Showing posts with label LK Weekly Precis. Show all posts
Showing posts with label LK Weekly Precis. Show all posts

Saturday, 9 March 2019

LK Weekly Precis - Corporate investors, monetising 5G, and hustle to complete deals before the slowdown..

March seems to be starting on a higher note with several startups raising late stage funds in th range of US $1 billion and more. This includes Grab, Go Jek, NYSE listed Sea Group in the recent follow on share offer and the Alibaba backed, Chinese influencer power blogger marketing platform, Rhunn.

Government initiatives are picking up steam especially in Southeast Asia for coaching services, co-working spaces, tax exemption, seed fundings and other resources but requires program owners to improve execution, assesment criterias and reach for better outcomes.  

Here are some key highlights to note this week;

5G Opportunities for Operators and Startups

The recent MWC 2019 in Barcelona, Spain may have been a routine yearly event, but visitors certainly caught a glimpse of a very different future for communication sector in the coming years. Change in business model, operation, partner eco-system, new customer and service segments is imminent. Operators will need to move upwards of the infrastructure, basic voice and data services for revenue and quicker ROI or risk running into massive losses at the point of the next network upgrade.
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Various participants including KT, China Mobile, startup communities and others demonstrated usecases on Smartcities, Smartfactories, 5G Cloud, Augmented Reality and Virtual Reality connectivity, autonomous vehicles and many more, that is pointing to enterprises as the key segment to monetise 5G investments.

Traditional partners such as Samsung and LG are adding new IoT services to offerings, apart from a range of mobile and connected devices. For instance the grocery replenishment service with Samsung refrigerator.

Telco operators in Korea, Japan and China are certainly leading the race when it comes to implementing 5G use cases and without a doubt will be in the forefront of innovations, in this space. 

AirAsia launches Redbeat Capital in collaboration with 500 Startups

In our last weekly summary we covered how DBS was looking to invest in startups that can help distribute the banks products further into new territories. It seems that trend is here to stay with more conglomerates taking the same approach to unlock new markets and innovation.

This week AirAsia announces the launch of Redbeat Capital in collaboration with 500 Satrtups. The US$60 million  fund will be used to provide post seed funding for global startups making way into Southeast Asia in travel, lifestyle, logistics and fintech segments.

Huawei Cloud Region Opens in Singapore

Huawei adds a new cloud region in Singapore aside from China, Europe, Latin America, Hong Kong, Russia, Thailand and South Africa. Huawei Cloud now has 40 availability zones in 23 geographic regions. Offerings will include various platform services for artificial intelligence and machine learning.

Currently the company is actively hiring the regional team and is aware of the market's highly competitive landscape with several key cloud vendors already delivering values, where customers are rapidly adopting cloud for better IT efficiencies, investment flexibilities, consistent performance, geographic expansion and faster time to market.

In the past, Huawei depended on its portfolio of foreign based Chinese customers to penetrate into new markets, but we should anticipate some new field tactics beyond price cuts and equivalent services for businesses this time. A shift of sales focus on nailing at least sixty percent of revenue share from services that run above the basic compute, storage and networking infrastructure services is almost mandatory to differentiate from the rest of the pack.

Meituan-Dianping and Chope

Restaurant booking sites and apps in the region has certainly changed how restaurants perceive customer experience for better or worst.

On peak days, customers are rushed to cater next booking, cancellation fees for no show, constant interruption from servers to top up drinks and other add ons to keep the table, have just made it more of a hassle for diners lately.

However, this deal with Meituan-Dianping should particularly benefit Chope to increase utility of their app and tap into the chinese tourist market at the same time. But will these reservation and restaurant referral sites in anyway add value to diners experiences? Can they help restaurants create unique experiences with the data they are collecting?

Horizon Robotics Raises US$600 Million

The trade war is now opening up opportunities for AI chip makers from China including Huawei and Alibaba to accelerate release of products within this year.

Horizon Robotics is one of the highest valued unicorn in China currently, apart from Cambricon for developing AI chips. The company recently raised another US$600 million in funds to push through development, final designs and outsourcing of manufacturing processes.

With several Chinese AI chip makers planning to outsource manufacturing process and rush to release second generation chips by mid 2019, this could prove to be a prospeporous year for Taiwan based TSMC with a full factory load.

