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.