GoTo Secures the First Pre-IPO Funding at 18.5 Trillion Rupiah

The GoTo Group announced its first pre-IPO funding of $1.3 billion (over 18.5 trillion Rupiah) from various investors, including the Abu Dhabi Investment  (ADIA) fully-owned subsidiary, Avanda Investment Management, Fidelity International. Participated also in this round, Google, Permodalan Nasional Berhad (PNB), Primavera Capital Group, SeaTown Master Fund, Temasek, Tencent, and Ward Ferry.

Other investors are expected to further join the pre-IPO fundraising round towards the final close in the coming weeks, aka towards the end of this year.

In an official statement, the funds will be used to invest deeper in developing its ecosystem, strengthening its position as a market leader in the region, and better serving the customers.

Further translated, GoTo to continuously focus on growing the customer base, expanding payment services and financial services, as well as encouraging the use of integrated transportation fleets and logistics networks to further enhance the hyperlocal experience, in order to better serve the customers.

“Indonesia and Southeast Asia are the two most promising markets in terms of growth prospects worldwide. The support we have received demonstrates the confidence that investors have in the rapidly growing digital economy in this region, as well as our position as a market leader,” GoTo Group’s CEO, Andre Soelistyo said, Thursday (11/11).

Andre also mentioned, the increasing digital adoption has driven consumer’s demand and brought many users online. As a result, GoTo’s services demand continues to increase, based on the company’s commitment to continue providing more options, value, and convenience to all customers in the GoTo ecosystem.

Primavera Capital Group’s Managing Director, Michael Woo said, “We discover growth opportunities in Indonesia and GoTo towards e-commerce, on-demand mobility and fintech  in all segments where Primavera has extensive investment experience. We are excited to partner and grow with GoTo and contribute our expertise and resources to the company.”

Indonesia has a GDP of over $1 trillion and is the fourth most populous country in the world. The GoTo ecosystem is said to account for nearly two-thirds of Indonesia’s consumer spending, and the total target market value will grow to over $600 billion by 2025. The country has nearly 140 million people with little or no access to the formal financial system, therefore, significant growth opportunities lies on the payment and financial service companies.

Through the Gojek and Tokopedia merger, GoTo’s services now include on-demand transportation, e-commerce, food and grocery delivery, logistics and fulfillment, as well as financial and payment services. The GoTo Group reached over 1.8 billion transactions in 2020, with over US$22 billion Group Gross Transaction Value “GTV” in total, and contributed to the economy equal to over 2% of Indonesia’s GDP.

The pre-IPO

The GoTo Group has not officially announced the date for the stock exchange. Rumor has it, the plan is to be executed in early 2022 with the go public process starting on the local exchange, then the New York exchange.

The success of Bukalapak’s IPO on the IDX has become a benchmark for many local technology companies to follow. By announcing the price at IDR 850 per share, Bukalapak was able to reap IDR 21.9 trillion. This is the largest number in the history of the Indonesian capital market, as well as the first listing of Southeast Asia’s tech unicorn on the stock exchange. When GoTo managed to go public on the IDX, it will be very likely to score a new record.

Gojek’s closest competitor, Grab, has decided to go public through the SPAC scheme at the end of this year. This plan was delayed from its initial target in the middle of this year, due to financial audit request from the local stock exchange authority. Grab is targeting a nearly $40 million valuation before going IPO.


Original article is in Indonesian, translated by Kristin Siagian

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BNI to Enter the Digital Bank Through Mini Bank Acquisition

Another top tier bank is to enter the digital business by acquireing a mini bank. Rumor has it, PT Bank Negara Indonesia Tbk (IDX: BBNI) is to acquire Bank Mayora, a BUKU II bank with less than IDR 2 trillion core capital.

On CNBC, BNI’s President Director, Royke Tumilaar has confirmed the company’s plan to acquire a bank. He said the company had finalized the initial process, but the bank name is still undisclosed.

“We have reached an initial agreement for a bank acquisition with a strong business ecosystem to be transformed into a digital bank,” Royke said at a press conference.

He said, the digital bank is to target the MSME segment and collaborate with experienced strategic partners to develop financial technology. Royke said that technology plays an important role in digital bank management, and capable to drive more efficient operational costs than conventional banks.

In general note, Bank Mayora is a retail and consumer bank that offers a variety of financial products, ranging from loans and deposits. Some of the loan products offered include Vehicle Loans (KKB), Multi-Use Loans (KMG), and Home Ownership Loans (KPR).

Meanwhile, BNI engaged in the consumer and business segments, both through savings, deposit and credit products. The bank with a “46” logo has a strong association as a widely used banking product by students/universities.

Quoting from Investor.id, Royke had given a sign that the company would not be transformed 100% into a digital bank without branch offices, instead will develop in terms of services, business processes, and products.

He said, apart from having fairly strong legacy in Indonesia, the Government as BNI’s majority shareholder demand the bank to focus on strengthening its position further as an international bank or global bank

The battle over SME market

Throughout this year, the Indonesian banking sector has been crowded with the launch of digital banking services to corporate actions, seeking for strategic partners. Bank Jago, BCA Digital, and Bank Neo Commerce have implemented the business in this first semester.

