southeast Asia.

Set to run virtually, the programme will provide teams with the necessary support they need to scale up rapidly and create lasting positive change across the globe.

Selected startups will be given US$100,000 in cash and US$100,000 in-kind investment on founder-friendly terms.

They will also benefit from coaching, mentor support, expert sessions, peer learning, and access to industry networks.

GROW is supported by impact partners, including UNDP Global Centre, Grow Asia, Asian Venture Philanthropy Network, and Toniic.

Also Read: Meet the 20 agtech startups pitching at Rabobank’s Food Loss Challenge Asia

“Each of the companies selected for the Impact Accelerator embodies this mission and brings a unique solution to the table. We are thrilled to welcome these 10 exciting companies into the family and look forward to working closely with them to scale new heights and create lasting impact,” said John Friedman, Executive Director at GROW.

Here are the five Southeast Asian startups in the cohort:

Biteback Biotechnology (Singapore)

Insect bio-refinery converting agro-industrial waste into a healthier drop-in replacement for palm oil, biofuels and other functional ingredients.

Braintree Technologies (Malaysia)

Robotic farming-as-a-service that transforms unattended land into agricultural spaces, raising smallholder incomes and reducing greenhouse gas and chemical emissions.

Green Rebel (Indonesia)

A plant-based protein brand that uses local ingredients to create clean-label meat alternatives with distinct Asian flavors.

Mayani (Philippines)

An agritech e-commerce platform helping smallholders access new customers and markets while digitising the supply chain to improve incomes and reduce food loss.

Seadling (Singapore)

Produces functional ingredients for pet, aquaculture and animal feed manufacturers from sustainably farmed seaweed.

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EduSpaze partners Colombian VC studio to help Asian edutech startups expand into LatAm

Laura Gomez, General Partner of Latin Leap.

EduSpaze, a Singapore-based edutech accelerator, has announced a partnership with Latin Leap, a Colombia-based VC studio.

This is aimed at providing strategic and commercial support for Asia’s edutech startups to capitalise on the global growth momentum.

Furthermore, it will also help drive deeper co-operation between the Latin American and Asian tech ecosystems.

Singapore has consistently sustained top rankings in the global education field and is recognised to have one of the best education systems in the world.

In contrast, Latin America continues to lag behind in terms of educational outcomes and hosts some of the world’s weakest education systems.

As much as 50 per cent of students in the LatAm region do not reach the basic PISA (Program for International Student Assessment) proficiency levels and are on average three years behind the OECD (Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development) in components such as reading, math and science.

Also Read: Meet the 7 startups from edutech accelerator EduSpaze’s second cohort

In light of these concerning statistics, there is a dire need for innovative edutech solutions to strengthen the local system and ensure that these Latin American children and adolescents are able to access quality education.

“One of the most crucial challenges that Latin America faces today is the lack of access to quality education. The region has one of the world’s weakest education systems and grapples with high levels of inequality,” said Laura Gomez, General Partner of Latin Leap.

“In times of unprecedented change, when the next 100 years will see the equivalent of 20,000 years of progress, Latin America’s usual strategy of catching up is not sustainable and faces the threat of becoming irrelevant. The only way is to anticipate and leapfrog the region. Innovative edutech solutions from Asia can help the region close this gap and enhance access to quality education for all,” Gomez added.

“Both EduSpaze and Latin Leap are aligned in investing our resources in purpose-driven companies that can create a strong educational impact. EduSpaze will help identify pedagogically-driven Southeast Asian edutech companies with a proven market fit and is able to similarly implement needs-based solutions that can drive effective and meaningful education for Latin Americans,” added Alex Ng, Managing Director of EduSpaze.

“Latin Leap would thereby provide the much-needed access and network for the startups to capture new opportunities, internationalise and build a stronger global edutech innovation ecosystem,” he shared.

Founded in 2019, EduSpaze is managed by seed capital firm and startup incubator Spaze Ventures, and supported by Enterprise Singapore.

Its accelerator supports companies that address sector-specific challenges within the education industry and provides selected startups up to S$500,000 (US$376,950) funding, mentor support and an environment for pilot project implementations.

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Image Credit: EduSpaze

 

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Axiata-owned ADA rakes in US$60M from Softbank to develop AI-driven digital marketing solutions

ADA’s CEO Srinivas Gattamneni

Axiata Digital Advertising (ADA), a Malaysia-based digital marketing solutions company, has secured US$60 million in funding from SoftBank Group.

Post the investment, the Japanese telecom group will own 23.07 per cent shareholding of ADA at an enterprise valuation of US$260 million.

With the newly raised capital, ADA aims to continue the development of its AI models, with a primary focus on precision targeting for the marketing industry.

In addition, ADA will also invest the funds in content analytics, automation of content creation, and build data platforms that predict consumers’ insights that help drive business decisions.