Some Cheers for Startup Communities in India

Finally some cheer from our startup entrepreneur communities in India as the Department for Promotion of Industry and Internal Trade (DPIIT) in India announces changes in the definition of startups (turnover not exceeding Rs 100 crore) and set the confusion over 'angle tax' to rest.

Fintechs Refining Playing Field

Lastly fintechs everywhere in the region are refining market strategies to bridge cashless payment, cryptocurrencies, lending, mobile wallets, e-wallets, and other financial services for both consumers and businesses through new alliances, effective sales programs and much polished product releases. 

Aside from startups, fintechs are increasingly seen as a lucrative attached revenue source for mobile operators, ecommerce platforms, conventional financial institutions and travel related sectors that has access to a broad audience of B2C and B2B buyers. 

Some noteworthy highlights of fintech activities this week are as follows; 
  • Axiata and Singtel collaborating for cross border payment;
  • Alipay having reached staggering 2 million users and 50,000 merchants in Hong Kong in just a year from launch;
  • PayTM India introducing subscription programmes to increase utility;
  • Razer launches beta services of Razer Pay digital wallet in Singapore;
  • and Mobi Direct teaming up with Worldline for digital payment processing in Pakistan.

Some common trends persist and still an untapped B2B segment.... 

Overall the startup scene is still evolving around ecommerce, ride-hailing, logistics, travel, gaming, payment and other B2C segments where a majority of funding deals are channeled by investors at the moment. As a result, we continue to observe several common repeating themes from previous weeks as follows;

  • Traditional sectors such as finance, telco and travel continue turning to startups eco-system to accelerate innovation, build new growth engines and discover business frontiers. 
  • Chinese corporate investors such as Alibaba, Tencent, Didi and Meituan-Dianping continue to supply capital to various Southeast Asian startups in ride-hailing, travel, e-commerce and other lucrative B2C segments. 
  •  Cloud companies such as Facebook (with IMDA) and Alibaba are working in deeper collaboration with regional startup incubators to lure and accelerate startup success on their platforms.

Nevertheless, this is an ideal period for startups in the region to reboot the drawing board in the B2B segments, leveraging the approaching 5G connectivity in IoT, augmented reality, virtual reality and smart factory arenas for new innovations. 

Telco operators in Southeast Asia are generally less prepared to monetise 5G services and may be more willing to pour investments in a startup ecosystem that fills the service gap in a shorter span of time. 

In addition, many of these telcos are positioned poorly for an internal transformation in terms of adding skills, reorganising business structures and constructing business capabilities for 5G use cases due to outdated business policies, practise of privilege systems and lack of diversity in workforce.  

Saturday, 16 February 2019

LK Weekly Precis - A Quiet Post CNY Week

It's a quiet post CNY week with no major shifts really. Go-Jek gears up plans to add payment partners in the region, the ongoing Didi~OYO chemistry, DBS warming up to startups for fresh new growth, PayPal office closure in Malaysia, Huawei's security concern and impact to 5G rollouts are just a few things to highlight this week.

Go-Jek adds Coins.ph as Payment Partner

The battle to win ride hailing leadership in the region continues, with Go-Jek making several moves to progress in the past weeks. After completing alliance agreements with VietinBank with Go-Viet and Singapore's DBS last year, Go-Jek adds another fintech partner this week, called Coins.ph to mobilise things in the Philippines market despite some brush offs with regulators there, last year. 

Go-Jek, considers payment as the core of its super-app play and intend to complete payments gaps in every market. The Indonesian unicorn is currently backed by investors including Google, Tencent Holdings and JD.com and is pushing valuation to $9 billion.


The Didi ~ OYO Chemistry 

"Ride comfortably with Didi and Stay comfortably with OYO"! The Didi ~ OYO chemistry is catching on naturally with riders and travelers in China, that the Chinese ride-hailing giant Didi Chuxing is investing $100 million in Indian hospitality chain Oyo despite cut backs in the Chinese market.

OYO is currently expanding actively in markets such as Southeast Asia, Europe and China apart from home market adopting similar campaigns with ride-hailing partners.


DBS is Open to investing in Startups

As more service sectors converge and customers turn to mobile app for all of their daily service needs, banks such as DBS too are eying the the app and super-app economy to realise new customer segments and growth engines. 