While several other banks are looking for strategic investors to raise capital, the media conglomerate PT Elang Mahkota Teknologi Tbk (IDX: EMTK) recently acquired 93% of Bank Fama‘s shares. Moreover, Kredivo has gradually acquired the shares of Bank Bisnis Internasional until eventually dominating with 40% ownership.

The corporate action is being pursued to meet the core capital obligation of IDR 2 trillion by the end of this year as stated in POJK No. 12.

Almost all of the banks are busy targeting the MSME segment amidst a surge in digital acceleration during the Covid-19 pandemic. Apart from being the foundation of the Indonesian economy, MSME is a segment with certain difficulties to capital access and has not been fully digitized.

Bank

Parent/Individual Acquisition/Subsidiary Transformation
BCA Bank Royal Indonesia BCA Digital
Jerry Ng and Patrick Walujo Bank Artos Bank Jago
BRI BRI Agro Bank Raya

Non-bank

Parent Acquisition/Subsidiary Transformation
Sea Group Bank Kesejahteraan Ekonomi Seabank
CT Group Bank Harda Internasional Allo Bank
EMTEK Bank Fama N/A
Kredivo Bank Bisnis Internasional N/A

This is a reason for digital banks to cooperate with platforms with a broad customer base and service ecosystem. That way, they can easily distribute financing products and loans using this leverage.

Based on data from the Central Statistics Agency (BPS), there were 65.5 million MSMEs in 2019, an increase of 1.98% from 64.2 million in 2018. Meanwhile, only about 8 million or 13% of MSMEs are integrated or utilize digital technology.


Original article is in Indonesian, translated by Kristin Siagian

DishServe Bags Pre Series A Funding, Ready to Expand Partnership

Delivery-focused ghost kitchen platform DishServe announced the closing of pre-series A fundraising this month. Some of the investors participated include Genting Group, Insignia Venture Partners, Stonewater Ventures, Ratio Ventures, Rutland Ventures, 300x Ventures, MyAsiaVC, and several angel investors. In 2020, they also received early-stage funding from Insignia.

The company plans to use the fresh funds to plant over 500 outlets in Jakarta and expand to Bandung and Surabaya. In addition, this capital will be used to increase sales channels, develop technology, and conduct curation to increase food options.

DishServe’s Founder & CEO, Rishabh Singhi revealed to DailySocial, Indonesia is a very attractive market with a variety of signature dishes. Cloud kitchens can certainly help F&B brands reach more customers in various geographic areas.

“In a certain way, cloud kitchens have increased the food options available to customers. Delivery only internet kitchen or dark kitchen is the future of the food business,” Rishabh said.

The animo of today’s society to order food online, has encouraged DishServe’s growth which has been functioning as a ghost kitchen. The company recorded sales to grow nearly 20x since its debut. Currently, around 25 brands have joined the DishServe platform.

Strategic partnership

Apart from strategic partnerships with brands such as HongTang, Healthy Box by M Kitchen, and Chicken Pao by FoodStory, DishServe is also working with cloud kitchen platform providers such as YummyKitchen and
Grab Kitchen is leveraging its platform to scale its operations across Jakarta.

In terms of delivery, DishServe currently partnered with third-party platforms such as GrabFood, GoFood, ShopeeFood, and TravelokaEats. Through this partnership, DishServe claims to be able to increase the visibility and exposure of its F&B partners while helping them get more orders.

“Over the past year we have forged deep partnerships with these players that gives DishServe and our partner brands more exposure and visibility compared to other brands listed on the platform. For example if you open the Traveloka app and continue eating, you will find the DishServe banner on the home page which gives us more exposure,” Rishabh said.

In particular, DishServe also provides relevant technology services to its partners. Among these are branding and marketing, inventory management, procurement, enterprise POS solutions, logistics services and warehousing expansion, and logistics services without capital expenditure and low fixed costs.

Apart from SMEs, DishServe has partnered with several well-known chefs in Indonesia to curate savory dishes to be sold under their own brand names. Currently, DishServe sells the Asian Fusion Rice Bowl and a unique blend of cold teas under its own brand.

“There are no big players in the F&B segment after KFC, McDonalds, Pizzahut, Hokben. We have the opportunity to grow a top group of small-scale F&Bs with annual income of less than $100k and have the potential to generate more than $1 million per year,” Rishabh said.


Original article is in Indonesian, translated by Kristin Siagian

Moduit Secures 65 Billion Rupiah Pre Series A Funding to Expand Wealth Management Product

Investment fintech startup Moduit announced $4.5 million (over 65 billion Rupiah) pre-series A round led by Singapore’s Reciprocus Moduit Holding (RMH). RMH is a consortium consisting of Reciprocus Financial Services Pte Ltd, insurtech entrepreneur Walter de Oude, and Helicap. In this round, participated also Djarum Group’s subsidiary, PT Alto Network.

Moduit is the first portfolio of the RMH consortium with the ambition to develop the fintech business in Southeast Asia, especially in Indonesia.

