Author: Janice

Grab Now Offers Food and Grocery Deliveries as Ride-Hailing Slows

Digital tech unicorn Grab has been working to put its home delivery service that delivers food and grocery products in the black by the end of this year as it prepares to offer its shares on the Nasdaq stock market.

The Singapore-based company has an application for restaurants, allowing clients to monitor the effectiveness of their advertising and increase their earnings.

“You’re earning 10.5 times what you spent,” reads a message in the app as a marketing representative from Plain Vanilla, a chain of five cafes in Singapore, checks upon the impact of the company’s latest advertisement. The app shows a spend of 40 Singapore dollars ($27.73) helped lift sales by SG$440.

The platform also helps companies tailor their adverts to appear high in customer searches. For Plain Vanilla, this would mean including words such as “coffee” and “bakery”. Clients do see effective results as their sales are boosted.

This tool to offered to partner restaurants as an app or online free of charge and can be accessed by smartphones, allowing users to see data such as sales trends and menu-based sales.

As COVID-19 infections are still high throughout certain countries that Grab operates in, food deliveries often make up for sales declines, especially for small and midsize restaurants. It’s often a great first step for digitization for these restaurants.

Grab receives up to 30% of commissions on the deliveries and actually earns more fees if the sales promotion app helps partner restaurants generate more orders.

For the business year ended December 2020, Grab had adjusted net revenue of $800 million from the delivery business, a fourfold increase from the previous year, thanks in part to strong stay-at-home demand. By contrast, revenue from its ride-hailing business fell to $500 million from $600 million due to restrictions on movement, such as limits on the amount of people allowed in cars, imposed in response to the pandemic.

When Grab announced in April that it was going public, it forecast revenue of $1.2 billion from the delivery business in the current business year, up 50% from the preceding year and a swing to earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization (EBITDA) of $100 million, versus a loss of $200 million in 2020.

But besides food deliveries, Grab has started to provide home deliveries of perishable foods in September. Through tie-ups with local farmers and suppliers, Grab offers next-day deliveries of fresh food ordered before 5 p.m. Grab already offers 20- to 30-minute delivery of groceries.

The market for online home delivery services is expected to keep expanding. London-based market researcher, Euromonitor International, forecasts the gross merchandise value of online food deliveries in Southeast Asian countries will reach $28.1 billion in 2025, up from $9.4 billion in 2020. Over the same period, the total online grocery retail value is projected to rise from $4.1 billion to $11.9 billion.

Grab is also counting on synergies between its food delivery business and the one for groceries. According to the company, 85% of people who have used its grocery delivery service also have food delivered. At present, the company has only 5% as many grocery delivery customers as food delivery customers.

Grab plans to hold an initial public offering in the U.S. through a merger with an American special-purpose acquisition company before the end of the year. The merger values Grab at $39.6 billion.

Grab has grown on the strength of its ride-hailing business in Southeast Asia until the COVID-19 pandemic hit in 2019. In April to June this year, its ride-hailing service saw adjusted net sales fall 13% from the previous quarter to $146 million.

But thanks to continued growth in its delivery business, Grab predicts adjusted net revenue of $2.2 billion from deliveries in the 2023 business year, up nearly threefold from 2020, bringing its EBITDA to $500 million. If the delivery service turns profitable this year as planned and continues to grow, Grab will be able tout its improving earnings structure to investors.

However, Grab has seen many other rivals trying to compete in the rapidly growing delivery market. They, like Grab, are strengthening their marketing programs. Indonesia’s Gojek, for example, is providing advertising tools such as a hyperlocal targeting feature to reach customers within a 4 km radius of partner restaurants.

Foodpanda, Grab’s rival in Singapore and elsewhere, offers a marketplace for merchants to buy affordable ingredients from suppliers. The U.K.’s Deliveroo offers a loyalty program for restaurants that rewards customers if they place multiple orders with the same restaurant, helping clients expand their customer base.

While two to four companies look set to dominate the food delivery market in Southeast Asia, competition is expected to intensify in ancillary services for restaurants and other clients.

India’s Latest Unicorn, Rebel Foods, Enters The Club After Raising $175m

Cloud kitchen startup Rebel Foods has entered the unicorn club after raising $175 million in its Series F funding round that was led by sovereign wealth fund Qatar Investment Authority (QIA), with a valuation of $1.4 billion. Other investors also include existing investors such as Coatue and Evolvence.

Rebel Foods has said that it is moving towards profitability, with an annual run rate sales of $150 million, growing 100% year-on-year.

“While we are excited about becoming the next unicorn, our focus continue to remain on improving customer experience the Rebel way. This round of funding will be re-invested in building our technology, increasing our global presence and also acquiring new brands. Rebel Foods is working towards an IPO in the next 18 to 24 months,” said Piyush Kakkad, Rebel Foods’ chief financial officer.

The startup was founded in 2011 by INSEAD alumni Jaydeep Barman and Kallol Banerjee.They are the 31st unicorn to emerge from the Indian startup ecosystem this year and the first in the cloud kitchen space. A cloud kitchen restaurant prepares food only for delivery and does not offer dine-in services.

Rebel Goods manages more than 45 brands and 450 kitchens globally across 10 countries and regions. These include India, Indonesia, Malaysia, Singapore, Thailand, the Philippines, the United Arab Emirates, the United Kingdoms, and Bangladesh. It also operates over 4000 internet restaurants.

Goldman Sachs acted as the exclusive financial adviser and Shardul Amarchand Mangaldas acted as the legal adviser to Rebel Foods on the transaction.

India: Cars24, A Used Car Marketplace, raises $450m at $1.84b Valuation

Cars24 is an e-commerce platform for pre-owned vehicles. It recently announced that it has closed a funding round of $450 million, including a $340 million Series F equity round alongside a $110 million debt from diversified financial institutions. 