In a recent interview with the Nikkei Asian Review, Mr. Piyush Gupta stated that the bank is open to investing in Startups where the bank's products and services can be distributed to whole new segments. As stated before, DBS recently entered into a strategic partnership with Go-Jek for facilitating payment services but it's unclear if this will this result in new customer flow for the bank.


Huawei, 5G Rollout, Security Concerns - It's business as usual in Southeast Asia

In the backdrop of an intense US-China trade war, are claims made by US intelligence community that Huawei products (particularly the 5G base stations and mobile phones) may contain serious security vulnerabilities that empowers the Chinese vendor with capabilities to conduct undetected espionage. 

This has lead global communication network operators, including long standing business partners such as BT, Vodafone, Dutch Telecom, Orange, LG U+ and others to temporarily suspend and reconsider Huawei agreements pertaining to 5G rollout. LG U+ also made a press statement recently, that the aforementioned equipment source code and various other materials have been sent to an international common criteria (CC) verification institution in Spain for security verification and the report is expected to be out in August or September this year. In the meantime LG U+ intends to rollout base stations for 5G in major city areas. Other Korean network operators such as SK Telecom and KT have suspended Huawei deals for the moment.

In the meantime, Huawei released a media statement informing clients that the company will work along customers with any additional security requirements or compliance towards meeting sufficient cybersecurity standards. The company has also set up a comprehensive FAQ Page to address accusations and correct misinformation.

In the meantime, it's business as usual in Southeast Asia with operators in countries like Philippine, Thailand and Malaysia affirming continued allegiance to Huawei.  Many have openly stated that it will be a tremendous effort to build the next 5G network without Huawei. Top executives further stressed the fact, that 5G is a non stand alone network, as it needs to integrate to LTE and other networks Installed previously, many of which use Huawei's equipments. As for Southeast Asian operators, rebuilding means undoing work accomplished in the last two decades, apart from acquiring huge losses and working forward with Huawei to patch any security concerns if valid, is the sensable way forward.



PayPal closes Malaysian Operation Office 

Media reports this week that PayPal has offered VSS to all employees in Malaysia and is closing its operation office there. PayPal has been in Malaysia since 2011 and has offices in other Asian locations such as Philippines, China and Singapore. Reasons for closing the office is unclear but observers are pointing to competitive landscape and a weak business team as the contributing factors. The company however reaffirmed that the internal reorganisation will not affect customers in Malaysia.



aCommerce in Trouble?

aCommerce just released the upgraded BrandIQ line of products and services late last year. A relentless startup when it comes to helping clients accelerate online sales with many leading brands such as Unilever, Samsung, Nestle, Philips and L'Oreal in customer portfolio, the company like many other growing startups did change direction from purely an enabler of e-commerce to distribution of products. Operating in Thailand, Indonesia, Philippines and Singapore, the Google Premier Partner Award winner provide services including logistics, fulfilment, delivery and digital areas like marketing. 

But a recent report by Dealstreet Asia is indicating that the company might be in trouble with key executives leaving the operation including in country offices.  aCommerce was planning IPO in 2020.  



That's all for this week and wishing everyone a belated CNY! 

Sunday, 27 January 2019

LK Weekly Precis - New e-Commerce Regulations, Acquisitions and Expansions

This week, new ecommerce regulations in India shook the tech business community and indicated that government meddling and protectionism policies may continue to hinder progress of emerging markets in sectors such as ride hailing, hospitality and many others aside from ecommerce.

Ecommerce regulations was also a topic discussed in Davos at the World Economic Forum (WEF), lead by Singapore. In addition, the event for the first time hosted talks among tech executives and leaders, including from BAT, to shape up AI framework that addresses both the seller and buyer nations.

Other than that, ST Telemedia acquisition of Cloud Comrade and Travelstop expansion to 7 Asian markets simultaneously, along with JD.com's first drone delivery outside of China are some notable developments in the startup sphere this week.

ST Telemedia Acquires Cloud Comrade

Last year we saw a number of consultancy firms such as Deloitte and the likes, hunting for acquisitions in the partner space of large tech companies namely Oracle, Sap, AWS, GCP and Microsoft.  This trend is now picked up by several data-centre service providers in the region.

ST Telemedia is certainly moving in the right direction by acquiring Cloud Comrade to enhance its datacenter service offering portfolio, especially in cloud services, IT management, cybersecurity and overall datacenter performance. 