In fact, the fundraising plan has been disclosed since October 2019 through DailySocial’s last interview with the company. Nevertheless, with the right momentum amidst this pandemic, the company managed to boost optimism to pursue growth. The series A fundraising is said to be held next year.

In an official statement, Moduit’s Founder & CEO, Jeffrey Lomanto explained that his team will use fresh funds to expand its platform to offer additional curated products from wealth management, aside from mutual funds and bonds. Also, to improve the Moduit Robo-Advisor feature, which provides algorithm-based automated financial planning services with little or no human involvement.

“We plan to attract more professionals to join us as financial planning partners at Moduit. We will offer them more opportunities and a better life balance,” he said, Wednesday (11/10).

David J. Emery as Reciprocus International Pte Ltd’s Founder & Chairman, also Reciprocus Financial Services Pte Ltd’s CEO said that the pandemic is a double-edged sword. “Moduit has developed a digital platform that can help its Financial Planning Partners to open important wealth gateways for gen-Z and millennials,” he said.

Singlife’s Founder, Walter de Oude said, “Moduit is the perfect platform that combines technology with financial planning in Indonesia. Moduit has all the recipes for rapid growth and success.”

Jeffrey continued, throughout this year, without marketing support, Moduit’s Assets Under Advisory (AUA) grew by more than 40% in line with the average investment value for B2C reaching $4600 or Rp66.7 million per client. Simultaneously, the number of Moduit Advisory Partners grew 74%, these partners handling an average portfolio of $60,000 or IDR 870 million per client.

In 2020, the company aims to triple the number of Financial Planning Partners and push AUA up to seven times. “The entire Moduit team is very excited about this development. With such a huge opportunity in Indonesia, our ultimate goal going forward is expansion throughout Indonesia, and we also plan to pursue series A funding by the end of 2022,” he said.

Different approach

Moduit takes a different approach in marketing investment products. There are two target consumers, B2C to target retail investors, and B2B2C by targeting securities marketers to reach investors with larger amounts.

This strategy was taken as the current wealth management industry is very fragmented. There are three main activities, educating clients by finding out their financial needs and what their cashflow is like. Instead of solely provided KYC (Know Your Customer).

Furthermore, the second activity is a financial planning to simulate the investment portfolio based on the data obtained during the first activity. Finally, the execution to transact activities in the second section.

“This last part requires an PI (Investment Advisor) license to administer, connect with custodians, KSEI (Indonesian Central Securities Depository) and so on. In Indonesia, wealth management startup players are very fragmented, if we expect it to be end-to-end,” Moduit’s Founder & CEO, Jeffry Lomanto told DailySocial.id in a previous interview.

Based on OJK statistics, the number of representatives of mutual fund selling agents (WAPERD) was monitored to increase to 24,351 WAPERDs as of January 2021, from the previous 24,972 agent representatives in 2017.

The B2B2C business is the biggest vehicle in Moduit. However, Jeffrey still wants his two businesses to grow together with the combination of ticket size and number of tickets generated from each.


Original article is in Indonesian, translated by Kristin Siagian

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East Ventures Leads Seed Funding for Kasual, a Fashion Startup Combining Technology and D2C Approach

The direct-to-consumer (D2C) startup Kasual has secured seed funding led by East Ventures. They developed products for everyday wear, with an initial focus on men’s trousers. The fresh funds will be used to strengthen the team, technology and factory capabilities, and to expand the company’s operational to Solo, Central Java.

In order to facilitate consumers to access its products, Kasual has developed its own website. In addition to the sales platform, it also provides several features. The first is called “Build Your Own Product”, allowing customers to choose the type of cut and size tailored to their preferences. There is also a “Virtual Fitting” service, providing direct consultation services with the Kasual team via video calls regarding sizes, personalized fittings, and product recommendations.

With more efficient ordering process and in-house garment production, products can be delivered to customers in less than 5 days. The personalization and technological approach is said to put Kasual the first fashion-tech and instant commerce in Indonesia.

“We realize that the e-commerce trend has rapidly mushroomed and helped customers shop comfortably from home, therefore, they demand manufacturers or sellers who can provide daily necessities, especially pants, more quickly and reliably. However, local brands are currently ignores technology which can actually be a vital aspect in fashion production. This means that customers still don’t have a reliable platform to get personalized fashion products instantly,” Kasual’s Founder & CEO, Alam Akbar said.

It is said that Kasual has experienced a 3x growth when the first pandemic entered Indonesia in 2020 compared to 2019 (YoY). To date, they have served around 80 thousand users and have produced more than 3 thousand products per month.

D2C Trend

Based on data compiled in the “Driving Growth with D2C” report by Ogilvy, Commercetolls, and Verticurl, current brand owners must have a D2C digital strategy to win the market. The main goal is to build a more personal relationship with customers, thereby creating a more effective and engaging brand experience as a value proposition. D2C provides invaluable ownership of customer data.

