FRIDAY, March 29, 2024
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Indonesia’s Go-Jek raises $550million

Indonesia’s Go-Jek raises $550million

RIDE-HAILING service Go-Jek gets more ammunition in its battle for market share in its home turf of Indonesia where its motorcycle taxis compete with the likes of Uber and Grab

Go-Jek has raised fresh funding of more than US$550million (Bt1.9 billion) from KKR, Warburg Pincus and other investors, giving it more ammunition in the battle for market share in the country of 250 million people.
Go-Jek competes with Uber and Grab, and investors in its latest round of financing also included Farallon Capital, Capital Group Private Markets and existing shareholders, it said in a statement last week.
Co-founder Nadiem Makarim, a Harvard Business School graduate, said in April that Go-Jek was in talks with potential investors to raise funds.
Go-Jek, a play on the Indonesian word for motorbike taxis, has become popular among commuters on the traffic-clogged streets of Jakarta. It launched its app in 2015 and has expanded into food deliveries, mobile payments and even cleaning services.
The announcement of the latest fund-raising came days after Uber sold its China operations to bigger domestic rival Didi Chuxing and analysts have said Uber may focus its efforts and money elsewhere, such as in Southeast Asia.
Indonesia is a key battleground in the region for ride-hailing firms, which have been driving rates lower to attract more customers in the country with the world’s fourth-largest population and a youthful, Internet-savvy demographic.
Grab, which was co-founded by Makarim’s fellow Harvard graduate Anthony Tan, announced last month that it is teaming up with Indonesian conglomerate Lippo Group to roll out a mobile payment platform in what has become its biggest market.
Grab has raised around US$700million so far from backers, including Japan’s SoftBank Corp, sovereign wealth fund China Investment Corp and an arm of Singapore state investor Temasek Holdings.
Grab still has a “significant” amount of capital left, Tan said in Jakarta last month.
While Indonesia is ripe with potential, the sprawling archipelago also comes with regulatory and logistical obstacles.
Earlier this year, taxi drivers’ protests turned violent in the Indonesian capital when they called for ride-hailing apps to be banned. Government ministers had also said that technology firms should be subject to the same regulatory and tax requirements as conventional public transport companies.
 
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