Cloud Comrade helps customers in Indonesia, Malaysia and Singapore deploy cloud to accelerate new development and migrate existing business applications for operational excellence. The startup works in alliance with almost all major public cloud providers such as Ali, Azure, AWS, GCP and Digital Ocean. 

Last year, ST Telemedia acquired stakes worth $27 million, in cloud management company, Bespin Global that operates in Korea and China. The new acquisitions will help ST Telemedia complete service offerings in cloud, AI, Bigdata, digital experience and cybersecurity.


JD's Drone Delivers Books and Bags in Rural Indonesia

JD.com has been delivering to some rural parts of China using drones for the last two years. This week JD ran its first drone delivery trial outside of China after securing a government license for regional level operation in Indonesia. According to media the drone travelled 250km to deliver boxes of books and bag packs to school children.

Tencent has a 15% stake in JD.com and together the companies co-invested in a number of Chinese companies. Last year Google announced significant amount of investments in JD and Tencent to make inroads in China. 

Soon, same day and next day delivery will be a common offering, sighting of drones in residential areas should be expected and e-commerce logistic players may have to reinvent their game.

Travelstop Expands to 7 More Markets

Travelstop is a year old startup from Singapore, that simplifies business travel and expense management to the SMB and startup segments. Since inception, the T&E Saas platform has been updated continuously with features and functions to sufficiently meet the needs of both travellers and employers in a segment where such services were inaccessible. 

We believe they are in the path to join the likes of 'certify', 'coupa' and 'apptricity' to challenge other established players such as SAP Concur in the travel and expense solution space for the enterprises.

Recently, the company announced service availability in Indonesia, Thailand, Hong Kong, Taiwan, Japan, South Korea and Vietnam.  The company also announced a mobile app for iPhone users to easily access services. 



New e-commerce Rules/Restrictions in India

The new rule restricts online retailers or marketplaces from sourcing more than 25% of inventories from a single vendor, vendors where the online retailers may have a stake and exclusive deals that results in deeply discounted products. 

The new rules seems to be aimed at protecting millions of small traders, operating offline and suffering from huge losses due to deep discounting practices of both Amazon and Flipkart. According to analysts and mainstream media, the recent electoral losses is seen as one of the contributing factor to this unusually regressive move.



AI Discourse at World Economic Forum, Davos 

Finally AI takes a critical spot in WEF this year with US (Alphabet, Apple, Facebook, Amazon, IBM, Microsoft) and China ( Baidu, Alibaba, Tencent) seen as leaders of the space. Economic potential, social threat, globalisation 4.0., ethical practices, AI nationalism, global policies for both AI sellers and buyers were some of the issues beginning to shape the global AI agenda.


Singaporean Ride-hailing Startup, 'Tada' in Vietnam

This year we might see more ride hailing players emerging in the region, including traditional players modernising their business and competing for their pie with larger competition namely Grab and Go Jek. 

New entries might come from taxi operators, affected driver groups and rental service providers. 

We might also see, new country level regulations, niche plays, convergence of industries/sectors, significant mergers and acquisitions in this space as we cool off in quarter four.


HG Exchange

HG Exchange, a fintech industry backed initiative has recently submitted a regulatory application to Monetary Authority of Singapore (MAS). This move will provide investors in the region with better access to high growth companies such as Grab, Go Jek, Didi, Deliveroo and others. 

The exchanged will be built by blockchain developer Zilliqa and Taiwanese digital asset platform MaiCoin.


It's seems to be a slow week in anticipation of CNY next week but we believe businesses will keep up momentum till quarter 3 as a slow down is expected in quarter 4. 

Happy Sunday!

Thursday, 17 January 2019

LK Weekly Précis - Big Week for Fintechs!

This is a new attempt for LK, to provide followers weekly summaries of startup news for Southeast Asia, China and India, posted both at the blog site (www.letskopi.com) and FB Closed Group (look for 'Startup Jam').

This looks like a big week for fintechs global and regional with new funding, acquisitions and game plan announcements from Akulaku, Grab, Go Jek, Razer, Gcash/Mynt, Paymaya, Alibaba and Tencent with just one or two announcements about AI related startups.