One case study that is widely told is the success of Perfect Diary, a cosmetic brand from China. Was founded in 2016, the startup achieved impressive growth throughout its 2 years of business. In 2019, they became one of the mos selling of three brands. Eventually, they decided to IPO in 2020 with $7 billion valuation. Its main strategy is solely D2C.

There are three main pillars that brand owners ideally have in its D2C strategy. First, it allows them to find product differentiation, this unique value is considered to invite more customers. Second, the ability to empower customer data to better understand their needs and characteristics. Third, to encourage brand leadership with more agility approach, including on the operational side.

With the same opportunities, some local players try their luck in the sector. East Ventures alone has also invested in another D2C startup in the skin care field named Base and a plant-based beverage called Mohjo. There is also Hypefast to help brand owners sharpen their D2C strategies — including to provide capital, network, access, and operational support.

On the investor side, apart from East Ventures, several other local venture capitalists have also started to enter the sector. From Alpha JWC Ventures, AC Ventures, and BRI Ventures through Sembrani. Recently, Kinesys has collaborated with The-Wolfpack specifically to strengthen the D2C ecosystem in its portfolio.

In terms of fashion business, sales is currently dominated by online shopping in global. Innovation is required to maintain this growth, along with changing trends that occur among consumers.

The most popular product categories in global online shopping throughout 2021 / Statista

Kasual’s further development

Various personalization features will be developed to support Kasual’s fashion commerce system. One of which is body measurement with 3D technology to strengthen custom personalization to be introduced by Kasual at its annual event “Custom Week 2021” on 17-19 December 2021 in Jakarta. By using an electronic body scanner, visitors can place custom orders instantly and accurately.

“We are delighted to welcome East Ventures and other investors to the Kasual family. With this funding, we will build a new team, improve the digital experience for customers and manufacturing processes, launch more product categories and marketing initiatives, and use new technologies such as AR measurement to create Indonesia’s first 3D body measurement. Going forward, we want to increase and process daily orders by 10x and process more than 5 thousand products every day,” Alam said.

Meanwhile, East Ventures’ Co-Founder & Managing Partner, Willson Cuaca said, “Indonesia has one of the most robust digital infrastructures in the region that allows small, custom-made companies like Kasual to thrive. We want to see how far they can go and support them along the company’s growth journey.”


Original article is in Indonesian, translated by Kristin Siagian

Alpha JWC Ventures Announces Third Fund of 6.1 Trillion Rupiah

Alpha JWC Ventures today (09/11) announced its third managed fund (Fund III) worth $433 million or equivalent to 6.1 trillion rupiah; bringing its Assets Under Management (AUM) to $630 million. In the press conference, Jefrey Joe as Co-Founder & General Partner said that this number has exceeded the initial target of $300 million. Several regional and global LPs are involved, including the International Finance Corporation (part of the World Bank Group) and Morgan Stanley Alternative Investment Partners.

In general note, Alpha JWC Ventures was founded in 2015 by Jefrey, Will Ongkowidjaja, and Chandra Tjan; focuses on providing early-stage funding for startups in Indonesia and Southeast Asia.

Fund journey

Their journey began with the first Fund I amounting to USD 50 million in 2016. It has been distributed to 23 startup companies in Southeast Asia, the majority have operational in Indonesia. More than 90 percent of the companies have now received follow-up funding.

Meanwhile, Alpha JWC Ventures’ Fund II closed in 2019 oversubscribed with a nominal value of $143 million; and has invested in 30 companies. To date, Fund I has generated 37% IRR (Internal Rate of Return) and Fund II has generated 87% IRR.

They have also produced 9 exits, including the acquisition of DealStreetAsia by Nikkei, the acquisition of Spacemob by WeWork, and the acquisition of Base.vn by Vietnam’s largest technology company FPT Corporation.

Since its launching this year, Alpha JWC Ventures’ Fund III has invested in seven startups in the financial technology, B2B SaaS, and MSME business solutions sectors in Indonesia, Singapore and Vietnam. Some of them are Esensi Solusi Buana, Spenmo, VIDA, GudangAda, and others.

Jeffrey in his presentation also said that the fund’s ticket size has ranged from hundreds of thousands to millions of dollars. The largest can reach $60 million in several phases. He clearly emphasizes that Alpha JWC Ventures’ principle is to be the number-one supporter of a startup (early stage investor).

Furthermore, along with the new managed funds in quantity, the number of startups invested may remain the same. Which means, they will increase the ticket size and focus more on follow-on funding for its portfolio startups.

“Since the debut in 2015, we have had a clear mission of bringing Indonesia and Southeast Asia into the center of the new global digital economy. Our journey and the Alpha JWC Ventures portfolio have proven that Indonesian and Southeast Asian startups can compete globally. We will continue to be at the forefront to create change and will not stop here,” Alpha JWC Ventures’ Co-Founder & General Partner, Chandra Tjan said.

3 unicorns, 11 centaur

Alpha JWC Ventures through its fund has took three portfolio companies to the unicorn status, Kredivo, Carro, and Ajaib. It is also said that they have 11 centaurs, including Kopi Kenangan, Lemonilo, Modalku, GudangAda, and others.

Jeffrey said, one of the centaurs will soon to become a unicorn in the near future.