 

With the latest investment, the company that is headquartered in Gurugram has seen its valuation shoot up to $1.84 billion. 

 

The Series F equity round was led by DST Global, Falcon Edge and Softbank Vision Fund 2. There was also participation from Tencent and other investors like Moore Strategic Ventures and Exor Seeds.

 

A statement from the company says: “With this latest investment, Cars24 will expand its global presence as well as further build its cars, bikes and financing business in India, while continuing to invest in technology that delivers the best customer experience possible.”

 

“Traditionally, car selling or buying has been a tiresome process, and only 2 of 100 people own cars in india. However, over the last six years, we have been working continuously toward fulfilling the dreams of many Indians to own car by transforming the customer’s journey- ‘the Cars24 way’ that is hassle-free, safe and transparent. With this investment, we will continue to penetrate into existing car, bikes and financing business in India while venturing into new overseas geographies this year,” said Vikram Chopra, Co-founder & CEO of Cars24. 

 

This latest investment comes just months after Cars24’s expansion into the UAE and Australian markets. The company claimed to have already sold over 1000 cars in the UAE since the launch of its operations in April this year. 

 

The company was foundED in 2015 with the aim of streamlining the buying and selling process of pre-owned cars by leveraging cutting-edge technology. It operates in over 130 cities in India. The company claims to have a 90% market share in the online used car segment, and has clocked more than 13 million monthly traffic and over 4 lakh transactions to date. 

 

Cars24 entered the unicorn club late last year after it raised $200 million in its Series R round at a valuation of over $1 billion. The round was led by DST Global with participation from existing investors including Exor Seeds, Unbound and Moore Strategic Ventures.

 

Cars24’s competitors include Droom, CarTrade and CarDekho.

Carsome from Malaysia Raises $170M From Taiwan’s MediaTek And Others.

Malaysian used-car marketplace, Carsome Group, said it has raised $170 million in a funding round from investors, including Taiwanese chipmaker MediaTek. This has cemented its position as Malaysia’s largest tech unicorn as it’s now valued at $1.3 billion. 

The valuation comes as Southeast Asian startups are attracting strong interest from regional and global funds due to robust growth rates, with investors taking bets on post-pandemic plays.

“The most important thing we are trying to tackle is the distrust that’s associated with the used-car industry,” said Carsome’s co-founder and chief executive, Eric Cheng, adding that consumers were becoming more open to buying cars online during lockdowns that were imposed in many countries over the past year.

Carsome is a six-year-old company that runs in Indonesia,Thailand and Singapore. Their competitors include SoftBank Vision Fund 2-backed Carro and OLX Auto in Indonesia, part of OLX Group, which runs global trading platforms. 

Cheng said Carsome has been ramping up its retail centres and expanding its offerings, which include a five-day refund policy and a one-year warranty.

Chief financial officer, Juliet Zhu, told Reuters that Carsome is looking to almost boost its revenue to nearly $1 billion this year from last year and expects to turn profitable on an operating level in 2022.

It had raised a total of more than $100 million in its previous funding rounds.

Zhu said Carsome is considering listing in the United States of America within the next 12 months and have been in talks with sponsors of blank check companies.

“We have always been envisaging ourselves to be listing on U.S exchanges,” Cheng said, citing comparable valuations with U.S-listed car marketplaces available for investors.

Backed by the likes of Asian venture capital firm Gobi Partners and an arm of Mitsubishi UFG Financial Group, Carsome will use the funds to extend its spate of acquisitions. 

This year, Carsome acquired a stake in a Jakarta-based car and motorcycle auction service and agreed a deal with Australia-listed iCar Asia, which offers listing sites in Southeast Asia.

Carsome said one of the largest sovereign wealth funds from the region joined the latest funding, but it declined to identify the fund. Carsome also secured new credit facilities of $30 million. 

Rothschild & Co is the financial adviser on the fundraising. 

India’s upGrad Enters Unicorn Club with $185m Funding from IFC, Temasek and Others

Educational technology platform for higher education upGrad is now part of the unicorn club as they have raised $185 millions at a valuation of $1.2 billion, it announced on Monday.

 

Unicorn is a term used in the venture capital industry to describe a privately held startup company with a value of over $1 billion.

 

Temasek, IFC (International Finance Corporation) and IIFL took part in the funding, said the company i a statement.

 

Unicorn” is a term used in the venture capital industry to describe a privately held startup company with a value of over $1 billion

 

“We are very focused on our path to being in the top 3-5 companies globally in edtech and serving the 1 billion workforce across the age group of 10-60 years. We will announce further updates on M&As, and unlocking value as they unfold. Yes, the last value was at $1.2 billion, but as I keep saying, we are not a fan of the tag name unicorn – for us, it is only a means to a much larger goal,” said Ronnie Screwvala, chairperson and co-founder of upGrad.

 

upGrad is owned by Entrepreneur Ronnie Screwvala, Phalgun Kompalli, and Mayank Kumar. It offers job-linked online degrees, certificate course and diplomas in collaboration with top Indian and global universities. The online platform has claimed to have helped over a total of 1 million registered learners in over 50+ countries. 

 

Last week, the company announced that it has acquired upskilling upskilling platform KnowledgeHut in order to mark its entry into the short-duration course market. This acquisition will allow upGrad to make its presence and offerings for international markets in North America, West Asia, and Southeast Asia. 

 

In May, upGrad had also acquired Impartus which is a video-learning solutions provider for Rs150 crore. In total, the company has made seven acquisitions and acqui-hires so far. They are competing with other Indian unicorns such as Byju’s and Unacademy. 

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