Fiserv acquired Firstdata for $22 Billion

Clearly Fiserv acquiring Firstdata for $22 billion topped the list. KKR cleverly reduced stakes in Firstdata from 36% to perhaps 16%, offloading at the right time. KKR's share price went up following the announcement.


Akulaku in Indonesia secured $100 funding from Ali

At the home front, Akulaku finally made the official announcement on their recent D series funding from Alibaba for $100 million, exceeding expectations. This is much higher compared to what competitors such as Kredivo, Cekaja, Modalku and KoinWorks raised late last year. The highest was Kredivo at $30 million. Successful Indonesian fintechs are focusing on lending or credit.


Chinese AI firm Megvii is aiming for $1 Billion IPO

7 year old Alibaba backed, Megvii that provides facial recognition system and owns face++ is aiming for $1 Billion IPO this year, probably in Hong Kong. Megvii provides facial recognition system to security, financial services segments and is a well known player for many government related contracts in China. Story goes that competitor "Sensetime" is also planning to raise $2Billion this year.


Philippines fintech, Voyager secured $215 Million Funding 

Philippines fintech player Voyager, owner of Paymaya recently raised $215 million from Tencent, KKR and World Bank arm International Finance Corp. This will be the largest deal so far in the country's fintech industry. Together the investors own more than 50% stake in the company.

Last year, Paymaya's main rival, Gcash/Mynt secured funding from Alibaba /Ant Financial Services for 45% stake in Globe Fintech Innovations (GCash owner).


Grab partners with ZhongAn for Insurance Platform

Grab extends into insurance with Chinese partner ZhongAn. Under the agreement, ZhongAn will bring in technology solutions to build an insurance ecosystem that will be launched in Singapore in the first half of 2019. The platform will address pain points of insurance discovery, premiums and payment options through GrabPay or affiliate payment partners.

Apart from food delivery, parcel delivery, grocery delivery, and financial services, Grab also intends to expand into cross-border remittance and online healthcare in the coming year via its Superapp strategy. I would think Grab might even make way into Chinese market with a partner, though no such plans annouced so far.


Razer Pay / Singapore 

Razer Pay which was launched in Malaysia in July 2018 is expected to continue expansion in Singapore by 2019.  Something we already know since last year. While entry into Malaysia was smooth, this is probably due to Razer’s acquisition of MOLPay which aided in the wallet rolled out across retail outlets like 7-Eleven and Starbucks. We believe Razor has a lot more work to compete effectively along the sides of Grab, Go Jek, WeChat and others.

Thailand issued licenses to Cryptocurrency Exchanges

Four cryptocurrency exchanges were issued licenses by Thai authorities/regulators following their Japanese counterparts to embrace crypto and digital currencies as an unavoidable social and commerce phenomenon. The four cryptocurrency exchanges, are Bx, Bitkub, Coins and Satang Pro, which are granted permission to operate in the country. This is a step forward to legitimising cryptocurrencies in Thailand.

BasisAI, a new AI startup in Singapore

A new venture focusing on AI solutions for businesses. However it's unclear what the solution is really about. We suspect they are in stealth mode and maybe working on something related to explainable AI (XAI).


Zurich Malaysia Partnering Bereev App to Modernise Services

Zurich Malaysia and Bereev, sealed a partnership for launching an online legacy planning platform, to help customers plan various things from wills to insurance policies, possessions, outstanding loans and personalised wishes. 


Overall we should expect a few more major fintech fund announcements in the coming weeks mostly fuelled by Chinese, Korean and Japanese investors (#BAT, Softbank, Naver). JVs between these eastern investors with western PE or investors such as KKR should also be expected in major deals.

As fintechs start to fill the financial service gap for consumers and businesses cut off from conventional banking systems, it's only a matter of time, before banks start to struggle in consumer banking and SMB services segment. 

I would think in 5 years we'll observe massive downsizing in banks due to lost revenue and there is a good chance that the trend will hit Southeast Asia or Africa first. Similarly we might see fintechs with superapps becoming formidable partners to traditional financial service providers as they learn and discover new data monetisation strategies.

Another key trend to note is the fact that fintechs are distancing themselves from Telco/CSP investors ( e.g. Globe and PLDT in the case of Mynt and Smart Money) and moving closer in alliance with financial services and e-commerce players.

Well it's only week two, let's see how this changes in December 2019 🤓✍

Happy friday everyone!