“As a VC originating, founded and operated by Indonesians, we are working to increase the positive impact of the digital economy in the country through our investments and portfolio companies. Together with them, we have reached nearly 1 million MSMEs through financial and market access, created more than 12 thousand jobs, empowered more than 200 thousand women through various business opportunities, inspired more than 1 million people to become retail investors, and much more,” Alpha JWC Ventures’ Partner, Erika Go said.


Original article is in Indonesian, translated by Kristin Siagian

JIWA Group Obtains Funding, Changing the Local Coffee Industry Landscapet with Grab & Go Concept

Coffee chain startup “JIWA Group” or known as one of its products, Kopi Janji Jiwa, announced funding from Openspace and Capsquare Asia Partners. The nominal investment is undisclosed, however, the fresh funds would be focused on increasing business expansion. Moreover, the two investors are considered to have the best practices in the local and regional value-chain markets.

Was founded in 2018, the company has overshadowed 3 product brands. Aside from coffee, it also offers Jiwa Toast and Jiwa Tea. In total, there are around 1000 outlets operated in 100 cities in Indonesia. Throughout 2021, it is said that the company has sold 40 million products, increased by two times compared to the same period the previous year.

“We believe JIWA’s strong brand, unique product offerings, 1000 strong offline locations, equipped with the increasing use of technology across all business elements will continue to solidify its position as a market leader,” Openspace’s Executive Director Jessica Huang Pouleur said.

Technology development and omnichannel strategy

Based on the explanation of JIWA Group’s Founder, Billy Kurniawan, the impressive growth obtained also influenced by the digital channels. Including the use of social media for engagement with customers, and integration with online marketplace and food delivery platforms.

They also launched the JIWA+ application to support the “grab & go” model as a signature of Kopi Janji Jiwa since day one. Users can order menus and pay through the application, they also offer options to pick up at the nearest outlet or have it delivered to the location. In the application, a loyalty system is also created to increase customer retention.

Aside from improving operations by adding outlets, products, warehouses, and logistics, with the investors support, JIWA intends to accelerate the use of technology. They’re focus on several areas, such as improving customer experience, supply chain, and reducing carbon footprint. The founders also have a mission to become the industry leader for the technology-enabled F&B segment, to further enter the Asian market.

“Innovation and customer satisfaction have always been part of Jiwa Group’s DNA, ensuring we remain relevant and sustainable in the dynamic F&B industry,” Billy added.

F&B level up through digital

According to research (MIX, 2020), 40% of Indonesian coffee consumers are switching to grab & go outlets. This is supported by a shifting demand from instant coffee, as consumers want a higher quality drink — pairing it with complementary snacks. According to a report compiled by Statista, revenue from the coffee business (roast coffee) will reach $9.5 billion this year. It is estimated to experience a CAGR growth of 9.76% until 2025.

In maintaining the growth trend, industry players have started to take advantage of digital channels. This strategy was performed along with the increase in several outlets. The grab & go concept alone is very dependent on the outlets, although not a few are only used as production sites (without dine-in).

Apps are designed to connect consumers with outlets, shifting them from online to offline – or vice versa. This model is quite efficient, because companies can use the data obtained from consumer habits recorded in the application, therefore, they can offer products and services in line with the market share. On the consumer side, the convenience and value added make them willing to use the application.

Coffee chain brand owners continue to invest in developing technology. In addition to utilizing the existing platforms, they also create their own applications. Some applications even rank quite significantly. Based on our observations of Google Play statistics as of November 5, 2021, we got this data from the Food and Drink category:

Rank App Download Rating
6 Kopi Kenangan 1 million+ 4,6
13 Boba Ceria 100 thousand+ 4,3
17 Chatime Indonesia 500 thousand+ 4,5
21 JIWA+ 100 thousand+ 4,7
22 ISMAYA 100 thousand+ 4,4
24 Fore Coffee 100 thousand+ 4,6
61 Flash Coffee 50 thousand+ 4,6
92 KULO 10 thousand+ 1,7

Backed by tech startup investors

The technology adoption in the coffee chain business model is a special concern for investors. With the existing roadmap, players are able to provide impressive evidence and business projections – not just the coffee business, but F&B in general. Many food tech-based services are born from innovators. The opportunity to use the technology is comprehensive, starting from the supply chain of raw materials, for operational and transaction efficiency, and distribution.

With their respective hypotheses, several venture capitalists in Indonesia are entering the industry, including:

Venture Capital Portfolios
Alpha JWC Ventures Google, Hangry, Kopi Kenangan, Lemonilo, Mangkokku
East Ventures Fore Coffee, Greenly, Legit Group
AC Ventures Coffee Meets Bagel, Fore Coffee
Vertex Ventures Dailybox
Openspace Ventures JIWA Group
SALT Ventures Hangry, Shiru

However, the coffee business model are developing in Indonesia. In 2020, Jago Cofee introduced the mobile coffee chain. Instead of using outlets, they use partners to distribute products around with carts that have been provided and specially designed. Likewise, Jago uses the application to make it easier for its customers to find partners and place orders.