SoftBank said in a statement that it will make ADA a core to its digital and data marketing arm.

Founded in 2018, ADA is a group company of Malaysian telco giant Axiata. ADA designs and executes integrated digital, analytics and marketing solutions to help businesses gain market insights, optimise cost and reach and acquire customers.

Also Read: Mosaic Solutions raises US$1.5M to provide data analytics, inventory management solutions to SEA’s F&B industry

So far, the company has a footprint across nine markets in South and Southeast Asia, including Malaysia, Singapore, Indonesia, Thailand, Cambodia, the Philippines, Sri Lanka, Bangladesh, and South Korea.

“We believe this alliance between SoftBank and ADA will reshape the digital marketing and data landscape in the Asia Pacific region. This move is part of our Beyond Carrier growth strategy as we seek to expand beyond the traditional telecommunications business. By combining our diversified solutions and technologies with ADA’s expertise, we expect we can both generate significant synergies,” said Daichi Nozaki, Head of Global Business Division, SoftBank.

“The post-COVID-19 norm is a digital-first economy, which ADA has been successfully building towards. The capital and business alliance with SoftBank will further propel ADA’s analytics, data and AI digital marketing solutions for the benefit of our customers across the region,” added Srinivas Gattamneni, CEO of ADA.

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HashMix raises US$3M funding to roll out its mining power NFT in June

HashMix, a Singaporean hashrate tokenisation company, has raised US$3 million in a new funding round.

Backers in the round are HashKey Capital, Kenetic Capital, GBV Capital, FBG Capital, LongHash Ventures, Continue Capital, SevenX Ventures, and Fenbushi Capital, among others.

The fresh capital will be used for protocol development, marketing, and talent enhancement.

The crypto mining industry has been plagued by centralisation and illiquidity. Although cloud mining allows investors without expensive hardware to mine cryptocurrencies and the emergent hashrate tokens provide liquidity for Bitcoin mining, they are only solving a piece of the puzzle

HashMix, founded in September 2020, aims to further democratise and activate the mining economy by introducing a decentralised universal marketplace for various mining capacities using the non-fungible token (NFT) technology.

HashMix’s tokenisation protocol can convert the mining power for any Proof of Work (PoW) blockchains like Bitcoin or Ethereum hashrate, or storage mining power in the Filecoin network, to NFTs tied to hardware, with the benefit of traceability, tradability and transparency.

Also Read: Joseph Phua’s Turn Capital acquires Dapp Pocket to create SEA-focused retail crypto exchange

This prevents the risks of overselling and fraud and effectively bridges different computing powers.

Coupled with a set of protocols for trading, swapping and lending, HashMix enables miners and Defi participants to buy and sell hash power seamlessly and access numerous financial options such as staking and liquidity mining.

The HashMix ecosystem is supported and incentivised via HashMix’s native token HSM. The team plans to roll out its first mining power NFT next month.

According to a report by Global Market Insights, the market valuation for cryptocurrency will cross US$1.8 billion by 2027.

With the recent rise in popularity of decentralised finance and the emergence of smart contracts, experts anticipate the market to grow further at an exponential rate.

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Thailand’s Brooker Group to invest US$48M into Binance, Uniswap, other DeFi projects

Varit Bulakul, Head of International Business Finance Advisory at The Brooker Group.

The Brooker Group, a Bangkok-based publicly listed financial consultancy firm, announced today that it will invest a total of US$48 million in a diversified portfolio of decentralised applications (dApps) and decentralised finance (DeFi) tokens.

The group has identified huge growth potential in a range of decentralised projects and will begin investing in 15-plus high-growth companies, including Binance, Uniswap, Enjin and Filecoin in the second quarter of this year.

The group said that this new direction to digital assets DeFi and dApps will eventually make up approximately 50 per cent of its total assets.

Additionally, the group disclosed in its Q1 report that it holds 122.3158 bitcoins on its balance sheet at an aggregate value of approximately US$6.6 million.

Also Read: Thai bank SCB’s venture arm launches new US$50M VC fund for blockchain, DeFi, digital assets

“The next frontier in financial technology will be DeFi. We believe that legacy funds have a responsibility to their clients to invest in emerging technology or risk being left behind as the sector matures,” said Varit Bulakul, Head of International Business Finance Advisory at The Brooker Group.

Initially, Brooker Group investments will be held by centralised exchanges including Coinbase and Binance while a strategic custody provider is chosen.

Founded in 1994, The Brooker Group has a wide range of assets in its portfolio of digital assets, alternative funds and real estate.

Despite much of the focus in the industry remaining on the US and Europe, the trading activity of digital assets in Asia is gaining more momentum.

According to analysts, the last few months saw the the biggest crypto bull run since 2017.

Some of the other large companies that have invested in the cryptocurrency sector include, MicroStrategy, Tesla, Ruffer Investment Company, and many more.

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Image Credit: Brooker Group

 

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