This industrial landscape is becoming interesting, especially Kopi Kenangan as one of the coffee chain market leaders has the potential to become the first unicorn in the near future. It is known that the company valuation has crossed nearly $900 million. This means that the market share is already that big and the business model adopted can be well received and scaled up even more.


Original article is in Indonesian, translated by Kristin Siagian

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Eden Farm Announces 271 Billion Rupiah Series A Funding Led by AppWorks and AC Ventures

Agritech startup Eden Farm announced the series A funding of $19 million or equivalent to 271.1 billion Rupiah. The round was led by AppWorks and AC Ventures, with the participation of Trihill Capital, OCBC Ventures, Investible, Corin Capital, and former investor Global Founders Capital.

This funding continues Eden Farm‘s pre-series A round led by investible in February 2021. With the mission of “Feeding the Nation”, Eden Farm has built an integrated food distribution network since 2017. The goal is to simplify the supply chain to increase margins by reducing prices and cutting out middlemen.

In its service, they also provide accurate demand forecasts for farmers by implementing digital acceleration, and achieving production predictability.

According to the statistics, Eden Farm currently serves 53 thousand customers and partners with more than 2 thousand farmers in Java. In order to support the supply chain, they also operate 5 Eden Fulfillment Centers in strategic locations, supported by 400 supplier partners for product availability.

Meanwhile, since 2019 AppWorks has participated in a number of local startup funding, including HarukaEDU series C funding (Nov 2019), Fabelio series C funding (June 2020), InfraDigital series A funding (Jun 2020), and iSeller pre-series B funding (2021).

Apart from Eden Farm, a number of local agritech startups are also trying to solve the same issue. One of them is TaniHub Group. Last May 2021, the platform secured a series B funding of $65.5 million (over 940 billion Rupiah) led by MDI Ventures. This round brought TaniHub’s valuation to over $200 million. Tanihub currently has several business units, including supply chain, financing, and farmer education.

Focus on solving supply chain issue

According to the BPS report, Indonesia has more than 33.4 million farmers, with the agricultural sector contributing 14% of Indonesia’s GDP or a $140 billion market growing 12.93% per quarter (QoQ). However, the agricultural sector still has major challenges related to supply chain efficiency and farmer welfare with many leakages occurring at various levels of the supply chain.

In this case, Eden Farm decided to focus on resolving issues in the supply chain. “We strengthened two important foundations on the supply and demand sides by building Eden Farm Sourcing Center (ESC) and Eden Farm Distribution Network (EDN),” Eden Farm’s Co-founder & CEO, David Gunawan said in an interview with DailySocial.id.

ESC is a program of direct collaboration with farmers to determine cropping patterns, certainty of selling prices, and certainty of the amount of agricultural produce taken every day. Meanwhile, EDN is a distribution network created to empower the community. EDN is spread in various locations and is within a 5 km radius of the customer so that delivery is faster and more efficient.

“Eden Farm is focused on revolutionizing the fresh produce supply chain and creating a strong defense in upstream agricultural technology. As early investors in Eden Farm, we see them growing and achieving their goals as they increase demand channels and build stronger relationships with farmers in the field. We believe Eden Farm can lead the industry towards digitalization and become a leader in B2B agricultural technology,” AC Ventures’ Founder & Managing Partner, Adrian Li said.

Focus on B2B segment

To date, the F&B sector has a market size of $92 billion, with the food sector expected to grow at a CAGR of 8.7%. They are also one of the biggest absorbers of agricultural products.

One of the business processes by Eden Farm is bridging needs on the industrial side, then connecting with farmers. They claim to have a strong operational system by procuring products directly from farmers, creating defenses in upstream agriculture and attracting growth through diversified B2B markets.

Focusing on the B2B market, Eden Farm supplies high quality food ingredients to various customer segments, including hotels, restaurants & cafes (HORECA), traditional markets, and e-commerce.


Original article is in Indonesian, translated by Kristin Siagian

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Paras Digital NFT Marketplace Platform Secures 71.8 Billion Rupiah Funding

Paras Digital’s NFT marketplace platform received of $5 million or around 71.8 billion Rupiah seed funding. It was obtained through an Initial Dex Offering (IDO) and investments by a number of investors.

As stated in the website, some of the investors involved in this round include Black Dragon Capital, Dragonfly Capital, Moonwhale Capital, Digital Renaissance, GFS Ventures, Global Coin Research, OKEx Blocdream Ventures, as well as several other venture capital and angel investors.

The Co-founder, Rahmat Albariqi said this funding will be used to scale up its business, including to expand NFT assets vertical on the NEAR Protocol, such as comics, games, and toys.

“The NFT popularity is increasing this year, and there are many opportunities we haven’t discovered. We believe [market] research and expansion into new verticals can maintain the NFT value. By adding value to digital assets, we can create a big change for NFT in the future,” says the man familiarly called Riqi.

Paras was founded in late December 2020 by Rahmat Albariqi and Afiq Shofy Ramadhan, and was fully developed by a team from Indonesia. Prior to funding, Riqi claimed to have worked on several projects with creators to create and release their IP on the NEAR Protocol.

It wants to open up opportunities for anyone with passion to develop their IP in the crypto world. Currently, Riqi and his team are pushing for the development of crypto-natives IP to be built on Paras.

“We aim to be a pioneer in the transformation of games, comics, toys, and works through smart contract capabilities and blockchain technology. Therefore, we want to open up a lot of access by offering content through various media,” he said.

Several local platforms have started to initiate a marketplace-based NFT platform. Two of them are Tokomall by Tokocrypto and Kolektibel.

Digital comic project and target market

In separate occasion, Riqi revealed that his team is currently working on three digital comic projects using NFT. The first Paras Comic project has just launched and the content is created by in-house creators.

Meanwhile, the majority of Paras users come from crypto-native and tech savvy level. However, Riqi said that the platform has started to be used by early adopters not new to blockchain and cryptocurrency technology.

Paras Digital will expand NFT assets to multiple verticals, such as comics and games

“We are targeting the pop-culture enthusiast market, such as fandom and gamers with a focus on China and Southeast Asia. To date, our total sales volume has reached $550 thousand from a total of 400 thousand transactions,” he said. Since Paras is built on the NEAR Protocol, this transaction is only available using NEAR cryptocurrency.

Riqi said that crypto volatility remains a different challenge. Especially when the crypto market declines, transactions and sales will automatically follow. However, he admits that he is passionate about pursuing the crypto world considering that there is always something new in the blockchain ecosystem.

“This requires us to be constantly learning and innovating. Even though most of Paras’ core team are from Indonesia, we still have to update about innovations happening in other parts of the world. Not to mention about the time difference between Indonesia and several countries as ‘blockchain epicenters’ like Lisbon and the United States,” he added.


Original article is in Indonesian, translated by Kristin Siagian

Bank Digital 101: Ecosystem and Future Prospect

In the last three years, the Indonesian banking industry has been stirred with the rise of digital banks, both in the form of new banks and conversions from existing banks. As a first step, the Government released a new regulation that is expected to accommodate the needs of digital bank players through the Financial Services Authority (OJK).

POJK Number 12/POJK.03/2021 contains various provisions related to the establishment of banks and capital. Among those are the provisions for the establishment of two types of digital banks. First, the establishment of a new bank as a digital bank and second, the transformation of existing commercial banks into digital banks

In addition, the new rules are also to provide clear boundaries regarding the digital banking business considering that this trend is still relatively new in the Indonesian banking industry.

In its efforts, digital banks continue to provide literacy, therefore, people understand the business and services they run. It is while taking advantage of digital finance rapid acceleration during the Covid-19 pandemic. Based on the FICO survey in 2020, 54% of Indonesian consumers prefer to use digital channels to interact with banks, 3% mobile banking, 7% internet banking, and 14% through telephone banking.

However, we cannot forget the large groups of Indonesian people who are more comfortable with financial transactions by visiting ATMs or branch offices.

PT Bank Jago Tbk (IDX: ARTO) held a journalistic training to provide an in-depth understanding of digital banking. DailySocial had the opportunity to participate in the training held in Bali.

Several prominent observers participated, including the Research Director of the Center of Reform on Economics (CORE) Indonesia Piter Abdullah, the Indonesia Stock Exchange Business Development Advisor Poltak Hotradero, and the Director of the Center of Economic and Law Studies (CELIOS) Bima Yudhistira.

Digital bank perception

Many Indonesian people recognize digital banks as digital banking services. Also, considering it is still a brand-new business model, the understanding of digital banking is still considered blurry among the public.

Research Director of the Center of Reform on Economics (CORE) Indonesia Piter Abdullah mentions a definition to significantly distinguish digital and conventional banks. He said, a digital bank is defined as a bank along with its services where we no longer need to think about where the head office, branch offices, the number of ATMs, including the number of employee.

Similar to the GoPay and OVO digital wallet platforms, we have no idea where the money stored. With a decade of internet and smartphone adoption phenomenon, he considered the banking business would remain the same, but the delivery is started shifting.

In his opinion, this perception is reasonable considering that people are used to transacting at banks. Bank is identified as financial institution with branch offices and head office. Unlike the pre-digital era, banking competition is clear from the bank efforts to build an ecosystem. In the context of conventional banks, its ecosystem is branch offices and ATMs.

To date, the use of ATM started to be irrelevant. People are getting used to making financial transactions through mobile banking platforms and digital wallets. The banking industry has experienced massive adoption during the pandemic.

Based on OJK data, a total of 2,593 branch office networks were closed from 2017 to August 2021. These branch offices are closed in line with the bank’s digital transformation as seen from the increasing volume of digital transactions.

Piter said, whether conventional banks have not transformed into digital banks today, it does not mean they have failed to digitize. It’s more of a competition failure. It should be noted, the banking advantage factor has changed, things excelled in the past, could be a burden in the era of the digital ecosystem.

“This is not a sprint, but a marathon, determined by resilience. Moreover, digital banking is still a brand-new trend in Indonesia. Therefore, this is the reason for established banks to be prepared, not directly face-to-face but through proxies or subsidiary,” said Piter.

The above explanation is a reminiscent of Bank Jago’s Founder Jerry Ng hypothesis when he decided to acquire Artos Bank and change its name. Jerry considered Bank Artos have quite small legacies (branch offices, ATMs, and HR). In this case, his team can develop technology from scratch instead of taking a bank with thousands of branch offices.

Digital bank study case

Moreover, the Indonesia Stock Exchange Business Development Advisor, Poltak Hotradero highlighted the digital ecosystem as one of the key factors in digital banks. He took several examples of successful digital banks in the world that apply a similar model, for example KakaoBank from South Korea.

KakaoBank was founded in 2016 and is owned by internet giant Kakao Corp. In its early days, KakaoBank recorded extraordinary achievements. Within five days, KakaoBank reached 1 million users.

KakaoBank also recorded financial performance above the industry average. For example, deposit growth was at 13.65% from the industry average at 11.98%. Also, KakaoBank’s NPL was at 0.26% where the industry reached 1.78%. Meanwhile, income fee reached 30.16% of the industry’s 28.02%.

Sumber: Boston Consulting Group
Source: Boston Consulting Group

For Poltak, KakaoBank’s success also influenced by the large digital ecosystem owned by its parent company. Kakao has a diverse service portfolios, such as chat services, fintech, e-commerce, and games.

“The internet evolution has brought changes in people and money. Machines are integrated with each other thanks to the internet. This is the foundation for the development of digital banks where payments, liquidity, and analytics will be in the cloud. In other words, technology enables banks [digital] to be able to scale up faster,” he said.

In the future, Poltak mentioned the competition of three types of banks, conventional banks, digital banks, and embedded banks. He defines embedded bank (Bank-as-a-Service/BaaS) as a service that has been operating digitally since day one and has entered the (native) ecosystem. He also said that embedded banks would become part of the plumbing system for corporate or individual financial services.

Source: FT Partners Research

“Digital platforms will facilitate synergies with other digital financial services, such as investment and insurance services. However, it is important to note that the biggest cost and risk of the digital transition is failure to maintain market share and segments. These factors can turn banks irrelevant,” he added.

Therefore, he highlighted that digitalization is a competitive necessity. We should not let the financial sector only delegate its role through banks, given the huge business potential and services. He believes market expansion is important for developing digital banks considering a large number of unexplored market segments in Indonesia and can only be served through digital.

Digital bank projection

According to his study, Director Center of Economic and Law Studies (CELIOS) Bhima Yudhistira divides digital banks into three models, direct banks, neobanks, and challenger banks.

He explained that direct banks enlarge opportunities for banking services, such as savings and digital loan channeling. Furthermore, neobank operates as a fully digital bank, without branch offices, but with a mobile application. Meanwhile, challenger banks are said to be revolutionizing the way transactions, new loan models, and personal finance.

Bhima said the global potential accumulation of challenger bank and neobank markets could reach $578 billion in 2027, according to a Medici Research report.

We try to take other sources to provide a thorough definition, especially on neobanks and challenger banks. Citing from FinTech Magazine, neobank offers flexibility to various services, including payroll and expense management. In addition, neobank also offers corporate financial solutions to address the challenges of MSMEs.

The API presence helps to integrate business flows with banking requirements. However, neobanks do not have a banking license as they operate by relying on partner banks. Therefore, they cannot offer traditional banking services.

Meanwhile, challenger banks use technology to streamline the banking process. However, challenger banks also maintain a physical presence to operate fintech services. The challenger banks scope is generally much smaller than the mainstream banking sector. It is estimated that there are currently 100 challenger banks globally.

Director Center of Economic and Law Studies (CELIOS) Bima Yudhistira / Bank Jago

Unlike neobank, challenger bank has a bank license and can offer customers a wide range of traditional and digital banking services. These traditional banking services can be accessed and utilized more accommodatively than commercial banks.

Furthermore, Bhima considered that digital banks offer a number of advantages, both for individuals and business players. At the individual level, digital banks increase customer literacy in other financial products, such as investments. According to World Bank data in 2020, the share of stock market capitalization to GDP is still relatively small. The emergence of digital banks is projected to encourage investment interest.

In addition, digital banks can encourage financial control efforts in the MSME sector with financial transparency and efficiency. Moreover, business players can get access to financing channeled by digital banks through channeling schemes.

The evolution of neobank / Sumber: PwC
Neobank evolution . Source: PwC

“To date, banks do not compete with technology, but with high interest rates. Moreover, digital bank suddenly appeared, offering easy services and access to capital. Currently, Indonesia has 65 million MSMEs and some of them are yet to receive loans. Digital banks can add to that financing capacity. If Indonesia wants to restore the economy to the level of 5%, its credit growth must triple,” he explained.

Based on data-driven credit scoring, digital banks can continue to grow by extending credit to unbankable segments. In the future, this loan disbursement can use the customer transaction rating indicator on e-commerce, food delivery, or ride-hailing platforms.


Original article is in Indonesian, translated by Kristin Siagian